Page 1
The death of the Dean of St. Paul's on Tuesday
The Spectatormorning, at Dover, in the seventy-sixth year of his age, has deprived the English Church of perhaps her greatest teacher, and England of one of the purest and most fascinating...
There is some fear, though it is not acute, of
The Spectatora sharp financial crisis in the United States. The large houses there have been locking their funds up in immense purchases of silver and goods the prices of which were expected...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The Spectatorp ARLIAMENT adjourned on Tuesday to January 22nd, a long holiday, which has been granted owing to the great progress of business rendered possible by the paralysis which has...
The King of Italy opened the new Parliament, in which
The SpectatorSignor Crispi has such an immense majority, on December 10th. His speech was altogether rose-coloured. He quoted the majority itself as proof that Italy, being united and...
As we anticipated last week, Mr. Gladstone declined to commit
The Spectatorhimself as to the course be should take in reference to the Land question and the Irish Constabulary in any Home-rule Bill he might bring forward, explaining to the four...
Page 2
Mr. Parnell left London for Dublin on Tuesday, and began
The Spectatorhis speeches by a little address to the Irishmen who cheered him at Euston. He speaks of himself as the agent of divine providence, and hoped that his country- men would achieve...
When the letter in which this passage was contained, and
The Spectatorthe report which contained it, was presented to the Irish When the letter in which this passage was contained, and the report which contained it, was presented to the Irish...
In the Rotunda in Dublin, Mr. Parnell made a considerable
The Spectatorspeech on Wednesday, of the drift of which we have said enough elsewhere. There was visible in it an odd con- flict between his desire to humiliate Mr. Gladstone and his desire...
The manifesto of the seceding brigade of former Parnellites appeared
The Spectatoron Thursday, and is not a very able document. They have to admit that they elected Mr. Parnell after the decision in the divorce suit, " under the influence of gratitude," " in...
No sooner had Mr. McCarthy and the majority left the
The SpectatorCommittee-room on Saturday, than the Parnellites passed unanimously Mr. John O'Connor's resolution regretting Mr. Gladstone's evasion of the questions put to him ; and in...
The seceding brigade at once deposed Mr. Parnell, acting "
The Spectatorunder an imperative sense of duty to our country," and substituted Mr. Justin McCarthy as " sessional chair- man ;" and the majority, numbering forty-five, immediately drew up...
Page 3
A great meeting was held in the Guildhall on Wednesday
The Spectatorto express sympathy with Jews under the renewed persecution of their race in Russia. The meeting had the approval of a great number of dignitaries, including Cardinal Manning,...
We regret to notice the death of Sir Barnes Peacock,
The Spectatorfirst known as a great black-letter lawyer, and afterwards one of the ablest Legislative Members ever sent to India. He had the honour of causing an Act of Parliament to be...
Professor S. H. Butcher, who is an Irishman, though he
The Spectatorlives and works most efficiently in Edinburgh, warns English- men that the control of the Irish Constabulary may mean a great deal for England. If the Home-rulers obtain it,...
Sir R. Temple on Thursday produced the half-yearly Budget of
The Spectatorthe London School Board, covering the half-year from March to September, 1891. He expects to spend £958,000, an increase of £60,000 over the corresponding half of the present...
Universal suffrage was tried for the first time in Spain
The Spectatoron December 7th, the occasion being the election of the Provincial Councils-General. The result, according to a telegram in the Times of Tuesday, has been a great surprise. The...
It is rumoured in Paris that as soon as the
The Spectatornew French loan of £36,000,000 has been subscribed (January 22nd), the Cabinet will be reorganised. M. de Freycinet, who has just been elected to the Academy, will probably...
As we expected, there is to be trouble over Mutaca's
The Spectatorcountry, the district entered by the British South African Company, but claimed by the Portuguese. The people in Lisbon are sending out volunteers and regulars to defend it. Mr....
We hardly understand the great interest taken in the case
The Spectatorof the Pelican Club, unless, indeed, the " sporting " section of society was anxious to be sure whether it could " sport " in buildings of its own without interference from the...
Page 4
TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE EFFECT OF THE PARNELLITE SPLIT ON THE ELECTORS OF GREAT BRITAIN. T HE first important consequence of the split in the Irish Party will be its tendency to convince the...
Page 5
MR. PARNELL'S SPEECHES.
The SpectatorM R. PARNELL has been received in Dublin and Cork after a fashion that seems to promise him a great following in Ireland, though the Mallow demonstration against him shows that...
Page 6
IRISH FACTION. R ECENT events will of course confirm the English
The Spectatorin their belief that the Celtic Irish are exceptionally inclined to faction, that they cannot hold together, but are always ready to spring at one another's throats. The belief...
Page 7
THE IRISH AND THEIR CATHOLICISM.
The SpectatorB Y far the most perplexing question in the mental con- dition of the Irish people—the native Irish we mean, not the English and Scotch settlers—is their real attitude towards...
Page 8
THE IMPERIAL COURT OF APPEAL.
The SpectatorB Y the death of Sir Barnes Peacock, the country loses 13 an exceptionally . able Judge. The expressions of regret which fell from his colleagues on the Bench on the receipt of...
Page 9
THE JEWS OF RUSSIA.
The SpectatorM ADAME NOVIKOFF'S argument, that there ought to be no meeting in London to plead for Russian Jews because the Czar disposes of two millions of soldiers, is as foolish as it is...
Page 10
THE VATICAN AND FRENCH CONSERVATISM. T HE utterances of the Vatican
The Spectatoron secular matters have an interest which is peculiarly their own. They are eminently and necessarily cosmopolitan. Every word has to be weighed and guarded, because the persons...
Page 11
THE DEAN OF ST. PAUL'S.
The SpectatorO NE after another, the great men of our Church disappear, and their places are not filled. Within a single year, the Bishop of Durham, Canon Liddon, and Dean Church have all...
Page 12
THE VALUE OF DRUDGERY.
The SpectatorT HE German Emperor is an able man, though, we fancy, of a rather commonplace type, the type of the efficient Englishman with more energy in him than originality ; but he may do...
Page 13
FAT CATTLE.
The SpectatorW E wonder what effect would have been produced upon the mind of a vegetarian by a visit to the show of fat beasts that has been held this week in the Royal Agri- cultural Hall...
Page 15
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE CYNICISM OF THE "SPECTATOR." [TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—In common, I hope, with many others, I have been much pained by the cynicism of the two articles in...
"ROBERT ELSMERE " AND UNIVERSITY HALL.
The SpectatorITO THE EDITOR or TEE " 1211PECTATOR." J SIR, —I am very loth to say anything more in public just yet about University Hall. We have had our full share of public attention for...
Page 16
MEMORY OF BIRDS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—Your readers may be interested by the following in- cident displaying the wonderful power of memory which some birds possess. Some...
POETRY.
The SpectatorIN MEMORIAM : THE DEAN OF ST. PAUL'S. "ASHES to ashes, dust to dust," In broken voice he said, Committing to the grave in love and trust. The body of the dead. Again must...
DUTY.
The SpectatorCALL, and I follow, power unknown ; Thy summons has a sovereign tone, As trumpet stern in morning air To bid to duties fresh repair, Or bugle soft, with evening dew, To cleanse...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorLORD MELBOURNE,* IT is hard to imagine a better piece of work than this short study of Lord Melbourne by Mr. Dunckley. Of all the Queen's Prime Ministers, Lord Melbourne was...
Page 18
TWO NEW NOVELS.*
The SpectatorTHE admirers of Mrs. Oliphant and Mr. F. Marion Crawford, whose name is legion, will assuredly find nothing to dis- appoint them in the latest works of these distinguished...
Page 19
SIR E. HAMLEY'S "CRIMEA."* IT seems to us certain that
The SpectatorSir Edward Hamley's account of the Crimean War will be the history of that contest which will be read by future generations of Englishmen. It is scarcely possible that, except...
Page 20
ABBEYS AND CHURCHES.*
The SpectatorWE expect a variety of interest in a volume that contains descriptions of fifty churches famous for their architectural beauty or for their associations, historical and...
A SCOTCH WILD-FOWLER, AND A NORFOLK NATURALIST.*
The SpectatorIF Captain Marryat, instead of devoting his time after leaving the service to writing novels, and to learning the ways of Thames lightermen like Jacob Faithful from his. house...
Page 21
THE COLOUR AND SHAPE OF SOULS.*
The Spectator"Rintrah roars and shakes his fires in the burden'd air, Hungry clouds swag on the deep." IN other and less technical terms, a new mystic has written a book. It is published...
Page 22
Mr. William Magrath has illustrated in twelve drawings, which are,
The Spectatoron the whole, well suited to their subject, The Low - Back'd Car, by Samuel Lover (Hutchinson and Co.) "Kitty," as she appears in her " low-back'd car" in the first picture, is...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorGIFT-BOOKS. Fifty - two More Stories for Boys, and Fifty - two More Stories for Girls, are continuations of two volumes which appeared with similar titles last year. Both are...
Page 23
The Way to Win. By John T. Dale. (Griffith, Farran,
The SpectatorOkeden, and Welsh.)—Looking to the class or classes for whom this book is specially intended, it can be said to have only one fault, though that is indubitably a serious one. It...
Good Words. Edited by Donald Macleod, D.D. (Isbister and Co.)—The
The SpectatorSunday Magazine. Edited by the Rev. Benjamin Waugh. (Same publishers.)—These two annual volumes are as good as usual. In the first, the chief serial stories are Mr. B. L....
Dot - and - Go - One. By M. Blanche Hayward. (Religious Tract Society.)—This is a
The Spectatorvery agreeable and thoroughly original story of a hunch-backed cripple and waif, who is " saved," and introduced to a reasonable amount of material happiness, by his love of...
The Princess Willa. By Mrs. Herbert Martin. (W. P. Nimmo,
The SpectatorEdinburgh.)—This is a very bright, original, and wholesome story—the story of a little Austrian Princess who at the ago of twelve is brought by her father to Macaulay House,...
Sunbeams on my Path. By Ebba J. D. Wright. (Nisbet.)—
The SpectatorThis little volume contains "reminiscences of Christian work in various lands," by a lady who dates from Dublin, but whose father was Director of the Royal Mint in Stockholm....
Roszlinda, and other Fairy - Tales. By Anna Cross and Blanche Atkinson.
The Spectator(George Allen.)—The authors of these delightful stories have accomplished what is virtually, if not nominally, a new departure in the production of fairy-tales. They have made...
The Seed She Sowed. By Emma Leslie. (Blackie.)—This is an
The Spectatorattempt, and on the whole a successful attempt, to utilise the great Dock Strike in the interests of sound Christian teaching. Brown and Chaplin may be taken as fairly typical...
The Girl's Own Poetry - Book. Edited by E. Davenport. (Griffith, Farran,
The SpectatorOkeden, and Welsh.) — This handsome volume of between five hundred and six hundred pages is a companion volume to " The Boy's Own Poetry-Book," and has been compiled for a...
Page 24
Tenerife. By George W. Strettel. (Fisher Unwin.)—So much that is
The Spectatorextravagant, says Mr. Strettel, has been said about the climate and scenery of Teneriffe, that he considers himself bound to place the true facts before the public. This he does...
How London Lives. By W. J. Gordon. (Religious Tract Society.)
The Spectator—The sub-title of this volume (which is, we suppose, a reprint from the Leisure Hour) is as follows :—" The Feeding, Cleansing, Lighting, and Police of London, with Chapters on...
We have to acknowledge the annual volume, the second of
The Spectatora new series, of Amateur Work, Illustrated (Ward, Lock, and Co.) It is described as " a practical magazine of constructive and decorative art and manual labour." Sundry...
Scouting for Stanley in East Africa. By Thomas Stevens. (Cassell
The Spectatorand Co.)—Mr. Stevens is the intrepid traveller who went round the world on a bicycle. The New York World sent him to Africa in search of such news as might satisfy the public...
Dumps and I. By Mrs. Parr. (Methuen and Co.)—Mrs. Parr
The Spectatordoes not altogether overcome the difficulty of telling a story in the first person without affectation. When, indeed, the staple of a narrative is adventure, this difficulty is...
The last volume of The Pulpit Commentary, edited by the
The SpectatorVery Rev. H. D. M. Spence and the Rev. Joseph Exell (Kegan Paul, Trench, and Co.), is devoted to the "Epistle to the Romans." The " Exposition " is from the pen of the Rev. J....
Nobody's Neighbour ; or, Ja:k's Experiment, by Catharine Shaw (John
The SpectatorF. Shaw), is a description of how a certain Master Jack, feeling himself " bothered by the womankind," thought that he should like to take up his quarters on an island, and how...
Cassell's Picturesque Australasia. Edited by E. E. Morris, M.A. 4
The Spectatorvols. (Cassell and Co.)—This work, which has been appearing as a weekly serial for now a considerable time, is at length com- pleted. It is not produced in the sumptuous style...
The Art Journal, 1890. (Virtue and Co.) —This, the latest
The Spectatoryearly volume of the oldest of the English art magazines, is equal to the tradition left by its predecessors. Of the twelve plate illus- trations, we prefer a photogravure, "...
The Marvellous Budget : being 65,536 Stories of Jack and
The SpectatorJill. By the Rev. F. Bennett. (Cassell and Co.)—Mr. Bennett has four pages marked (1), four marked (2), and so on up to (8). Each of these may be read continuously with each of...
Page 25
Fresh - Water Aquaria. By the Rev. G. C. Bateman. (Upcott Gill.)--An
The Spectatoraquarium is a thing to conjure with, for more can be learnt in a month from one than in years of paddling in streams. Mr. Bateman discusses the whole theory and practice of...
Russia's Railway Advance into Central Asia. By George Dobson. (W.
The SpectatorH. Allen and Co.)—Mr. Dobson travelled from St. Petersburg to Samarkand in 1888, when the railway to the latter place was opened. He described what he saw in a series of letters...
Dr. Joseph Parker publishes the thirteenth volume of his huge
The Spectatorwork, The People's Bible : Discourses upon Holy Scripture. (Hazell, Watson, and Viney.)—The portion dealt with is the Proverbs. Dr. Parker's qualities are known to our readers,...
The Rive - Speaking Peoples of the Slave Coast of West Africa.
The SpectatorBy Major A. B. Ellis. (Chapman and Hall.)—We now find that in writing " The Tshi-Speaking Peoples of the Gold Coast," which was noticed in the Spectator (January 26th, 1889),...
Page 26
A Modern Milkmaid. By the Author of " Commonplace Sinners."
The Spectator2 vols. (Digby and Long.)—This is a book to be avoided by everyone who has any respect for good English or for good taste, either of matter or manner. Here are a few samples,...
Messrs. Marcus Ward and Co. send us specimens of their
The Spectatorvery elaborate Christmas and New Year's Cards, illustrated books of verse, and so forth. The landscapes are all beautiful in their way, and the flower-pieces too. We do not...
Messrs. Bemrose and Son send us three forma of a
The Spectatorcalendar intended to be hung up on a wall. These are the Daily Calendar, the Scriptural Calendar, and the Proverbial Calendar. The first gives information of sunrise and sunset...
Fulcher's Pocket-Book. (Peacock, Mansfield, and Britton.)—The oldest, we believe, of
The Spectatorthe pocket-books once so common in country towns. This is the sixty-seventh year of its life. It contains all the usual information, some poetry, chiefly by local versifiers,...
Messrs. Hildesheimer and Co. (Silk Street) send us specimens of
The Spectatortheir Christmas and New Year's Cards, containing some very large ones, and some cut out into the shape of human figures, representing Christmas and Christmas benefactors...