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The police, it is clear, failed on Monday. It is
The Spectatorfolly to attack an excellent body of men who usually do their duty admir- ably, but it seems evident that there was a serious want either of purpose or judgment in Scotland...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorA LL important re-elections will be over to-day, but Parlia- ment does not meet till Thursday, and even then we may be far from a statement of the Government ideas. There is a...
The accounts from Eastern Europe remain contradictory. It is affirmed
The Spectatorand reaffirmed that the Emperor of Russia, though enraged with Prince Alexander for promising military aid to the Sultan, still will not actively oppose him, and insists that...
The actual force is ample, as some forty thousand drilled
The Spectatormen could be in the streets in two hours ; but the scare proves a necessity for some changes. First, Sir E. Henderson should be respectfully superseded by a more vigilant and...
London, usually so tranquil, has been excited and alarmed this
The Spectatorweek by a most serious riot. A meeting of the unemployed had been called on Monday, in Trafalgar Square, and was largely attended by decent poor men, chiefly builders, who are...
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Lord Fife has written a letter to the Secretary of
The Spectatorthe Scottish Liberal Association resigning his presidency, on the ground that he cannot support a Government which is practi: Gaily committed to a dissolution of the Legislative...
Mr. Morley's argument was chiefly directed to show the diffi-
The Spectatorculty of recurring to force in Ireland, and, of course, for his purpose he exaggerated the amount of force necessary. In describing the putting-down public meetings, locking-up...
Mr. Thomas Case, Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, has
The Spectatorput together, in a letter to the Times of Thursday, a rather important selection of Mr. Gladstone's expressions of opinion as to the limits of a safe Home-rule, though he has...
Mr. John Morley,âthe Right Honourable John Morley, as we suppose
The Spectatorwe must now call him,âaddressed his constituents on Monday at Newcastle, on the subject of the re-election for which be was asking after his acceptance of office. He spoke as...
Mr. Morley was summoned by telegraph to Dublin on Tues-
The Spectatorday morning to be sworn in, but returned to Newcastle on Thursday, and again addressed the electors, intimating that even during the few hours that he had spent in Dublin he had...
The Welsh are meditating a Land League, and on Thursday
The Spectatorreceived Mr. Michael Davitt with enthusiasm at Flint, and listened to a great speech of Ilia in support of the principles of the Irish Land League. If the evils which we have...
The most important official appointments made since our last issue
The Spectatorare those of Lord Aberdeen to be Viceroy of Ireland, and of Mr. Broadhurst to be Under-Secretary of State for the Home Office. We believe that Lord Aberdeen is both shrewd...
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It is clear that the refractory members of the party
The Spectatorremain sullen. There is an improbable rumour that Mr. Biggar con- templates retirement into private life; but Mr. Sullivan, the Lord Mayor of Dublin, declares that he will not...
The Bishop of Oxford, in distributing the certificates and prizes
The Spectatorawarded to the candidates in the Oxford Local Examina- tions of 1885 at the London and Southwark centres, on Wednes- day, in the theatre of the University of London, delivered...
The House of Lords met on Monday, only apparently for
The Spectatorthe installation of the new Lord Chancellor, Sir Farrer Herschell, who took his seat on the Woolsack as Lord Herschell. After donning his Peer's robes and making the usual...
The Paris correspondent of the Times, in a letter published
The Spectatoron Thursday, intimates, in a curiously involved and obscure way, but still unmistakeably, that M. de Freycinet will not be able to keep General Boulanger as Minister for War....
Two further receptions of the Irish Patriotic Union have taken
The Spectatorplace,âone at Hull yesterday week, and one at Sheffield on Wednesday last. Lord Claud Hamilton, M.P., who presided at the latter meeting, predicted that Home-rule in Ireland...
There is revolt in the air just now, and it
The Spectatorhas spread to the Parnellites. Mr. Parnell wished Captain O'Shea, who helped him with the so-called " Kilmainham Treaty," to be elected for Galway ; but many of his followers,...
The long-expected divorce suit of " Crawford v. Dilke "
The Spectatorbegan and ended on Friday. The petition was dismissed as regards Sir Charles Mike, against whom no legal evidence was forth- coming, Mrs. Crawford's statement to her husband not...
On Thursday, the French Chamber was the scene of an
The Spectatorextra- ordinary incident. M. Basly, a new Member for Paris, got up, and in the plainest possible language justified the murder of M. Watrin, manager of the Decazeville iron and...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE RIOT OF MONDAY. S O deep and unbroken is the tranquillity of Londonâa tranquillity unmatched in any capital of the worldâ that we may all be tempted to exaggerate the...
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THE FLABBINESS OF PUBLIC OPINION.
The SpectatorT HERE is one danger in democracy which is not usually taken sufficiently into account, and that is, that by making public opinion on political questions omnipotent, you not...
MR. JOHN MORLEY AT NEWCASTLE.
The SpectatorW E have no doubt that Mr. John Morley will have been returned by a great majority before the present issue of this journal can be in our readers' hands ; and profoundly as we...
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THE " MAN FOR GALWAY."
The SpectatorT HE quarrel over the Galway election between Mr. Parnell and some leading members of his party is interesting on many grounds. It shows, to begin with, that the Parnellite...
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THE DECAZEVILLE AFFAIR.
The SpectatorW E begin to fear for the permanence of the French Republic. The one thing which, ever since 1848, the mass of French voters have shown themselves unable to bear is insecurity...
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THE NEW ECCLESIASTICAL MOVEMENT IN SCOTLAND.
The SpectatorC LARENDON says that at the beginning of the troubles in 1638, " there was so little curiosity either in the Court or the country to know anything of Scotland, or what was done...
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THE SCHOOL BOARD BUDGET.
The Spectatorrp m figures in the Budget of the London School Board will reassure those who feared that the recent election would give a serious check to the work of education in London. So...
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THE FEAR OF MOBS.
The SpectatorI T is a little difficult to explain either the meaning of the word " Mob," or the horror with which the thing is now regarded in all countries of Europe by the educated....
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THE VOYAGE OF THE COLUMBINE.'
The SpectatorN O real adventure, perhaps, in our own time has streak the imagination of Englishmen as more romantic thanithe voyage of the old Shetland woman, who, left alone on the smack '...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE CREATION OF AN IRISH PEASANT- PROPRIETARY. [TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR. " ] Six,âWill you allow an Irish land agent of long experience, and holding upwards of...
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DR. MAGEE ON PATRONAGE.
The SpectatorITo THE EDITOR Or THE " Sexcrrros.1 SIR, â In your article of February 6th under the above heading, I think that you hardly do justice to the efforts of others who have...
RAILWAY EXPROPRIATIONS.
The SpectatorITO THE EDITOR OF THE " SrEOTATOH."l SIR,âYOur correspondent, "A Liberal Surveyor," in replying to my letter on this subject, says that I have made two " inex- cusable...
LORD GOWER'S DESPATCHES.
The Spectatorpro THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "' SIR,âThe very competent critic who reviewed my " Despatches of Lord Gower," in the Spectator of December 26th, finds fault with me for not...
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CARLOS VON GAGERN.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] SIR,âIn the interesting review of Carlos von Gagern's " Todte and Lebende," in the Spectator of February 6th, there occurs the statement...
MODERN NAAMANS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR-1 Strt,âIt is an old truth that when men are bidden to do "some great thing," they usually perform it with alacrity ; but when recommended...
THE CATHOLIC CHURCH IN IRELAND.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. - '] SIR,-31r. Gladstone has formed his Cabinet, and his purpose, so far as the Irish Question is concerned, is proclaimed in the appointment...
HOLBERG.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,âIn your review of Dr. Brandes' recent Life of Holberg, which appeared in the Spectator of February 6th, you introduce a kind...
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ART.
The SpectatorMR. MARSHALL'S DRAWINGS OF LONDON.t MR. HERBERT MARSHALL is an artistâa water-colour artistâof whom little is generally known, though we have for many years praised his...
POETRY.
The SpectatorSomewhere at altar kneeling, Bride, with her maidens round ; While the great organ, pealing, Fills all the Abbey with sound: Somebody's hand hers holding, Pledging a life for...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorSCHERER'S " HISTORY OF GERMAN LITERATURE."⢠PaorEssoa S IIERER'S History of German Literature has obtained deserved popularity in Germany, where it is regarded as the most...
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DOUBLE CUNNING"
The SpectatorDIVIDING novels into those whose especial strong point is either plot, study of character, humour, ideas, or action, we class Double Cunning amongst the latter, and heartily...
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WALTER CRANE'S "THE SIRENS THREE."* THESE pages of illustrated poem
The Spectatorare reprinted from the English Illustraleel Magazine, in which they have appeared in parts. They are now collected into a volume which is dedicated to William Morris. It is, in...
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BISHOP ALEXANDER'S SERMONS.* THE Bishop of Derry evidently speaks with
The Spectatorabsolute simplicity and sincerity when.he says in his preface that even if he had been able to publish these sermons in the form in which they * The Great Question., and other...
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OTHMAR.* " Our ," whatever one may think of her
The Spectatorstories from other points of view, is a past mistress of picturesque description, both of persons and places ; no phase of natural beauty escapes her notice, and all through her...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorThe American Caucus Syâ¢tem. By George W. Layton. (G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York, U.S.A.)âThis is an interesting little book in its way, though rather disappointing at the...
The Growth of the Homeric Poems. By George Wilkins, M.A.
The Spectator(Hodges, Figgie, and Co., Dublin.)âMr. Wilkins recognises a Homer to whom the world owes " the origination and partial development of the ` Iliad,' and perhaps of the Odyssey....
The eighth and ninth divisional volumes of Messrs. Cassell's admir-
The Spectatorable Encyclopaedic Dictionary, bringing the work down to the begin- ning of " P," have now reached us. It is enough to say that in all respects, but particularly in accurate,...
The Bronte Family. By Francis A. Leyland. 2 vole. (Hurst
The Spectatorand Blackett.)âThis book refers chiefly, as we are informed on the title- page, to Bramwell Bronte, the brother who makes so nnpleasing an appearance in Mrs. Gaskell's " Life...
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The Mothers' Manual of Children's Diseases. By Charles West, M.D.
The Spectator(Longmans.)âThis volume is the outcome of a very extensive experience as a " children's doctor." The anther explains that he does not intend it as a "handbook for the...
The Golden Gate and Silver Steps. By Shirley Hibberd. (E.
The SpectatorAllen.)â" A prosey-versey medley for young people of all ages" is the description which Mr. Hibberd gives of his book, and we do not know that we can better it. We may say,...
good story, though we are kept longer than necessary before
The Spectatorwe come to it. Mr. Matthews pads out his book with descriptions of social life, and, indeed, with another love-story. He gives it also a certain flavour by introducing the topic...
Our Dwellings : Healthy and Unhealthy. By Catherine M. Beaton.
The Spectator(Longmans )âMrs. Buckton's volume is a reprint of lectures delivered to girls attending the Board schools of Leeds. She is very strongly in favour of practical teaching of her...
The Science of Business. By Roderick H. Smith. (G. P.
The SpectatorPutnam's Sons, New York and London.)âMr. Smith begins with two scientific chapters on the " Direction of Motion " and the " Rhythm of Motion." Then come commercial facts and...
Westminster Abbey. By M. C. and E. T. Bradley. With
The SpectatorMae- trations and architectural chapter by Mr. A. T. Grahame, and intro- ductory chapter by the Dean. (Pall Malt Gazette Office.)âWe can praise everything about this guide...
Our Friends in Paradise; or, Sanctorum Dulcis Meneoria. (Wells Gardner,
The SpectatorHeston, and Co.)âThe Bishop of Lichfield has written an emphatic commendation of this volume. It contains a text for every day in the year, and one or more extracts of a...
The Seasons Pictured. By Richard A. Proctor. (Longmans.)â This is
The Spectatora useful contribution to popular astronomy. It givesâ(1), A number of "sun-views of the earth," i.e., representations of the aspect presented by the earth to the sun on...
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POETRY.âClaudis and Fide, and other Poems. By Aston Clair. (London
The SpectatorLiterary Society.)âThis volume is dedicated to the memory of John Keats, poet ; a name which the reading of the poems themselves did not suggest to us. The author is not...
We have also before us a series of Lengman's New
The SpectatorReaders. (Long- mans and Co.)âThe volumes are a First Primer, in which are com- bined the " alphabetic " and " look-and-say " methods of teaching reading ; picturesâand very...
We have received a series of Standard Readers, edited by
The SpectatorProfessor Meiklejohn. ( Blackwold and Sons.)âThese are six volumes, adapted for the six standards of primary schools. The choice of extracts, so far as we have been able to...
A Digest of English History, 1760.1815. By M. Gutteridge, B.A.
The Spectator(Relfe Brothers.)âThis is one of the many books called forth by the examination system. It seems carefully done ; and read after the student has gone through some standard...