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Lord Bowen, in former years one of the most brilliant
The Spectatorof the contributors to this journal, died early on Tuesday morn- ing after several weeks of serious illness, to the universal regret of all who knew him and within a few months...
The Clerical party in Hungary has received a severe blow.
The SpectatorFor some reason, to us inexplicable, they not only demand a religions marriage of all faithful Catholics, which is, of course, in accordance with the tenets of their Church, but...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE Budget is fixed for Monday night, and the public interest in it is for once so keen that the speculation as to its details is almost endless. The secret has been very care-...
King Humbert of Italy has made an effort to approach
The SpectatorFrance, through an interviewer on the staff of the Figaro, --an effectual if not perhaps a dignified way. The King in his speech GO the reporter denies absolutely that Italy...
NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS.
The SpectatorWith the "SPECTATORS" of Saturday, April 28th, will be issued, gratis, a SPECIAL LITERARY SUPPLEMENT, the outside pages of which will be devoted to Advertisements. To secure...
The Press of Europe is jubilant over a victory won
The Spectatorby the journals over the Hungarian Parliament. The reporters, it appears, had access to the lobbies of the Lower House, and either formed acquaintance with the Members, or...
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The Moplah rising in Malabar, reported this week, is not
The Spectatora new symptom of discontent. Though originally Hindoo converts, they are the most fanatic Mussulmans in the world,. firmly believing that whenever they die in battle with the...
On Tuesday, the House of Commons began the discussion of
The Spectatorthe Navy Estimates. Mr. Arnold-Forster made a speech. which deserved the praise it obtained from all sides. The programme was, he considered, a very fair one.. He did not...
The proceedings of the Board of Conciliation, recently established to
The Spectatorsettle coalminers' disputes, have been roughly interrupted. Lord Shand, the chairman, declined, it seems, to place the right to a" living wage " among the "Rules " of the Board,...
Mr. Balfour made a speech at Bradford on Wednesday in'
The Spectatorfavour of Lord Randolph Churchill's candidature for the- Central Division of Bradford, which now returns Mr. Shaw- Lefevre. He endeavoured to imitate the provident policy of...
On Monday, the Chancellor of the Exchequer moved for leave
The Spectatorto take Tuesday and the morning sitting of Friday for Government business for the rest of the Session, of which only one month had elapsed, and declared, frankly enough, that...
On Friday last, Mr. Woods raised the favourite question of
The Spectatorthe politically inept—the system of royalty-rents and wayleaves- in mines. They injured our great industries, and ought to be acquired by the State. Royalties in foreign...
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The Westminster Gazette was quite eloquent the other day on
The Spectatorthe indifference of the weekly journals to serving up their reviews of Mrs. Hamphry Ward's new novel hot and hot on the first practicable occasion, and contrasted this apathy...
An extraordinary story comes in from America, which may be
The Spectator'nonsense, and may be exceedingly important. A person named -Coxey, a Califoinian, who claims, according to the Herald, to be some sort of "Incarnation," has, it is said,...
The Convocation of the University of London, which met on
The SpectatorTuesday, was well advised in determining not to hinder the great experiment which the recent Commission has proposed in the way of combining a great teaching University in the...
The Anglican Bishop of Jerusalem, in a letter to Friday's
The Spectator'Times, gives some facts which show that the Jews are pouring into Palestine. About one hundred thousand Jews have -entered the Holy Land during the last few years, and " the...
The Government has, it is believed, resolved to retain Uganda,
The Spectatorgoverning it, in a sense, directly,—that is, through a Commissioner, who, with thirteen assistants, will control the King's native Administration. This is the Egyptian plan with...
On Sunday a meeting was held at Nenagh, which was
The Spectatorattended by both sections of the Anti-Parnellites,—i.e., by both Dillonites and Healyites. Mr. Healy made no reference to the split within a split, but stated that "in a few...
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MANNING THE NAVY. T HE debate on the Navy was satisfactory
The Spectatorexcept in one particular. It showed that the Admiralty is fully alive to the needs of the situation, and that a real, and not a mere Parliamentary, effort is being made to put...
TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE COMING CHANGE IN THE COMMONS. M ONDAY was a great era in the history of the House of Commons, though it was an era the meaning of which will not be sufficiently understood...
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LORD SHAND AND THE MINERS. T HE attack of the Nottinghamshire
The Spectatorminers on Lord Shand, Chairman of the Board of Conciliation re- cently appointed to settle coalminers' disputes, may prove a most disastrous incident in the great labour...
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MR. BALFOUR'S QUESTION.
The SpectatorI N his speech at Bradford on Wednesday Mr. Balfour, taking for granted that even his opponents admitted the necessity of a Second House of Legislature, as they themselves had...
SIR GERALD PORTAL ON UGANDA.
The SpectatorS IR GERALD PORTAL'S report on Uganda is a most characteristic document, characteristic, we mean, of the conclusions at which an able Englishman always arrives after he has...
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THE COUNTY COUNCIL BUDGET.
The SpectatorA N annual expenditure which only just falls short of two millions sterling is something of a draw upon the resources even of such a city as London. If, indeed, this were all...
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LORD BOWEN.
The SpectatorO F all those greater ornaments of our generation who touch life with the fine irony of a classical delicacy and depth, the most distinguished that was left to us has passed...
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HERONS AT HOME.
The Spectator" r E old order changeth," and it is with a tinge of melan- choly that the naturalist feels that altered times fore- shadow the future extirpation of the race of our largest...
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SCIENCE AND FOOD.
The SpectatorA S regards what are usually called " sanitary laws," the men of science will win. In Europe and North America, they have completely convinced the educated classes, including...
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THE FUTURE OF DINNER-PARTIES.
The SpectatorU NDER the heading " Fashionable Dinner-Parties," the Daily News had a good deal to say the other day about the favourite form of English hospitality. " Dinner," accord- ing to...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE BUSINESS OF PARLIAMENT. [To TIIE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—In your article in the Spectator of April 7th approving, upon the whole, of my proposal in the House of...
THE "RENT OF ABILITY."
The Spectator[To maa EDITOR OF THE " SPZCTLTOR:] SIR,—Mr. Bernard Shaw's reply to Mr. Mallock (Spectator, April 7th), which, whatever its effect on that gentleman, has certainly enhanced the...
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SCOTLAND.—WILD ANIMALS AND VAGRANTS:.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] Sin,—It was very interesting to many of us to read, in the- Spectator of April 7th, that, owing to the extension of deer– forests in...
THE CHARITY ORGANISATION SOCIETY.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR.") cannot expect you to afford me the space in your- columns necessary to go into the details connected with Mr.. Solly's letter in the...
SOMERSETSHIRE WITCHCRAFT.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR 01 THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR., —I have been much interested in " Witchcraft in Somer- set," as I was born in that county ; but for several years I have lived in...
[To THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR.") SIR, — Does not your
The Spectatorreview in the Spectator of April 7th miss the point of the Socialist criticism of Mr. Mallock ? The Socialist freely grants that " labour " is powerless without skilled...
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" BURDETT'S OFFICIAL INTELLIGENCE."
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR.'] SIR,—May I call your attention to two errors in the very kindly notice you were good enough to give last week of one of my books P The...
ice THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. " ] SIR,—There may be a
The Spectatorgreat seal of witchcraft in Somerset, but there is quite as mach, if not more, in Devon. The fol- lowing is a charm used in charming handkerchiefs to be tied round the limbs of...
A CORRECTION.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. " ] SIR,—The poem in Longman's, which you mention favourably in the Spectator of April 7th, is not, as you suppose, by me, but by my brother,...
POETRY.
The SpectatorT HORPE UNDE RW 0 OD. THERE is a house set on a lonely hill In a green Midland shire, It fronts the rolling uplands dim and still, It greets the westering firc. And pines of...
COLLEGE FOR MEN AND WOMEN. (ESTABLISHED 1864.) [To THE EDITOR
The SpectatorOP THE " SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—May we appeal to your readers who love intellectual pleasures, scientific research, and the like, to come and help us P We want help in our classes...
[To THZ EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. " ] SIR,—After reading the letters
The Spectatorof your correspondents upon " Witchcraft in Somersetshire," I questioned one of. my ser- vants, a most respectable woman, who has lived with me for ten years, upon the subject,...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorLADY GRANVILLE'S LETTERS.* WE presume that the increasing bulk of literature of which these volumes are but another specimen, finds more and more readers as time goes on. In...
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THE "SPECIAL COMMISSIONER" IN IRELAND.* THIS is pre-eminently the age
The Spectatorof the special reporter, of that type of impressionist expert in journalism whom we despatch, note-book in hand, to the seat of war, or to interview some magnate of politics,...
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THE JACOBEAN POETS.* IN The Jacobean Poets, Mr. Gosse undertakes
The Spectatorfor the first time to concentrate attention on the verse produced during the twenty-two years of the reign of James I., and observes that the unparalleled wealth of poetry in...
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DR. GEORGE MACDONALD'S AND MR. OSCAR WILDE'S FAIRY-TALES.* IT is
The Spectatornot often that we have a grievance against an author whose works we read with pleasure, but we own to a grievance now, in discovering that Dr. George Macdonald's book of...
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SOME VOLUMES OF SERMONS.* No apology is needed for a
The Spectatorvolume which supplies the reader with characteristic specimens of the teaching given from the . University pulpit of Cambridge. Most of these sermons attain a high level of...
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THE " SON OF THE MARSHES" AND HIS INTERPRETER.*
The SpectatorSHEPHERDS and sylvans have been so long the puppets and mouthpieces of authors and poets, that we must go back almost to the days of Theocritus, or of Amos among the herds- men...
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The Poet and the Man. By Francis H. Underwood. (Lee
The Spectatorand Shepard, Boston, U.S.)—Dr. Underwood seems to have known Lowell intimately. He saw much of him in private life, and he was his colleague in the conduct of the Atlantic...
William Blake. By Alfred T. Story. (Swan Sonnenschein and Co.)—This
The Spectatorbook deals in great part with the intellectual side of Blake's genius. Mr. Story is not an indiscriminate worshipper; but he goes beyond the limits of admiration which a quite...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorPlatonics. A Study by Ethel M. Arnold. (Osgood, McIlvaine, and Co.)—It is a question that will excite the curiosity of the reader of this impressive little tale, whether it was...
admirably suited for children's acting. But why does Miss Jackson
The Spectatorshrink from making Cinderella's sisters mutilate their feet in order to get them into the glass slipper ? That is a rose-waterish literary proceeding which children will hardly...
convenient one, for it shuts the mouth of any critic
The Spectatorwho might be disposed to comment on the probability of the incident. That is indeed a consideration with which it is needless to trouble oneself. We have a capital story, moving...
Joseph," and "Moses." There is no special novelty in the
The Spectatortreat- ment of these subjects ; and Dr. Blaikie, quite rightly, we think, ignores the criticism which would relegate the pre-Mosaic history to the region of legend. The...
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The Storehouse of General Information. " India — Morison." (Cas- sell and
The SpectatorCo.)—This work is in fact an encyclopaedia more after the manner of " Chambers's " than of the " Britannica." It consists, that is to say, not of elaborate monographs, but of...
The First Saints. By James Rankin, D.D. (Blackwood and Sons.)
The Spectator—These "Character and Church Studies in the New Testament" take a wider range than the limits of the Anglican Calendar. Dr. Rankin is himself a Presbyterian minister, and does...
Samuel Taylor Coleridge. By J. Dykes Campbell. (Macmillan.) —" This
The Spectatormemoir," writes Mr. Campbell in his preface, " is mainly a reproduction of the very able biographical sketch prefixed to the one-volume edition of Coleridge's Poetical Works,'...
We have received : — The City of London Directory, 1894. (W.
The SpectatorH. and L. Collingridge.)—This is the twenty-fourth annual issue of one of the most complete directories issued in this country. We have often borne testimony to the utility of...
A highly interesting volume, from the view both of Church
The Spectatorhistory and of the history of the English language, is The English Psalter of the Great Bible of 1539, edited, with Introduction and Notes, by John Earle, M.A. (John Murray). It...
Come Ye Apart. By the Rev. T. R. Miller, D.D.
The Spectator(Sunday School Union.)—This is a volume of " Daily Readings," arranged for the whole year. The author dates, we see, from Philadelphia, and this is a copyright edition. It is...
Wholly for God is "a series of extracts from the
The Spectatorwritings of William Law." (James Nisbet and Co.)—The Rev. Andrew Murray has made the selection, and adds an introduction which will serve as a profitable preparation for the...
Side - Lights. By James Runciman. (T. Fisher Unwin.)—Mr. Grant Allen writes
The Spectatoran appreciative memoir of his friend by way of preface to this volume. James Runciman was indeed, both in mind and person, a remarkable man, and his essays are characteristic of...