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The German Emperor, always restless when the world's eyes are
The Spectatorturned away from himself, has called its attention in a rather unusual way. He has telegraphed to the Czar and the Mikado requesting permission to invest General Stossel and...
The French are greatly interested in a " Report "
The Spectatorsaid to have been submitted to the Japanese Govern- ment by General Kodama, Governor of Formosa, before the war. In this paper the General accepts " war with the Western Powers...
Friday's papers contained some interesting figures as to the materiel
The Spectatorcaptured at Port. Arthur, which showed that the surrender of that fortress was not caused by the failure of ammunition. Over eighty thousand shells have been given up, as well...
The Echo de Paris has published an extraordinary state- ment
The Spectatoralleged to have been made to M. Marcel Hutin by Vice- Admiral Dubassoff, the Russian Commissioner on the North Sea Inquiry. Briefly summarised, it amounts to this,—that Admiral...
T HE news from the Far East may be summed up
The Spectatorin a sentence. The Czar and his advisers have decided that the war must go on till " a great Russian victory " has been obtained, and the Mikado and his advisers have accepted...
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On Monday the International Commission of Inquiry into the North
The SpectatorSea incident resumed its sittings. Baron von Spann presided, and proposed as President Admiral Fournier, which was unanimously agreed to. The French delegate then took the...
citizenship with an average income of £150 (equal to about
The Spectator£70 in this country), or prior enrolment in the First Volksraad list of voters. The High Commissioner declared himself generally in sympathy with. these principles, which seem...
The Government of M. Combes has sustained what may prove
The Spectatora serious defeat. The Assembly commenced a new Session on Tuesday, and it was expected that M. Brisson would be reappointed President of the Chamber without serious opposition....
The Pashas in Constantinople are, it is stated, greatly encouraged
The Spectatorby the fall of Port Arthur, and inclined to restore complete order in Macedonia by severe measures. They have appointed officers to command the troops there whose record is One...
MERCHANDISE. BULLION AND SPUDS.
The SpectatorExports Exports Imports. (British). (Total). Imports. Exports. (L) Dec., 1904... 52,845,366... 28,072,134... 34,512,410... 4,957,645... 4,294,606 „ 1903... 52,319,618......
The meeting of Parliament has been fixed for February 14th.
The SpectatorWe are not prepared to say, with some political meteorologists, that an impending Dissolution is foreshadowed by the com- parative lateness of this date, but undoubtedly omens...
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Mr. Chamberlain, of course, repeated his old fallacies that if
The Spectatorwe taxed the products of countries with high tariffs we should compel them to reduce them, and that Preferential duties would bind Colonies which may hereafter contain fifty...
Mr. Balfour was the principal guest at a great Unionist
The Spectatorbanquet at Glasgow on Thursday night, and delivered an interesting and important speech. Deliberately avoiding controversial subjects, Mr. Balfour confined himself to eulogising...
The decision of the Nottingham and Notts Liberal Unionist Association
The Spectatorlast Saturday to ally itself with the reconstituted Liberal Unionist Council has led to the resignation of Lord Belper, the president ; Sir Charles Seely, vice-president; and...
Mr. Chamberlain's visit to Preston has not been altogether a
The Spectatorsuccess. The Conservative Associations declined to pledge themselves to his policy, and even after his " great " speech of Wednesday the resolution carried only committed the...
The general meeting of the Classical Association of England and
The SpectatorWales was concluded on Saturday last, when the Lord Chancellor, as president, delivered an excellent address. In particular, he pleaded for a judicious extension of the...
Two by-elections have been held since our last issue. The
The Spectatorresult of the polling in the Stalybridge division was de- clared shortly before 10 p.m. on Saturday last, the figures being: Mr. J. F. Cheetham (L.), 4,029; Mr. Travis-Clegg...
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Mr. Chamberlain every credit for dearness and consistency of intention.
The SpectatorHis points are the same as he has made in the past on many platforms,—Retaliation, to secure the revision of foreign tariffs : Colonial Preference to increase our Colonial trade...
T HE internal condition of Russia, as produced or exasperated by
The Spectatorthe war, is by far the most interest- ing question now discussed in Europe, and the one which presses most closely on all diplomatists. It is clear that the struggle in the Far...
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T N courage Mr. Chamberlain is not wanting, and he exhibited
The Spectatorthat virtue when he arranged to add Preston to the list of his missionary engagements. For from the outset of his Fiscal campaign it has been generally discerned that the...
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T WO letters which appeared. in the Times of Tuesday were
The Spectatorcalculated to cause, and probably have caused, some uneasiness among the contributors to the various funds for the relief of the unemployed. The first called attention to the...
W E have never been able to join with much heart
The Spectatorin the speculations of those who believe, as thousands of excellent and thoughtful men undoubtedly do believe, that war will by and by be extinguished. We doubt, to begin with,...
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T HE biographical dictionaries say little about Louise- Michel, — perhaps they never
The Spectatorwill, for legally recognised position or official rank is often thought better worth chronicling than sheer upside-down careers such as hers: But what an amazingly interesting...
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P ROFESSOR VAMBERY in the entertaining volume of reminiscences which he
The Spectatorhas lately published quotes the proverb, Qui multum peregrinatur, raro sanctifteatur, as the apology for any shortcomings which may pertain to the wanderer. That sanctity and...
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H E must be a man of dull appreciation who fails
The Spectatorto give a due weed of admiration to the historian of Halicar- nassus ; and yet this most charming and genial of classical writers labours under grave imputations of want of...
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(TO THE EDITOR OD THE " SPECTATOR:1
The SpectatorSin,—You are quite right in saying in reply to Orr Rope, Lethbridge (Spectator, January 7th) that my letter had nothing whatever to do with the Cobden Club, but I am sorry that...
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[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR...] SIR,—The New York Evening
The SpectatorPost, I observe, is engaged in instituting an informal Referendum on the question of Tariff Revision. Its questions are being put, not, indeed, to the American public generally,...
Sia,—Sir Roper Lethbridge may be entitled to his little triumph
The Spectatorover Mr. Harold Cox in last week's Spectator on the point raised in Mr. Brodrick's speech at Shere. But, in common with other Tariff Reformers, he forgets that the Indian...
[To THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR.") Gilnin's list of
The Spectatorprices ruling in London, as com- pared with those in New York, in the Spectator of Decem- ber 31st, 1904, does not get us much "forrarder." It may be interesting, but is not...
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STE, — It may be presumptuous for a working man to attempt
The Spectatora criticism of an article in the Spectator. I do so with the greatest diffidence, hoping the while that the pen of a more ready writer will be wielded to some purpose in...
SIR,—May I be permitted to suggest, with great respect to
The SpectatorLord Colchester, that his letter in the Spectator of January 7th, although it asserts that the story of "the hungry forties" is irrelevant to the Fiscal question of the present...
Sm.,—In your article, " The Fall of Port Arthur," in
The Spectatorthe Spectator of January 7th, you say : " The place, remember, was not defended by Chinese or by natives of India, but by Russians"; and further down : " There is no State in...
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Sin,—In your sympathetic notice of the Jubilee book of the
The SpectatorWorking Men's College in last week's Spectator you question whether its students are indeed working men. As this is a matter of some importance to the College, I trust you will...
Sxn,—I have viewed with much interest the discussion arising out
The Spectatorof Dr. Rose's " Napoleonic Studies " on the question of Canning, Denmark, and Tilsit. Having only just returned from abroad, Dr. Rose's essay is not to hand, though I believe it...
SIR,—In the search for light and truth I have steadily
The Spectatorread the Spectator for years, and do sometimes find those pearls of great price in its pages; but the writer of an article on " Employment and Extravagance" in your issue for...
.SIB.,, --In the interesting article under the above heading in the
The SpectatorSpectator of December 31st, 1904, the writer, in suggesting certain methods as to the disposal of Fulham Palace to the best advantage (assuming that London House is...
Sra,—By way of illustration on your criticism of Mr. Balfour's
The Spectatorattitude, I send you the following quotation from Fielding :—" Surely the actions of men seem to be the justest interpreters of their thoughts, and the truest standard by which...
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[To THE EDITOR OF THE 'quitter/mm.1 Srn,—In an article published
The Spectatorin your columns last year the writer regretted that Major Hale ' s work, "How to Tie Salmon-Flies, " was quite out of print and scarce. I should be obliged if you will allow me...
Sra, — The second of Mr. R. E. Bartlett ' s epigrams, of which
The Spectatorpart is quoted in your issue of December 31st, 1904, is not accurately given. The admonition and the reply should, I am confident, run as follows :— " To A SCHOLAR OF YE...
pro THE EDITOR OW THZ "SPECTATOR. "] entirely agree with your
The Spectatorcorrespondent " A. G. W. " (Spectator, December 31st, 1904), whom I recognise under his initials as an old friend of my own and of the late Rev. R. E. Bartlett. I knew the...
S In, While you are on the subject of Old Balliol
The Spectatorepigrams, may I give you the version of the " Port and Porter " which occurs in my father ' s commonplace-book ? He took his B.A. degree in 1848, so his authority is that of a...
The Rev. Dr. Abbott ... el 1 0 A. Frewin
The Spectator/2 2 0 Margaret Evans ... 1 1 0 E. F. C. Roger. ... 10 0 W. IL Cooper 1 1 0 William Ransom, DR., I.P. 2 2 0 2 ... 2 0 ... 1 1 0 We are asked by the "County Gentleman" to...
[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOIL1 Sm,—In your issue
The Spectatorfor November 12th, 1904, you were good enough to devote considerable space to a review of " The Master of Game, " in which the oldest treatise on hunting, written by the...
" The hues of youth upon a brow of woe,
The SpectatorWhich men called old two thousand years ago : Match me such marvel, save in Eastern clime,— A rose-red city—half as old as Time." They will be found in his poems. " Petra " is...
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THE first thing that strikes the visitor to the International
The SpectatorExhibition at the New Gallery is that English art is repre- sented by the work of a very small circle ; and the next thing the visitor naturally asks himself is whether this is...
From their dusk an orange glow shines forth Promise of
The Spectatorfriendly fires, the close-drawn ring of chairs, And stories of old ghosts ; the musing cigarette, And the soft rippling of women's laughter: A small oasis, wherein haply one Out...
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WHEN some ten years ago the late Lord Coleridge, then
The SpectatorChief Justice of England, died, a great figure passed from the stage of English law, letters, and society. There is, as has often been noticed, much in common between the...
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IH the December number of the Fortnightly Review Mr. W.
The SpectatorTeignmouth Shore takes the excessive production of books dealing with recent developments in the Far East as typical of the congested book market. No doubt the supply of such...
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A NATION is rarely quite just to its typical men.
The SpectatorPowerful as they are in their day, posterity tends to forget merits which have a real or fancied resemblance to its own, and confines its admiration to the meteoric beings who...
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ONE'S first emotion on reading Miss Sorabji's studies of Indian
The Spectatorchildren is pure and simple delight ; one's second, amazement that nobody has ever had the happy thought before of opening up this rich field of infant character and charm. The...
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IT is impossible to render full justice to Mr. Edward
The SpectatorNoble's striking story in this column. Viewed simply as a story it can only appeal to a limited circle of readers, partly because it is destitute of the ordinary romantic...
• The Edge of Circumstance: a Story of the Sea.
The SpectatorBy Edward Noble. London: w. • Blackwood add Soar. Lthid realises that the action takes place under the Union Jack, not under the Stars and Stripes. Through the medium of an...
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Buckholt " is a large farm, and is most successfully
The Spectatormanaged by the wife of its owner, "Bray of Buckholt," whose husband at the opening of the book has left her keeping house for his father, while he himself has sought his fortune...
The Career of Harold Endsleigh. By Walter B. Harris. (W.
The SpectatorBlackwood and Sons. 6s.)—The figure of the young man who is eager to break the narrow bounds of life in England, and to embark rather vaguely on a larger sphere, is very true to...
Historical Mysteries. By Andrew Lang. (Smith, Elder, and Co. Os.
The Spectatornet.)—Mr. Lang has continued the entertaining series of historical mysteries which he began in his "Valet's Tragedy" in a volume of less detail and a more popular character....
HILTON OF "THE LIGHT GREEN."
The Spectatorsonally, we are inclined to think not. Anyhow, we have nothing but congratulations to offer Sir Robert Edgcumbe on his pions act of homage to the memory of his friend and...
The Prisoner of Mademoiselle. By Charles G. D. Roberts. (A.
The SpectatorConstable and Co. 6s.)—Besides throwing very interesting side- lights on the history of Canada under French rule, Mr. Charles Roberts tells us a charming love-story in his new...
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John Knox : his Ideas and Ideals. By James Stalker,
The SpectatorD.D. (Hodder and Stoughton. 3s. 6d.)—Professor Stalker makes a fitting contribution to the celebration of the fourth centenary of John Knox's birth in this book (we are...
The Case for Pres. Imports. By Julius Bertram. (Stephen Austin
The Spectatorand Sons, Hertford.)—Mr. Bertram, who is the Liberal candidate for North Herta, has been contributing to the Hertz Mercury a series of short articles on the Fiscal controversy,...
[Under this heading we notice such Books of the task
The Spectatoras haw 1106 been reserved for review in other forms.] An Outline of the History of Eolithic Flint Implements. By Benjamin Harrison, (The Author, Ightham, Kent. 6d.)—Mr. Harrison...
we are compelled to indicate rather than appreciate the treatment
The Spectatorthey receive. Among the most valuable contributions we should be inclined to put that of Mr. W. C. Allen on the question, " Are the Gospels True ?" a very powerful argument, as...
Memorials of a Warwickshire Parish. By Robert Hudson. (Methuen and
The SpectatorCo. 15s. net.)—Mr. Hudson laboured at this book for many years, but died before it was published. It now appears under the editorship of his son. The " Warwickshire parish" is...
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An Unwritten Chapter in the History of Education. By H.
The SpectatorKingsmill Moore, D.D. (Macmillan and Co. 7s. Gd. net.)—This " unwritten chapter," the story of twenty years of effort to con- ciliate the warring denominations and parties in a...
Literary Landmarks of the Scottish Universities. By Laurence Hutton. (G.
The SpectatorP. Putnam's Sons. 5s. net.)--Mr. Hutton labours under a considerable disadvantage in the scarcity of materials. The Scottish Universities have not been wanting in distinguished...
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology. Vol. XV. (Longmans and Co.
The SpectatorGs. 6d. net.)—The most generally interesting of the five essays contained in this volume is the first, dealing with the curious question of the religious position of Boethius as...
Life and Times of Sir Richard Southey. By the Hon.
The SpectatorAlex. Wilmot. (Sampson Low, Marston, and Co. 15s. net.)—Richard Southey was a lad of twelve when he went out to South Africa with his father (a first-cousin one degree removed...
The Privilege of Motherhood. By Lucie Simpson. (Greening and Co.
The Spectator2s. 6d.)—This little book is full of good sense. Much that concerns the welfare of a child depends on causes out of control, or " even knowledge." " You should begin with the...
Mathieson's Handbook for Investors for 1905. (2s. 6d. net.) — A useful
The Spectatorbook considering its size, but, like others which aim at getting too much in a small space, incomplete. We also notice some inaccuracies. The particulars for 1904 are made up to...
Japan: the Place and the People. By G. Waldo Browne.
The Spectator(Sampson Low, Marston, and Co. 16s. net.)—Mr. Browne's book was copyrighted, wo see, in what we:presume was its first form, as early as 1901. It was anyhow written before the...
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The Scottish Church and University Almanac, 1905. (Macniven and Wallace,
The SpectatorEdinburgh. ls. net.)—In this volume we have an interesting statement of the proceedings which resulted in the 6.mous judgment of the House of Lords. In the Second Division of...
Book Prices Current. (Elliot Stock. 27s. 6d. net.)—This, the eighteenth
The Spectatorvolume of the series, shows a not very prosperous condi- tion of the book market. The average price fetched by the 6,275 lots was £2 9s. 3d. As usual, many of the items are...
Papers of the British School at Borne, Vol. IL (22
The SpectatorAlbemarle Street. 30s.)—This volume consists of a reproduction of a hundred and seventy drawings of Roman monuments, dating from the early part of the sixteenth century, and...