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Lord A. Clinton's amendment was so long as to be
The Spectatoralmost a speech in itself, but the noble hero of the Strand Theatre so quickly betook himself to his MS. that it would have been better if he could, after the American fashion,...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorR. DISRAELI'S first act as Premier has been to write a letter to the newspapers in answer to Lord Russell's charge against his Edinburgh speech. This was a mistake of Mr....
Mr. Mill made a good but rather too abstract speech,
The Spectatorwhich was heard with considerable impatience. He called the Ministerial proposals "a beggarly account of empty boxes," and held that a Conservative Government which affected to...
Mr. Lowe spent the greater part of his telling speech
The Spectatorin reinforcing Lord Mayo. He said, "We get into this vicious circle,—Ireland is miserable because capital can't be brought into it to take the people from the cultivation of the...
He was followed by Mr. Neate, who represented the Irish
The Spectatorland- lords as the salt of that unhappy land,—a salt for which he pro- phesied an increasing, not diminishing, savour,--and characterized Mr. John S. Mill as a great deal more...
Of Lord Mayo's dreary and verbose statement we have spoken
The Spectatorat length elsewhere. Mr. Horsman described it rather felicitously when he said that Lord Mayo appeared to be looking everywhere for his policy without being able to find it....
Mr. Maguire introduced the Irish debate on Tuesday in a
The Spectatorspeech not without ability, but much tainted with declamation. He described how the country was now held, —gunboats in every river and harbour ; police offices easemated with...
The adjourned debate on Thursday was languid, though con- siderable
The Spectatormen took part in it. It was opened by Mr. Horsman, who always speaks in a statesmanlike tone, though never in a statesmanlike way, and consisted mainly of an amplification of...
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The trial of President Johnson was fixed for Friday, the
The Spectator13th, but up to the evening of that day no telegram announcing the event bad been published. The country, which at first was excited, has since become perfectly tranquil, gold...
Mr. Hunt was re-elected on Saturday without opposition, and addressed
The Spectatorhis constituents at Kettering, Northamptonshire. He appeared, like his leader, in the totally unaccustomed character of Uriah Heep, which must have sat oddly on his jolly...
Mr. Hardy wound up the night's debate in a temperate
The Spectatorbut thoroughly Conservative speech, full of points, which told in the House, but do not tell outside it. He declared tenant right, like Mr. Goldwin Smith, to be "either illusion...
The new Bill to enfranchise public meetings has been laid
The Spectatorbefore the French Chamber. It authorizes public meetings, if held under cover, if limited to a definite subject, if attended by an official "in his insignia," if dissolved when...
On Thursday the Oxford and Cambridge Conservatives, headed by Lord
The SpectatorCranborne, waited on the Archbishop of Canterbury to pour out their dread of the Oxford Tests' Abolition Bill, and requested Dr. Longley to oppose it with all his power. This...
It ham been finally decided to make Mgr. Lucien Bonaparte,
The Spectatorgrandson of Lucien, brother of Napoleon I., a Cardinal, the nomination being made in some specially honorific manner He will be the youngest Cardinal in College, being only...
The Scotch Reform Bill was read a second time on
The SpectatorMonday. The debate was dull, but was marked by one incident. Mr. Laing, speaking, as he said, on behalf of the moderate Liberals of Scotland, offered to accept the Bill if...
It is stated that Dr. Miller, the eminent chemical professor,
The Spectatorand proposed as the Conservative candidate for the London University, has joined Sir John Lubbock's committee, as the Conservatives have given up the idea of starting a...
Mr. Justice Lush has given a decision very important to
The SpectatorTrades' Unions. One Dodd, secretary to the House Painters' Association, forged a pass-book, and so abstracted about 800/. of the society's money. He avows that he was tempted by...
The Archbishop of York has published his correspondence with Bishop
The SpectatorGray,—two letters of which,—stated by Bishop Gray to have no importance or bearing on the controversy,—are now published for the first time. This curious statement of Bishop...
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We publish elsewhere a report from a correspondent of unusual
The Spectatorexperience upon the present condition of Orissa. It will be seen that the original accounts of that catastrophe were not exag- gerated, that the old have disappeared from the...
The Rev. A. J. Plow, the clergyman of Todmorden who
The Spectatorwas cut down by Miles Weatherhill, has since died, as has the child, which was but three weeks old when its mother was attacked, and died of the necessary separation. Mr. Plow,...
The debate on the Alabama claims raised by Mr. Shaw
The SpectatorLefevre yesterday week elicited a very conciliatory speech from Lord -Stanley, who argued that to arbitrate on the right of England to 'recognize the Confederates as...
We are requested to state that the Dean and Chapter
The Spectatorof Westminster are anxious to give every facility for seeing all parts of the Abbey to all persons of whose respectability and trust- worthiness they can be assured. The nave...
The Metropolitan District Railway Company have invited sub- scriptions for
The Spectator400,0001. Perpetual 6 per Cent. Debenture Stock, under the borrowing powers of their:special Acts. The issue will be made at par, and the various instalments payable will extend...
Yesterday and on Friday week the leading Foreign Bonds left
The Spectatoroff at the annexed quotations :— Friday, March 6. Friday, March 13, Spanish New ... Turkish 6 per Cents., 1858 ... If „ 1862 United States 5.20 ' s • .• ••• ••• ••• ••• 151...
The market for Home Stocks has been unusually steady dur-
The Spectatoring the week, the opening price for Consols having been 93 to 93i, at which they closed last evening. Reduced and New 'rhreeper Cents. were 91k, 92; Exchequer Bills, 10s. to...
The new Chancellor of the Exchequer, having taken his seat
The Spectatoron Monday night after re-election, proposed, and promptly lost, a small Government measure,—for transferring to the Consolidated Fund eertain sums received for Irish fees,...
Great Eastern...
The SpectatorFriday, March C. 301 Friday, March 13. 31 Great Northern ••• 107 105* Great Western 461 ••• 47/ Lancashire and Yorkshire ... 1261 1253 London and Brighton ......
Mr. Gladstone's Bill for abolishing compulsory Church- Rates passed through
The Spectatorcommittee on Wednesday, by a majority which renders it most likely that it will not this time be rejected by the Lords. The principal clause wee/carried by 167 to 30, -and so we...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorLORD MAYO'S IRISH PROGRAMME. y r R. MAGUIRE'S too declamatory eloquence, the dropping I fire of Mr. Neate's intellectual pea-shooter as it rained its harmless artillery on Mr....
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/UR. DISRAELI AS HEAD OF THE CHURCH.
The SpectatorW E have at last got, we will not exactly say a theolo- gian, but a man of a highly speculative turn of mind, who has always considered theology as one of the highest subjects...
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THE GRAND REMONSTRANCE FROM NOVA SCOTIA.. T HERE is going to
The Spectatorbe trouble, it may be serious trouble, about this Nova Scotian business. The 350,000 of ' inhabitants in that colony were, it will be remembered, always more or less hostile to...
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THE PRESIDENT'S COUP D'ETAT.
The SpectatorT HE public in this country seems still unable to understand the impeachment of President Johnson. The event has startled it into a closer attention to American politics, but it...
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THE GRIEVANCE OF THE CUSTOM-HOUSE CLERKS.
The SpectatorT HE Custom-House Clerks, a great body of Government servants, who collect a revenue of 22,000,000/. a year, who prepare all our commercial statistics, and who, in certain...
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WHAT TO DO WITH OUR SONS.
The Spectator" IT is all very well," said a professional man the other day I whom the writer was congratulating on his apparent chances of promotion, "but I don't see what to do with my...
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MR. BANDMANN IN N.4RCISSE. T HE English Stage has got a
The Spectatorreal accession in Mr. Bandmann. It is true that the first impression he makes upon the spectator is that of a Mr. Fechter on a diminished and somewhat confined scale,—Mr....
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excellent and suited to the country and the people, has
The Spectatorbeen renewed in its integrity for another period of thirty years. This has caused a feeling of security which has not been without a beneficial influence in the rapid...
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THE DEAN OF CORK ON THE IRLSII CHURCH.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SI11,—I see that you have done me the honour of noticing in a lead- ing article in the Spectator of last Saturday a reply of mine to...
[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."]
The SpectatorSin,—Allow me to point out a mistake into which your reviewer has fallen when commenting upon the Dies kw in your last number. He remarks upon the fifth stanza,— " Tura liber...
DIES IRS.
The Spectator[To THE EDrfOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,—In the able article in to-day's Spectator comparing the Dies Iris with the verses suggested by it in the Lay of the Last Minstrel,...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorMR. DARWIN'S LAST WORK.* WHATEVER view we may take of what is now commonly called Darwinism, there is one aspect of it under which the thanks of all persons are especially due...
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MEG.*
The Spectator" SHE was not yet seventeen, and beautiful with a beauty rarely seen in such places as Swamp Town. It was a face that would have been a fortune to a tragic actress—mobile,...
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MR. SWINBURNE'S ESSAY ON BLAKE.*
The SpectatorMn. SWINBURNE has made a profound study of Blake, and there is no one whom it takes more effort to make a pro- found study of than Blake, in spite of his unquestionable genius...
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PRINCE HENRY THE NAVIGATOR.* [SEcosrm NOTICE.]
The SpectatorIN a former article we gave an account of the life of Prince Henry, and an outline of the geographical discoveries immediately due to his personal exertions ; we propose now to...
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DE FOE.* Tins edition of a book which has perhaps
The Spectatorhad more readers and given more delight than any other fiction in the language belongs to the famous " Globe " series of popular authors. The preface, gracefully written, but...
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The Matrimonial Vanity Fair. By the Author of Whitefiiars. 3
The Spectatorvols. (Skeet.)—The title of this novel does not lead us to expect much from the book itself, but even our moderate expectations are disap- pointed. Alternately vulgar and...
Debrett's Illustrated Peerage, Baronetage, and Knigkage. — It is dial- cult s if
The Spectatornot impossible, to give the palm to any of the many Peerages which now compete for public favour. One is cheap, another full, one contains some genealogical information, another...
CURRENT LITERATURE •
The SpectatorLift and Correspondence of Richard Whately, D.D., late Archbishop of Dublin. By E. Jane Whately. New Edition, in 1 vol. (Longmans.)— Miss Whately tells us in this new, cheaper,...
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Miltoni Samson Agonistes. Grieco reddidit Georgius, Bare Lyttolton. (Macmillan.) Enochus
The SpectatorArden. Poema Tennysonianwn. Latine redditum. (Moxon.)—Lord Lyttelton's Greek version of Samson Agonistes and Mr. Selwyn's Latin version of Enoch Arden come to us just at the...
A True Portrait of the Primitive Church. By E. D.
The SpectatorCree. (Murray.) —This is an interesting little book, but it would be better if its tone were not so controversial, and if Mr. Cree did not constantly attempt to describe by...
with interest to the fntnre works of the author. But
The Spectatorthe faults of the book are grave, and we are, perhaps, more disappointed by it than we should be if it was far weaker. Mr. Speight does some things so well that we are inclined...
The Elements of Maritime International Law. By William de Burgh.
The Spectator(Longmans.)—Everything treated of by Mr. de Burgh is made perfectly plain and intelligible, so that hia book may be read after the popular writings and studied after the...
Charlotte Burney. By K. S. Macquoid. 3 vols. (Tinsley.)—The young
The Spectatorgirl who gives her name to this story is almost in love with an artist in the first chapter of the first volume, and is engaged to him in the last chapter of the third. The...
How to Develop Productive Industry in India and the East.
The SpectatorEdited by P. R. Cola. (Virtue.)—In this work the late proprietor of the Ark- wright Cotton Mills in Bombay gives an account of the processes of manufacture required for cotton,...
A Stormy Lif e; or, Queen Margaret's Journal. By Lady
The SpectatorGeorgiana Fullerton. 3 vols. (Bentley.)—It seems ungracious to say that the pains Lady Georgiana Fullerton has taken with this novel have not pro- duced an adequate result....
" iirriatles," or Hints to Sportsmen and Travellers upon Dress,
The SpectatorEquip- ment, Armament, and Camp Life. By H. A. L., "The Old Shekarry." (Saunders and Otley.)—This book is written for those whose lines are cast in out-of-the-way places, and...