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The third reading of the Irish Crimes Bill was carried
The Spectatoryester- day week, after an adjourned debate commenced by Mr. Bryce, in one of his most interesting and thoughtful speeches, though it was not a speech in the drift of which we...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE deep alarm which was felt in Paris as to the possible conduct of the populace on July 14th proved groundless. It was believed that the Radicals, who are exasperated by...
In the House of Lords on Thursday, the Irish Crimes
The SpectatorBill was read a second time without a division, the Liberal Peers decamp- ing at the dinner - hour without providing for the continuance of the debate. Lord Ashbourne, in moving...
The Duke of Argyll made a very powerful speech in
The Spectatorreply to Lord Granville. He directed a sharp attack on Mr. Morley for insisting on the extreme incapacity of Irish Unions to rate themselves and to spend their rates...
On Saturday it was announced that the Unionist, Mr. Aird,
The Spectatorhad carried North Paddington by a diminished majority (418), against Mr. Routledge, the Home-ruler. Mr. Aird polled 2,230 votes, and Mr. Routledge 1,812. This time last year,...
Mr. Dillon made a fierce speech against the artificial and
The Spectatortottering Government of Ireland," propped on bayonets;" and Sir W. Harcourt was, as usual, as skilful as he could be in ridiculing and making sport of all the opinions which a...
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MR. E. RUSSELL ON THE CHURCH AND SOCIALISM.
The SpectatorW E took up Mr. Edward Russell's speech, or lecture, on the relations between the Church and Socialism, just delivered before the Diocesan Conference of Liverpool, with a...
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ELEPHANTS.
The SpectatorI T is possible, and even probable, that persons now living may see the extinction of the elephant as a wild animal. The operation of natural causes has already reduced the many...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR,
The SpectatorTHE OXFORD MODERN LANGUAGE STATUTE. (To VIE EDITOR Or THE " ErECTITOR.1 am afraid you have been misled on some points with regard to the statute about Modern Languages which...
ULSTER AND IRELAND.
The Spectator(To THE EDITOR Or THE ' SPECTATOR:1 SrmâI see a question raised in your issue of November 5th as to the relative strength of the Separatists and Unionists in Ulster. Should...
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THE NUMBER OF ANTI-HOME-RULERS IN IRELAND.
The Spectator[To Tax &mos 51 Tax " 8PECTATOli,"] Sta,âI do not recollect that the number of Unionists in Ireland has been stated, on any trustworthy authority, at two millions. I think the...
THE LATE MR. TURING.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THE SPECTATOR:1 Sue, â Will you allow one who sympathises with Mr. Abbey ' s concern for the credit of his old master, and who is acquainted with the facts,...
PUBLIC WORKS FOR THE UNEMPLOYED.
The SpectatorrTo THE EDITOR. OP TES â¢â¢ SPECTATOE."1 Ste., â As we see now so many suggestions that the State should provide suitable occupation for our unemployed labourers, some of...
MR. ARNOLD-FORSTER ' S LAND SCHEME. [To THE EDITOR Or THE "e5 - ser.roa.1
The SpectatorStn, â The only serious flaw you find in Mr. Arnold-Forster ' s scheme is that it would be necessary to fine the whole of Ireland by indirect taxation for the failure of any...
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MORTIFICATION.
The Spectator[To Tax EDITOR Or TUE 'â SPECT.011.1 - S111, â In his defence of the Roman Catholic view of mortifica- tion, Father Clarke relies upon the text,â" This kind goeth not out...
ART.
The SpectatorTHE MANCHESTER EXHIBITION, AND WHAT ITS ART COLLECTION SHOWS.âI. Now that the Manchester Jubilee Exhibition has closed its doors, onr readers may perhaps care to consider...
THE STARLINGS' AUTUMN MA_NCEUVRES. [To TEE EDITOR or rex "Sracreron.".1
The SpectatorSIR, â The graphic description of the autumn flight of starlings given by your correspondent, "J. D. D.," must have recalled to many of your readers the well-known lines of...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorMICHAEL FIELD'S NEW PLAYS.* THOSE who found in Michael Field's first work the evidence of strength and genius such as are very rare in our generation, will be confirmed in that...
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THE LATE DUO DE BROGUE.*
The Spectator[SECOND NOTICE.] Taeotortour the reigns of Louis XVIII. and Charles X., the Duo de Broglie, says the translator of the Souvenirs, â sat constantly on the benches of the...
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THE BEST PLAYS OF BEAUMONT AND FLETCHER.* TIIE names of
The Spectatorthe great twin dramatic poets from whose numerous plays two volumes of selections have recently been added to the "Mermaid Series," are probably more familiar to most English...
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The French Radicals on Monday raised a scene in the
The SpectatorChamber, M. Tony likvillon demanding that the Government should reassure them as to its attitude towards Liberalism. M. Cl6mencean declared that the Government was in league...
Ballantine, the Home-ruler, by the narrow majority of 16, Mr.
The SpectatorBallantine polling 4,229 votes, against 4,213 given for Colonel Eaton. This is a borough in which the Conservatives and the Liberal Unionists have not co-operated with any...
Mr. Gladstone made a speech in reply, and remarking that
The Spectatorhe had never had any but the most generous treatment from the United States, be vindicated the right of the United States to express their opinion on English political...
⢠The debate in the Commons on the second reading
The Spectatorof the new "Irish Land Bill began on Monday, and went on till Thursday night without much benefit to Ireland or mankind. The Bill, in truth, only admits of useful debate in...
In moving the Land Bill, Mr. Balfour renewed the assurance
The Spectatorthat the Government felt the necessity for a much larger measure, and subsequently explained to a deputation that this would be a great Purchase Bill, which, however, it was...
The struggle ended on Thursday in a collapse of the
The SpectatorOpposi- tion, the Bill passing its second reading without a division. The night was remarkable for two speeches, one by Lord Ran- dolph Churchill, and the other by Mr. Goschen....
On Saturday afternoon, a deputation from New York, con- sisting
The Spectatorof Mr. Joseph Pulitzer, of the New York World, Mr. Perry Belmont, Chairman of the House Committee of Congress on Foreign Relations (not the very much more important Com- mittee...
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WINDSOR CASTLE.* Ix is with a calm and holy feeling
The Spectatorof gladness that we are becoming conscious that the Jubilee is passing away from us. The politician from the platform no longer maunders about fifty years of progress; the...
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THE MOORS IN SPAIN.* Tuz task of writing a history
The Spectatorof the Moors in Spain for The Story of the Nations series has very appropriately been entrusted to Mr. Stanley Lane-Poole, and a better choice could scarcely have been made. Mr....
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MAX MOLLER'S "GERMAN CLASSICS."
The SpectatorTHE new edition of Professor Max Miiller's German Classics is adapted to the English translation of Scherer's History of German Literature which we have already noticed. The...
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COLONIAL GEOGRAPHY.*
The SpectatorTun volume is merely the first instalment of a complete historical geography of the Colonies, for which it clears the ground by usefully and clearly discussing the principles...
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Selections from the Poetical Works of Algernon Charles Stoinburne. (Chatto
The Spectatorand Windas.)âThis selection, made, we presume, by Mr. Swinburne himself, as no other name appears on the title-page, is exactly what was wanted. It represents him at his best....
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorThe Bachholees in Italy. Edited by Julius Stinde. Translated by Harriet F. Powell. (George Bell and Sons.)âFrau Wilhelmine in Italy is decidedly less attractive than the...
Last Words with Gordon. By Lieutenant-General Sir Gerald Graham. (Chapman
The Spectatorand Hall )âThis is a reprint, in the main, from the Fortnightly Review. Sir Gerald Graham saw Gordon at Cairo on January 25th and 26th, and accompanied him and Colonel Stewart...
Great Waterfalls, Cataracts, and Geysers. By John Gibson. (Nelson and
The SpectatorSon.)âThere seems really no limit nowadays to I:rook-making, no subject too wearisome to be dragged into print, no end to the use of scissors in the service. "Groat...
The Final Memorials of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Edited by Samuel
The SpectatorLongfellow. (Kegan Paul, Trench, and Co.)âThis is a supplementary volume to the two which contain the poet's life. The editor has been asked for it by some readers, and he...
A New Othello. By John Hyndford. (Elliot Stook.)âThis is a
The Spectatordreary story of jealousy and revenge, not without a certain dramatic power, but certainly not attractive. There are little things which take off from its verisimilitude,âa...
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The Story of Egypt. By George Rawlinaon, M.A.; with the
The Spectatorcollaboration of Arthur Gilman, M.A. (T. Fisher Unwin.)âThis popular account of Egyptian religion, life, and history is one of the series entitled 'Story of the Nations," and...
Ireland in the Days of Dean Swift, By J. Bowles
The SpectatorDaly, LL.D. (Chapman and Hall.)âMr. Daly reprints here the " Drapier Letters," and various other tracts published by Dean Swift between 1720 and 1734, ending with the "Modest...
In the" Gentleman's Magaeine Library," edited by George Lawrence Gomme,
The SpectatorF.S.A. (Elliot Stock), we have the second part of Romano- British Remains. The plan of the work, as has been explained in a previous notice, is to give the various...
The Haunted Harp the Narrative of Evelyn Desmond. By Somer-
The Spectatorville A. Gurney. (J. Arrowemith, Bristol; Bumpkin, Marshall, and Co., London.)âThis little tale is half a ghost-story, half a story of insanity, but wholly anecesaful in...
Spirit - Workers in the Horne Circle : an Autobiographic Narrative of
The SpectatorPsychic Phenomena in Family Daily Life, extending over a Period of Twenty Years. By Morell Theolsald. (T. Fisher Unwin.)âAn amazing book, which we cannot profess to criticise....
The Ordnance Survey of the United Kingdom. By Lieutenant. Colonel
The SpectatorT. Pilkington White, R.E. (Blackwood and Son.)âThis little volume contains a record of the achievements of a century and more, âachievements which have coat a great deal of...
Messrs. Macmillan publish a handsome edition of The Works of
The SpectatorShakespeare. It bears the name of the "Victoria Edition," and the Queen has accepted the dedication. The three volumes of which it consists contain the "Comedies," the...
Oar readers will not expect any criticism of this great
The Spectatorwork. Its place is now well established, and all that remainais to welcome its instalments, and, for those that have opportunity, to further it. " A " and about three-fourths of...
Bowes RECEIVED.âApoiogia ad Hebraeoa, by " Zemin" (T. and T.
The SpectatorClark), an attempt to prove the Panties authorship of the Epistle to the Hebrews, and to connect it with the time of the writer's imprisonment at Rome. The author rejects the...
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Applications for Copies of the SPECTATOR, and Communications upon matters
The Spectatorof business, should not be addressed to the Enrroa, but to the Pm:mum:ma, 1 Wellington Street, Strand, W.O.
MAGAZINES AND SERIAL PUBLICATIONS.âWe have received the following for November
The Spectator:âPart 1 of a serial edition of The World's Inhabitants, Ac., by G. T. Bettany, MA. (Ward, Lock, and Co.)â Part 13 of the History of Lancaster.âPart 6 of Mr. Punch's...
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION TO "THE SPECTATOR."
The SpectatorIncluding postage to any part of the United yearly. Including postage to any of the Australasian Colonies, America, France, Germany 1 10 6 0 15 8 0 7 8 Including postage to...
To insure insertion, Advertisements should reach the Publishing Office not
The Spectatorlater than noon on Friday.
SCALE OF CHARGES FOR ADVERTISEMENTS. OUTSIDE NAM, TWELVE GUINEAS.
The SpectatorPage .210 10 0 I Narrow Column ZS 10 0 Half-Page 5 5 0 Half-Column 1 15 0 Quarter-Page 2 12 6 Quarter-Column 0 17 6 Sig lines and under, 53; and 91 per line for every additional...
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PUBLICATIONS OP THE WEEK.
The SpectatorArletoPe'e Polities, by W. L. Newman, 2 vols. 8vo (Oxford Univ. Preen) 2510 Arnold (E.), Death and Afterward, er Boo (Trillaner) 1/6 Ashton (J.). A Centory of Ballade, 410 (E....
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Herr Krupp has been so closely associated in the European
The Spectatormind with German victories, that his death on the 14th inst. is an event. Herr Krupp in 1848 commenced the manufacture of steel guns and large steel articles generally, and...
The election of Prince Ferdinand to the Bulgarian Throne has
The Spectatornot as yet advanced matters much. A deputation appointed by the Sobranje hastened to inform the Prince of his election, and urged him to repair at once to Tirnova. The Prince,...
There will probably be a bitter debate in a few
The Spectatordays upon the Anglo-Turkish Convention. According to the latest intelligence, the Sultan cannot make up his mind to ratify that document, and Sir H. D. Wolff finally quits...
The Irish are perpetually saying that Ireland is without crime,
The Spectatorand Mr. Gladstone has recently repeated the same fallacy. Mr. W. Ambrose, however, in a letter to the Tinter), shows from official statistics that while in England 71 per 10,000...
The Parnellites exhibited their patriotism on Monday night by repeated
The Spectatormotions of adjournment intended to defeat the Law of Evidence Amendment Bill, and this though the Attorney. General offered to exclude Ireland from its operation. The intention...
Earlier in the evening of the same day, Sir Wilfrid
The SpectatorLawson who, if he did not retain some vestige of humour, would be almost as great a political nuisance as Mr. Conybeare, wasted a great deal of time in raising an absurd...
Sir George Trevelyan has written a letter to the Secretary
The Spectatorof the Liberal Association in Glasgow consenting to contest the Bridgeton Division of Glasgow, vacant by the resignation of Mr. E. Russell, as a Liberal. In it besets forth that...