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Brooks Parker, Chief Justice of New York State, was then
The Spectatornomi- nated as candidate of the entire party by a two-thirds majority, and the news' was telegraphed to him while Hiring at his country home. Instead of accepting, however, Mr....
unauthenticated rumours are plentiful enough, as always happens when a
The Spectatorgreat movement is in train. The main outlines of the scheme are clear, now that all the three Japanese armies have emerged from the mountainous country and are operating on the...
It is very difficult to believe that so direct an
The Spectatorattack on the semi-divine personality of the Sovereign can have been written. by a Russian official of high rank still in Russia. If it has been, and if it expresses even in a...
The German Emperor has again been telegraphing. He is honorary
The SpectatorColonel-in-Chief of the 85th Russian Infantry, and as that regiment has been ordered to the front., be has tele- graphed to the commanding officer declaring that he is proud of...
The publication of the article headed "The Tsar" in the
The SpectatorQuarterly for July is a most serious incident. The Quarterly is the gravest, and one of the ablest, of all English periodicals ; it is supposed to represent, and often does...
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In the House of Commons on Wednesday the Licensing Bill,
The Spectatorby the aid of the "guillotine," passed through Committee. In one important particular, though, we fear, only in one, the Bill has been improved. By a Government amendment...
The correspondence dealing with the resignation of Sir Charles Eliot
The Spectatorwas published on Monday. The question of a conces- sion of land to the East Africa Syndicate is not in issue, Sir Charles having made no objection to this grant. Apparently Lord...
The effect of Mr. Parker's action upon his party throughout
The Spectatorthe Union has been electric. They were aware in a vague way that Justice Parker was a man of character, but they had not expected him to display such decision and energy, and...
The Daily Mail during the week has been doing excellent
The Spectatorservice in making the wider British public understand that German dislike of England is not a whim or a fancy, or the mere outcome of bad manners, but the result of a carefully...
One interesting point of etiquette is raised in the discus-
The Spectatorsion. Lord Lansdowne consulted certain Protectorate officers who happened to be in London at the time, and Sir Charles Eliot complains bitterly that such action was disloyal to...
During the week the visit of a powerful German squadron
The Spectator—eight battleships and seven cruisers—to Plymouth has caused a considerable amount of perturbation in the public mind, or, at any rate, in the public Press. For ourselves, we...
On Tuesday a Treaty between. Britain and Germany was signed
The Spectatorin London providing for the settlement by arbitration of differences which may arise of a legal nature, or relating to the interpretation of existing Treaties between the two...
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influence, n the Unionist party. Lest some of the members
The Spectatorof the Government should refuse to attend the gathering, and so a fissure be opened in the Administration, it was deter- mined not to invite the Ministry. Mr. Chamberlain, in...
• On Thursday Mr. Arnold-Forster unfolded his scheme of Army
The Spectatorreform. We have dealt with its general outlines else- where, but must point out here that, owing no doubt to the complexity of the subject, his exposition was by no means free...
Subject to certain reservations, this is a sound scheme ;
The Spectatorbut unfortunately Mr. Arnold - Forster couples it •with plans for dealing with the Auxiliaries which call for the opposition of all who desire to strengthen instead of...
Ex-President Kruger, aged seventy-nine, died at Clarens, on the Lake
The Spectatorof Geneva, at 3 o'clock on Thursday morning,— pneumonia complicated by disease of the heart, being the cause of death. Had the event taken place four years ago, the whole world...
Mr. Chamberlain's great speech at the Albert Hall on Thurs-
The Spectatorday to his newly organised Preferential and Protectionist Liberal Unionist party—the gathering numbered some twelve thousand people—was a fine piece of political oratory, in...
We fear that the struggle to preserve the Militia will
The Spectatorbe a difficult one, as the force has many enemies ; but it is one well worth making. We trust, as we have said elsewhere, that the leadership in this truly national cause will...
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W ITH a portion of the new Army scheme unfolded by
The SpectatorMr. Arnold-Forster in the House of Commons on Thursday we are in agreement. With the other portion we strongly disagree, and sincerely trust that the Govern- ment may be induced...
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M R. CHAMBERLAIN'S speeches at the Hotel Cecil and the Albert
The SpectatorHall tell us nothing which we did not know before in regard to his policy. They and the speeches of Lord Lansdowne and Mr. Alfred Lyttelton at the latter function, and the very...
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tion of which by Russia bad been very carefully planned
The Spectatorby experts, whose schemes only broke down because they overlooked or never perceived one governing factor,—the truth that Japan was a great Power and not a little one. They...
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believe that if there were more " money " there
The Spectatorweerld be more prosperity, were sufficient to compel the managers of the Convention to omit from the programme all reference to monetary issues. The omission, of course, shocked...
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W HETHER the brewers are as well pleased with the Licensing
The SpectatorBill now that it has passed through Com- mittee as they were when it was read a second time is not a matter of much moment except to themselves. Whatever objections they may...
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S IR OLIVER LODGE wrote a paper in the April number
The Spectatorof the Hibbert Journal entitled "Suggestions towards the Re-interpretation of Christian Doctrine," and the Bishop of Rochester has written in the current number of that able...
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• and terrible of all combinations. A man who combines
The Spectatorinspiration apparently derived—in my judgment really derived—from close communion with the supernatural and the celestial, a man who has that inspiration and adds to it the...
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I T will be news to most people, and especially to
The Spectatorthose who know the history of whaling, and its steady decline for centuries, that there is something like a revival of whaling, not only with the British coasts as a base, but...
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NATIVE FEELING IN INDIA ON THE RUSSO- JAPANESE WAR. [To
The SpectatorTHE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR...1 Sin,—The apathy of the British public towards Indian questions is proverbial. In general, for obvious reasons, it works to the advantage of...
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[To THE EDITOR OF VIE "SPECTATOR."]
The SpectatorSi,—As you say in the Spectator of July 9th, I have not forgotten Mr. Balfour's letter to Mr. Chamberlain. But I am far from thinking that your interpretation of it as imply-...
Sin,—The report of the speech of Mr. W. H. Irvine,
The Spectatorlate Premier of Victoria, at the banquet given to him by the various mercantile associations connected with Australia at the Trocadero on May 27th received, as was due to a...
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[To TUE EDITOR OF TUE "SPECTAT0R."1
The SpectatorStn,--I send by same post a marked copy of the Sydney Morning Herald containing an article on " Cobden and the . Colonies." Some time since an endeavour was made, on the...
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NAVAL SUPREMACY.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sra, — Referring to Sir John Colomb's remarks on my lettet in the Spectator of July 2nd, I would observe that whereas during the past fifty...
THE LICENSING BILL.
The Spectator[To TER EDITOR OF TEE "SYRCTATOR."] SIR,—A few weeks since you kindly extended the hospitality of your columns to some remarks which I ventured to make on the liquor question....
THE PROLONGATION OF LIFE AND ACETIC ACID. pro THE EDITOR
The SpectatorOF THE "SPEOTATOR.1 Sin,—Your remarks in the Spectator of July 9th on Professor Metchnikoff's prediction that science will shortly find a cure for old age are deeply...
UNIONIST FREE-TRADE ASSOCIATIONS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP TEN " SPZeTATOR.1 Sra,—In order to give greater publicity in Surrey to the Unionist Free-Trade Association which is proposed for• that county, and also in the...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorMR. SWINBURNE'S POEMS AND BALLADS.* IN the interesting and characteristic preface which Mr. Swinburne contributes by way of general introduction to his collected poetical works,...
POETRY.
The SpectatorTHE ROMANCE OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. [" The Bible in most parts, is a cheerful hook it is our piping theologies, tracts, sermons that are dull and dowie."—Bossaf Louts SfEVENSUN,...
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• The Alps. Described by Sir W. Martin Conway. Painted
The Spectatorby A. D. McCormick. London A. and C. Black. [Ws. net.] SIR MARTIN CONWAY has written a very delightful, and, we would add, to the lover of great hills a very soothing, book....
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WHEN William Weller Pepys was an undergraduate at Oxford he
The Spectatorwas known by his contemporaries as the "Old Gentleman." Ingenuity could not have found a more suitable name. An old gentleman in his youth, he never grew younger, and a...
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MR. JOHN MURRAY has chosen an opportune moment for the
The Spectatorpublication of Sir Robert Biddulph's interesting account of Lord Cardwell's administration of the Army. In many ways the problems which confront Mr. Arnold-Forster to-day are...
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The Peradventures of Private Pagett. By Major W. P. Drury.
The Spectator(Chapman and HalL 3s. 6d.)—There is nothing serious about the stories of Mr. Pagett, ex-private of Marines, and some of them are very amusing. The most entertaining in the book...
The Ragged Messenger. By W. B. Maxwell. (Grant Richards. 6s.)—Students
The Spectatorof heredity will be interested in this book by the mere fact that it is written by "Miss Braddon's" son. The idea which is at the back of the story—the effect on a man who has...
One Doubtful Hour. By Ella Hepworth Dixon. (Grant Richards 3s.
The Spectator6d.)—Miss Hepworth Dixon's collection of short stories is, if not very distinguished, quite readable. "The Fortune of Flora" is the most amusing of the sketches ; but in "The...
IN his new novel Mr. Benson leaves that dreary and
The Spectatorcon- ventional world in which he has chosen to dwell so long, and has the courage to grapple with a real human problem. His work, therefore, deserves to be treated with all...
Isabel Broderick. By Alice Jones. (John Lane. 6s.)—This novel is
The Spectatorabove the average in plot and character-drawing, bat it is a little spoilt to a fastidious reader by an occasional extraordinary vulgarity in the use of words. The expression "a...
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The History of the Northern Interior of British Columbia. By
The Spectatorthe Rev. A. G. Morice, O.M.I. (W. Briggs, Toronto. 10s.)— Father Morice's dispassionate chronicle of the fur-trading days and the coming of the gold-seekers will probably not...
Recent Literature on. Interest, 1884 - 1899. By E. v. Bohm- Bawerk.
The SpectatorTranslated by W. A. Scott, of the University of Wisconsin, and Professor Feilbogeu, of the University of Vienna. (Macmillan and Co. 4s. 6d.)—The Nature and Necessity of...
The Annual of the Hellenic Society, 1902 - 1903. (Macmillan and Co.
The Spectator21s. net.)—Mr. A. J. Evans occupies a great part (about two-fifths) of this volume with a continuation of his discoveries in the Palace of Knossos. The wonder grows the more we...
In Fifty Years. By Madame Belloc. (Sands and Co. 2s.
The SpectatorGI net.) —These twenty-two poems represent the occasional utterances of half-a-century. Such a collection has nothing, so to speak, of the professional versifier about it ; now...
GERMAN ARMY MANCEUVRES.
The SpectatorWe have received a copy of Major-General Sir Alfred Turner's account of the manceuvres of the XIVth. German Army Corps, held in Baden and Wfirtemberg in September last. The...
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Euripides : Hercules Furens. By E. H. Blakeney, M.A. (W.
The SpectatorBlackwood and Sons. 2s. 6d.)—We are seldom able to notice school-books, even when their merits are considerable. But we must find space for a few lines on this very good edition...
How to Deal with the Unemployed. By Mary Higgs. (S.
The SpectatorC. Brown, Langham, and Co. 2s.)—With respect to our social failures, Miss Higgs is in favour of adopting vigorous measures. We have let the laissez - faire method prevail, and...
Dante and the English Poets. By Oscar Kuhns. (G. Bell
The Spectatorand Sons. 6s. net.)—Chaucer owed not a little to Dante ; after Chaucei there is practically a blank, though there are resem- blances which are to be otherwise accounted for....
Modern Cottage Architecture. By Various Architects. Edited by Maurice B.
The SpectatorAdams. (B. T. Batsford. 10s. 6d. net.)—Here we have fifty plans of rural and suburban cottages, lodges, isolation homes, nurses' cottages, by various well-known architects. The...
NEW EDITIONS AND REPRINTS. - We have received some important
The Spectatorand interesting reprints, to which we would gladly give more space were the claims upon us not so urgent. The first book on the list is, indeed, not a reprint at all,—The...
.A Lonely Summer in Kashmir. By Margaret Cotter Morison' (Duckworth
The Spectatorand Co. '7s. 6d. net.)—Miss Morison spent some weeks in solitary journeys in Kashmir, starting from Srinagar, and coming back to it, after many wanderings among valleys, plains,...
Shakespeare's London. By T. F. Ordish. (J. M. Dent and
The SpectatorCo. 3s. 6d. net.)—Mr. Ordish has added to a new edition of this book a chapter on Westminster and an Itinerary of Shakespeare's London. The Westminster chapter is largely...
Early Days at Uppingham under Edward Thring. By an Old
The SpectatorBoy. (Macmillan and Co. 3s. 6d. net.)—The "Old Boy's" recol- lections date back nearly to the beginning of the second half of the last century (Edward Thring went to lippingham...