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BOOKS.
The SpectatorMR. STEVENSON'S LETTERS.* EVER since it was announced that Mr. Stevenson's diary. letters, written from Samoa to Mr. Sidney Colvin, would be given to the world, the admirers of...
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THE SECOND AND THIRD BATTLES OF BERG ISEL.*
The SpectatorONE of the results of the war of 1805 was the severance of Tyrol from Austria, and its enforced union with Bavaria to the dire dismay of the Tyrolers, who were passionately...
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REGIMENTAL HISTORIES.*
The SpectatorIN one of Mr. Kipling's stories, entitled "The Mutiny of the Mavericks," there occurs a scene in which an Irish private is represented as unfolding the regimental colours and...
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THE RELIGIONS OF JAPAN.*
The SpectatorIN Japan, as in China, the religion of the majority of the people is complex and eclectic, an amalgam of three ori- ginally distinct systems. "The average Japanese," says Dr,...
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MR. LINTON'S " MEMORIES."* IN the memories of most persons,
The Spectatortheir personal affairs are the principal feature ; but the author of this book has strangely little to say about either himself or his belongings. His talk is chiefly about the...
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FRENCH MEN AND FRENCH MANNERS.* Mn. VANDA31 proceeds with his
The Spectatortask of holding up France as a country which is not successful in producing happy children, good soldiers, or painstaking citizens. His book is a collection of lively...
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TWILIGHT LAND.*
The SpectatorIT is very difficult to state with anything like precision the merits or faults of a book of fairy-tales, or to give intelligible reasons for liking or disliking it. One can do...
GIFT-BOOKS.
The SpectatorBEAST AND MAN.* HERR EERELMAN is a Dutch George Morland ; only, we hasten to add, what poor Morland never succeeded in being, a good citizen. To use another comparison, he does...
The Sunday at HOW. (R.T.S.)—Fiction is represented in the volume
The Spectatorbefore us by three stories,—" Told by a Housekeeper," by Evelyn Everett-Green ; " Nadya : a Tale of the Steppes," a vivid and beautifully illustrated Russian peasant-story by...
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The Boy's Own Annual and 2716 Girl's Own Annual (R.T.S.)
The Spectatorhave reached, respectively, their seventeenth and sixteenth yearly volumes. Among the other contents of the first in the way of fiction are "Amid Siberian Forests : a Tale of...
The Leisure Hour. (R.T.S.)—This admirable magazine still preserves its high
The Spectatorlevel of providing the very best and most varied of mental nutriment. We have a good serial with plenty of reading in it by Leslie Keith, entitled "The Indian Uncle," in which...
The Quiver. (Cassell and Co.)—This magazine continues to fulfil its
The Spectatorpurpose of supplying "Sunday and General Reading" very well. Fiction, which, we need hardly say, is of a serious type, occupies but a moderate space ; the directly instructive...
Madagascar of To-Day. By the Rev. W. E. Cousins. (R.T.S.)
The Spectator—Mr. Cousins has been a missionary in the island for more than thirty years. To these opportunities of observation he adds a liberal and broad-minded way of looking at things...
The Child's Own Magazine. (S.S.U.)—We were struck in looking through
The Spectatorthis volume with the good quality of some of the verse, an article which ought to be made as good for children as for grown-ups. There are other praiseworthy things in the maga-...
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The Haunted House. By Thomas Hood. With Introduction by Austin
The SpectatorDobson. Illustrated by Herbert Railton. (Lawrence and Bullen.)—Mr. Austin Dobson tells the story of the last three years of Hood's life,—years of work done, in spite of all...
The Tiger of Mysore. By G. A. Henty. (Blackie and
The SpectatorSon.)— This is a very vigorous picture, which Mr. Henty has drawn for his young readers, of the wars between the East India Company and Tippoo, the Tiger. Dick Holland, the...
In "The Children's Favourite Series" (E. Arnold) we have two
The Spectatorvolumes, My Book of Perils, in which the balloons of the Siege of Paris, the trenches in the Crimea, and various other scenes of war, hunting, and exploration furnish the...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorSt. Andrews in 1645 - 46. By D. R. Kerr. (William Blackwood and Sons.)—Nowadays an extraordinary amount of interest is taken in old St. Andrews, and not by Scotchmen alone. It...
A special interest must always attach to the story of
The Spectatorthe Princess Alice. Not only had she great opportunities of action, and used them to the full, but she had also an intellectual and spiritual side to her life, which presents...
Sunshine, 1895. (G. Stoneman.)—This periodical, intended, according to the title,
The Spectator"For the Home, the School, and the World," claims as its founder the late Dr. Meynell Whittemore, a well-known writer of this kind of literature. It is an interest- ing and...
John Chandos, and fights at Poitiers, is a hero after
The Spectatora boy's heart. Not only is he a giant in stature and courage, but he has a cool head, and shows himself a born leader. He rapidly works himself into the favour of the Black...
In the series of "Science Talks to Young Thinkers" (Oliphant,
The SpectatorAnderson, and Ferrier), we have Nature's Story, by H. Farquhar, B.D. Mr. Farquhar discourses about flowers, with special refer- ence to their reproduction and preservation, and...
Messrs. Bliss, Sands, and Foster have reprinted in one volume
The SpectatorEdward William Lane's translation of The Arabian Nights' Enter- tainments. They have added from another source the stories of "Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp" and "All Baba and...
Stamford Bridge, had a brilliant career, which came to a
The Spectatorfitting end when he and the traitor Tostig and their great invasion were defeated. Captain Young follows the adventures of Harold— partly historical and partly imaginary—first...
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Willoughby Court. By Getrani Buchan. (Digby, Long, and Co.)—This is
The Spectatora story in which Mrs. Malaprop's theory that a little aversion is a good beginning for love, is justified by results. Effie Penrose is made the victim of a most extraordinary...
Adulteration of Food. By Douglas C. Bartley. (Stevens and Sons.)—This
The Spectatoris a statement of the statutes that have been passed on the subject of food adulteration. These began with the 5 George I., cap. 11, though in those days our legislators'...
Memorials of a Short Life: a Biographical Sketch of W.
The SpectatorF. A. Gaussen. Edited by the Bishop of Stepney. (T. Fisher Unwin ) —Mr. Gaussen had an unusual acquaintance with Russian litera- ture, and helped to introduce some of its best...
A Tale of Two Curates. By James Copner, M.A. (Digby,
The SpectatorLong, and Co.)—" A short and unpretending little work" is Mr. Cop:Lees description of his tale. Both epithets are justly applied ; and we may add that it shows good sense and...
By Order of the Brotherhood. By " Le Voleur." (Jerrold and
The SpectatorSon.)—This "story of Russian intrigue" belongs to a class of literature which must be very well done if it le to succeed. There are some masterpieces, both in French and...
Milady Monte Christo. By John Pennington Marsden. (Osgood, McIlvaine, and
The SpectatorCo.)—In spite of its too great length, this is an extraordinary story,—extraordinary alike as regards the incident with which it opens and the Defoe-like, rather than Zolaesque,...
Ancient and Holy Welts of Cornwall. By M. and L.
The SpectatorQuiller- Couch. (C. J. Clark.)—We may commend this little volume, a painstaking account of the Cornish Holy Wells. They have been personally visited, and their present condition...
A Street in Suburbia. By Edwin W. Pugh. (W. Heinemann.)
The Spectator—This volume reminds us of the photographs that one sometimes sees in a fifth-rate London street or small provincial town, poorly executed portraits of quite uninteresting...
John Dalton and the Rise of Modern Chemistry. By Sir
The SpectatorH. E. Roscoe. (Cassell and Co.)—No one is better fitted to estimate the work of Dalton than Sir H. Roscoe. Doing this with characteristic aptitude in this volume, he adds a...
Station Stories. By Murray Cator. (Arrowsmith, Bristol.)— As it certainly
The Spectatoris not true that the Grand Trunk Road and un- counted empty beer-bottles are the only monuments of British sway in India, so we may refuse to believe that the British rulers...
The Teaching of the Vedas. By Maurice Phillips. (Longmans and
The SpectatorCo.)—We cannot undertake to analyse the contents of this volume, the outcome, it is evident, of long and careful study. But it is interesting to note the conclusion to which...
Marmaduke, Emperor of Europe. By " X." (Durrant and Co., Chelmsford.)—Marmaduke
The Spectatoris a theorist who contrives to deliver Europe from the adverse influences of militarism, socialism, anarchism, and the rest of the " isms " that threaten society. His executive...
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Lectures on Colet, Fisher, and More. By the Rev. Arthur
The SpectatorJ. Mason. (S.P.C.K.)—It is not necessary to do more than com- mend Dr. Mason's lectures to the notice of our readers. The sketches are necessarily in outline, for each portrait...
Transactions of the National Liberal Club Political Economy Circle. Vol.
The SpectatorII. Edited by J. H. Levy. (P. S. Kin g and Son.)— There are some very interestin g papers in this volume, papers dealin g with many of the g reat economical q uestions of the...
Thoughts from the Writings of Richard Tefferies. Selected by H.
The SpectatorS. H. Wayless. (Lon g mans.)—" Thou g hts" is hardly the word to describe these extracts. " Fancies " mi g ht be better. Jefferies described with a rarely sympathetic power, but...
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London Printed by Wrieart & Bose (Limited) at Nos. 74-76
The SpectatorGreat Queen Street, W.C.; and Published by JOHN JANEs BAKER, of No. 1 Wellington Street, in the 'Precinct of the Savoy, Strand, in the County of Middlesex, at the "SPECTATOR'...
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ht *peettator
The SpectatorFOR THE No. 3,516.] WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1895. rBEGISTERED AS •)PRICL 6a. L NEWSPAPER, BY POST, WA
There is some fear that the Powers may be too
The Spectatorlate. So far from the danger of the Christians being exaggerated, every account which reaches the Ambassadors is worse than those which reach the public. There is reason to...
It is believed that the Bourgeois Ministry in Paris will
The Spectatornot last. The Radicals and Socialists are as good as gold, and avoid awkward questions with a discipline of which they were believed incapable; but the Moderates are growing...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT ORD SALISBURY made his anxiously expected speech J at the Guildhall on Saturday, and its effect throughout Europe has been very great. He denied the existence of dangers in...
At a banquet given last Monday to Colonel Gerard Smith,
The Spectatorthe new Governor Designate of Western Australia, Mr. Chamberlain, who presided, delivered both a very lively and a very instructive speech, in which he remarked on the great...
The news from Turkey all points to a coming catastrophe.
The SpectatorThe Sultan, almost paralysed by personal fears, has fallen completely into the bands of a palace clique who trade on those fears, and represent that his Majesty can be safe only...
It seems probable that Russia and England have come to
The Spectatorsome understanding both as to the Far East and the Near East, but the course of action is not yet clear. Apparently, some proposal is to be laid before the Sultan, supported by...
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Mr. Timothy Healy was expelled on Wednesday from the Council
The Spectatorof the National Federation by 47 to 40; and from the governing Committee of the Irish party in London, by 33 to 24 The nominal reason for expulsion was Mr. Healy's independent...
Mr. Balfour made a " good; rattling speech at Glasgow
The Spectatoron Thursday night. He laughed at the inconsistency of the Radical organs, which complained in July of the Government for having no programme, no political food to offer us at...
Captain Lugard on Tuesday delivered, a striking lecture at the
The SpectatorRoyal Colonial Institute on the prospects of East Africa. Captain Lugard thinks that region offers a fair field to English settlers of the right kind,—that is, men with a little...
The Chancellor of the Exchequer, Sir Michael Hicks-Beach, was rather
The Spectatorsanguine, and perhaps hardly as prudent as he might have been, when he said in his speech on Colston Day at Bristol (Wednesday last) that it was "within the reasonable bounds of...
The Austrian Government has decided to act with vigour in
The Spectatorthe capital. The Municipality, as was expected, met the Imperial refusal to sanction Dr. Lueger's election by re-elect- ing him, this time by a majority of 47 (92 to 45). The...
For the proper filling up of a Colonial Governorship, said
The SpectatorMr. Chamberlain, a great many qualifications are needed,— namely, high character, good social standing, a large experi- ence of affairs, tact, discretion, exceptional...
The Chief of Coomassie has failed to reply to the
The Spectatorultimatum, and an expedition has therefore been ordered against him. It will he a small one, consisting of three hundred picked men from battalions at home, a West India...
The Egyptian Premier, M. Nubar„ has resigned, and has been
The Spectatorreplaced by Mahomed Fehmy Pasha. The reason assigned is physical infirmity, but Nubar, who is only seventy, was quite well a fortnight since, and it is quite probable that the...
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The Bishop of Durham delivered a striking address yes- terday
The Spectatorweek in the Church of St. Mary-at-Hill, Durham, on the difficulty of dealing with the unemployed. He seemed to think that with the increasing population of the world the...
Mr. Asquith, who also spoke on Colston Day at the
The SpectatorAnchor - Society's meeting (Sir Michael Hicks-Beach of course spoke at the Dolphin Society's meeting) began by saying that the date Government had nothing to apologise for and...
Lord Rosebery has written a letter to Mr. J. H.
The SpectatorEdwards, - the editor of Young Wales, expressing his gratification that there is to be what is, in the literary cant of the day, called a symposium,"—meaning a collection of...
Sir Michael also declared against the absurd notion that the
The Spectatorgeneral principles of Mr. Forster's Education Act, as regards Board-schools and voluntary schools, were to be in any way -revolutionised, but pledged the Government "to consider...
The Times of Tuesday gives a very interesting account of
The Spectatorthe enterprise in which Mr. Mummery, probably our greatest Alpine climber, and two Goorkbas lost their lives last August. They were attempting to reach the summit of one of the...
A correspondence concerning the rate at which the extermi- nation
The Spectatorof the African elephant is going on, has appeared within the last ten days in the Times. It seems that there are more wild elephants preserved in Cape Colony than in the great...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorLORD SALISBURY AT THE GUILDHALL. T ORD SALISBURY'S literary training is sometimes J mischievous to him, an epigram which he has thought of, burning his mouth as a shilling...
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THE POLITICAL APATHY. T HE Gladstonian Press, for want of anything
The Spectatorbetter to say, are charging the Government with complete indifference to the promises made by their supporters to the public before the General Election, and with a wish to...
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THE RECENT PANIC IN IRE CITY. T HE financial history of
The Spectatorthe present year, which during its first three-quarters was memorable for the number of records broken on the side of optimism, has freed itself from the reproach of monotony by...
THE EXPEDITION TO COOMAPSIE. T HE Government has decided on an
The Spectatorexpedition to Coomassie, the principal kraal of Ashantee, and we wish it every success. The Chief of Coomassie—the word ." sheik" should be adopted for the head-men of all...
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MR. HEALY'S EXPULSION.
The SpectatorM R. HEALY has shared the fate which he helped to bring on Mr. Parnell. Like his much greater leader, he has been expelled from his position in his party, and driven to form a...
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MR. ASQ1TITH AT BRISTOL.
The SpectatorI T would not be esay to find any speech of an Opposition leader more satisfactory to the party in power than that of Mr. Asquith on Colston Day at Bristol. It was on the whole...
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MAYORS AND LORD MAYORS. T HE list of new Mayors published
The Spectatoron Monday last possesses unusual interest. It is not the first such list which in recent years has included the names of Peers of the realm. Lord Bute was Mayor of Cardiff and...
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PRINCE BORIS AND HIS RELIGION.
The Spectator" O F one thing be assured : Russia will never recog- nise a Roman Catholic Prince,—never, never !" In this sentence lies the kernel of the long controversy about the religion...
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TOLERANCE IN TASTE. T HERE is one aspect of the duty
The Spectatorof tolerance which the classes are certainly very reluctant to grasp, even for the benefit of the masses,—we mean tolerance in taste. The Vestry of St. Mary Abbott's,...
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PLAIN" QUAKERISM
The SpectatorT HEQuakers are holding a meeting this week at Man- chester to consider among other things the future of their Society; and when the speeches made are published in full we shall...
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NOVEMBER ON THE NORFOLK FLATS.
The SpectatorF ROM Hunstanton at the eastern entrance of the Wash, to Foulness beyond Cromer, the Norfolk coast lies in a straight line of forty miles, running from west to east. This great...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The SpectatorJOWETT. [To THE EDITOIG Of THE " SPZCTATOR."3 SIR,—Your friendly, though dissentient, notice of my volame;_ in the Spectator of November 2nd, tempts me to make two. remarks....
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MAGNIFICENCE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—As a great admirer of the Spectator, may I be allowed to protest against a verbal inaccuracy, in the article in the Spectator of...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorMR. WATSON'S NEW POEMS.* Mn. WATSON gives us here what is perhaps the finest, perhaps, again, only the all-but finest, poem he has ever written. He asks of the Sea "a subtle...
THE RIGIDITY OF ROME.
The Spectator[TO THE t DITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] • 'SIR,—Your interesting review of my essay on "The Rigidity of Rome," presupposes so wide a difference between us, as to the philosophy of...
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TALES FROM WAGNER.*
The SpectatorWE do not know why it is, but memories of Wagner will always bring back to us a story of him and the elder Dumas, —so characteristic of the two as to be worth recording. The...
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ST. JAMES'S SQUARE.*
The SpectatorMn. DASENT must be credited with having spent a vast amount of research on this history, and the result is eminently satisfactory. In writing it he has consulted the parochial...
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SOUTH AFRICA. AND ITS MINES.*
The SpectatorTHE interests of South Africa are many-sided. This curious. agglomeration of States, administered by the Imperial Govern- ment, the Cape Colony, a joint-stock company, and...
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MR. NOBLE'S "IMPRESSIONS AND MEMORIES."
The SpectatorSOMETHING of the self-revelation of which Mr. Noble speaks in his praise of the "charms of autobiography" penetrates this little volume of short essays. While reading them we...
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THE RELIEF OF CHITRAL.*
The SpectatorTo all who can enjoy military history this will be a fascinating book. It is written in conjunction by Captain F. E. Young- husband, formerly political officer at Chitral, and...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorStuck Up. By Nat Gould. (Routledge and Sons.) — Stuck Up, as its title implies, is an Australian story, and a very stirring one, too, of bushranging days. There are two brothers...
The Macdonald Lass. By Sarah Tytler. (Chatto and Windus.) —The
The Spectatorheroine of this story—a combination, as it may be sup- posed, of fiction and fact—is the Flora Macdonald who may be said to have saved the life of the young Pretender, with...
A Mystery of the Cordillera. By A. M. Bourne. (Bellairs
The Spectatorand Co.)—The Andes have always seemed to us to appeal more to the imagination than any other mountain range, and consequently this story of an expedition in quest of adventure...
The Secret of the Court. By Frankfort Moore. (Hutchinson and
The SpectatorCo.)—We are disappointed with this story, for so much more might have been done with the secret,—which, indeed, is the Secret of Life, discovered in an Egyptian temple. Mr....