Page 1
The asserted cattle-plague in Donegal is now pronounced a delusion,
The Spectatorfor which we have every reason to be most thankful. A disease there was, but not the disease which has spread so rapidly in England.
At Hawarden, on Wednesday, a dinner was given to Mr.
The SpectatorW. H. Gladstone, the new member for Chester, to his father the Chancellor of the Exchequer, to Sir Stephen Glynne, Lord Lyttelton, and indeed the whole family party, and the...
There was a squabble about the Riuderpest in the British
The SpectatorAssociation on Tuesday. Dr. Shettle traced it " to those electrical changes which have prevailed so extensively of late in this portion of the globe, in withdrawing from the...
The Bishop of Oxford made a clever and ingenious speech
The Spectatorat Reading on Wednesday, on opening the new Industrial Exhibition there. He spoke of these exhibitions as the opportunities which break the dead monotony of education in the...
Nobody has discovered anything further about the cattle dis- ease.
The SpectatorNobody has succeeded in curing it to any considerable extent, and the favourite remedy appears to be to " stamp it out," L e., kill all ailing animals, bury the carcases in the...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE meetings of the Emperor of the French with the Queen of Spain at San Sebastian and Biarritz, the marriage of Miss Crosse with her groom at Wandsworth, post-mortem...
And of all these, perhaps intrinsically the least interesting was
The Spectatorthe meeting of the Sovereigns of France and Spain,âthe principal observation which has resulted from the meeting being that the Emperor was punctual in making his visit and...
Page 2
Governor Sharkey, of MIlisissippi, has had a collision with the
The SpectatorGovernment at Washington, and found it firm. He tried to raise soldiers of his own to replace the negro troops, which he wished to get rid of. A white man taken by General...
Dr. Acland, in his address as President to the Sub-Section
The Spectatorof Physiology of the British Association at Birmingham, made a real point when he asked why physiology was treated by the British Association as a sub-section at all ? " Being,"...
Aristotle, we learn, agreed with Lord Stanley about the House
The Spectatorof Commons. "Lord Stanley," says the Times of yesterday, "pro- fesses the highest respect for the House, and advocates the opinion, sanctioned by the authority of Aristotle, and...
The St. Leger was won on Wednesday by Gladiateur, who
The Spectatorhas _ thus proved himself the most wonderful of living horsesâhaving VIM the Two Thousand, the Derby, the Grand Prfx de Paris, and the Yorkshire race with equal - saw A...
Lord Stan! ,y has, we suspect; been a little wearied
The Spectatorwith the prosy and pointless discussions in his section (the statistical and economic section) of the British Association. On Tuesday, at the Mayor of Birmingham's banquet, he...
The ravages of the Shenandoah in the North Pacific continue,.
The Spectatorthough Captain Waddell must well know that the destruction of the government which accredited himânever more than a de facto government by international lawâleaves him in'...
Mr. Judah P. Benjamin, lately Confederate Secretary of State and
The Spectatorrevolutionary orator in Richmond, writes to the Times to repeat Mr. Lawley's misrepresentations concerning the treatment of the Federal prisoners in the South, and add one or...
Page 3
On Saturday last Cousols left off at 89i t for
The Spectatormoney; and 89} 90 for account. The closing prices yesterday showed an advance of one-eighth from these quotations, the latest official prices being 89t # for delivery, and 89{...
It does not appear to be generally understood by the
The Spectatorshare- holtbrs that the instalment of 801. on the⢠paid-up scrip of- the' East London Railway Company need' not be paid entire on' the 23rd of this month, but may, at the...
The literature of leading articles becomes at this time of
The Spectatorthe year' truly remarkable. One paper writes leaders in favour of eating poultry rather than beef. The leading journal begins a magni- ficent article with the truly remarkable...
The Dairy Company, with a capital of 100,0001. in 101.
The Spectatorshares, is announced this week. The directors propose the erection of extensive, substantial, and well-ventilated cowhouses in the neigh- bourhood of Battersea, and to supply a...
The report of the London Bank of Mexico and South
The SpectatorAmerica, to be presented to the shareholders on Tuesday next, states that the profits of the half-year ending June 30th last were 22,8841 . , being equal to about 20 per cent....
In the mechanical section of the British Association on Friday
The SpectatorMr. Bessemer read a paper on cast steel, with especial view to its -employment as a substitute for wrought iron. There are now 17 extensive Bessemer steel works in Great...
Miss Crosse's evidence in the Wandsworth Police-court con- cerning her
The Spectatorshare in the elopement with her groom " George " had so much effect on her father's mind, that he withdrew his charge against the lad, which could not indeed in any case have...
The closing prices of the leading Foreign Securities yesterday` and
The Spectatoron Friday week were as under :- Friday, September 8. Friday, September 15. G reek .. .. Do. Coupons .. .. .. Mexican . .. .. .. .. Spanish Panty/3 .. .. .. .. Do....
Mr: Henley is very thankful that the people in the
The Spectatorneighbour- hood of Bicester are well off, and that the working classes there are likely to be Able to say to those who employ them, " We will not live here, and we will not do...
The official account at last and apparently reluctantly given out
The Spectatorby the Prussian authorities concerning the murder of M. Ott, is that Count Ealenburg and other students met a noisy party, that one of the students was attacked, and a scuffle...
Page 4
TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorLORD STANLEY AND NEUTRAL POLITICS. L ORD STANLEY, presiding in the Statistical and Economical Section of the British Association at Bir- mingham, should have been in his...
THE FENIAN FOLLY.
The SpectatorT HE Irish are a peculiar people, not zealous of good works.. With all their admirable and endearing qualities, they are the most wilfully and pertinaciously unlucky race on...
Page 5
PROFESSORS OF POLITICS. application of.political methods to science by the
The Spectatorquasi- pelitieians. We will illustrate briefly what we mean in both oases from the discussions of the association. We take Professor Leoni Levi and his paper on the ex- -...
Page 7
THE COST OF A CHURCH.
The SpectatorT HERE are no doubt many ways of managing a national Church, and each has its peculiar disadvantages. The great objection to the practice of the Ecclesiastical Commis- sioners...
GENERAL LAMORICIERE.
The SpectatorA LGERIA has long been recognized as the school of French warfare. The sole profit indeed for long years that the French drew from their conquest was a race of able soldiers....
Page 9
MR. JEFFERSON IN RIP VAN WINKLE.
The SpectatorUR: JEFFERSON is a great gain to the English stage. There I are few qualities in which our English actors, and even Mr. Fechter, our greatest foreign actor, are so deficient as...
Page 10
OUR AMERICAN COUSINS.
The SpectatorFROM AN OCCASIONAL CORRESPONDENT. 1 9 THE recent discussion which has taken place relative to the temper of the American people towards England will have accomplished a great...
Page 12
FRANCE UPON THE FRONTIER.
The Spectator[FROM A CORRESPONDENT.) TWO thousand Frenchmen from the Pas de Calais were brought over the other day from Calais to the Crystal Palace, and restored to their homes on the...
Page 13
EORGE, eldest surviving son of the fourth Earl, succeeded to
The Spectatorhis claims to the earldom and estates of Huntly. His career formed him of Moray's G ma' hes for a reconciliation, took horse, and was politically 'it very discreditable one. On...
Page 15
ENGLISH ERRORS CONCERNING AMERICA.
The Spectator[FROM OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT.] New York, September 1, 1865. THOSE who lead or express British public opinion have been led, not unaccountably, into error upon one or two...
Page 16
THE WESTMINSTER ELECTION.
The Spectator[Co THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] SIR,âI am glad to have seen the analysis of the votes given at the Westminster election, to which you referred in your columns of last...
like way, but he has, I think, on one point
The Spectatorbeen a little absard in his solitary remark contemptuously thrown out at a creature who, though I admit not born to his exalted attributes,' hardly deserves his contempt, and...
Page 17
-BOOKS.
The SpectatorSKETCHES FROM CAMBRIDGE.t " I amsr," writes a Don, " make the rather obvious remark that a young Englishman at a university is remarkably like a young Englishman anywhere else,...
0 " W. R. G." ON SLAVERY.
The Spectator. [To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] SIR,âI abhor newspaper controversy, and seldom deem it wise or worth while to reply to critics and opponents. I am content to lay my egg...
Page 18
A SUMMER IN SKYE.* SOME years have elapsed now since
The SpectatorMr. Smith gave his Life Drama to the world. That poem had caught, or was the outcome, of the feverish spirit of unrest which is not genius, nor even its necessary accompaniment,...
Page 19
AUTOGRAPHS.* THE love of collecting autographs, if it has sometimes
The Spectatorbeen pur- sued without much taste or meaning, has never sunk to the rank of a mere mania, like the tulip mania of the seventeenth and she postage-stamp mania of the nineteenth...
Page 20
SYDON1E'S DOWRY.*
The SpectatorTHERE is a real pleasure in the sketches of accomplished artists which is quite distinct from the pleasure we derive from their more finished pictures,âthe sense of power...
Page 21
JAMES BEATTIE.*
The SpectatorMu. KERR has done a rare service to the people of Great Britain in making known to us an obscure man so truly great as James Beattie the schoolmaster of Aberdeenshire, and he...
Page 23
Tales for the Marines. By Walter Thornbury. 2 vols. (Sampson
The SpectatorLow, Son, and Marston.)âMost of the tales in these volumes have already appeared in All the Year Round and Chambers's Journal. As the title indicates, they are rather of a...
A Quarter of a Century. By H. W. Fricker. (Effingham
The SpectatorWilson.} âThis is precisely the book that a man would wish his enemy to write. Mr. Fricker dedicates his volume of poems to a friend of twenty-five years' standing ; can the...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorMaraud of Geology. By Rev. S. Naughton, M.D., F.R.S., Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin. (Longman.)âThis volume, which was origi- nally delivered in the form of lectures at...
Life and Writings of Joseph Rossini. Vol. IL Critical and
The Spectatorliterary. (Smith and Elder.)âThis volume contains some literary criticisms written in the years 1829-39, with two prefaces added in 1860 and 1862-to explain the object of the...
Cyril Blount; or, Trust Money. By the Author of Recommended
The Spectatorto ⢠Mercy. 3 vols. (Chapman and Hall.)âThe author of this novel evi- dently refers masculine morality to the times of King Saturn. That men are immoral, and that women are...
Page 24
Consumption. By Henry McCormac, M.D. Second edition. (Long- man.)âDr. McCormac
The Spectatorin this work makes a passionate appeal to the profession and the public in general to open the bed-room windows of their consumptive patients at night. He is of opinion that...
Poems. By William Brownrigg Lumley, Major II.M..'s Indian Army. (Moron.)âThis
The Spectatorbroad, thin, and gorgeously bound volume is intended for presentation copies, and will do very well for those drawing-rooms where the books lie on the table and are never...