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NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE event of the week has been the publication of a letter from the Emperor Napoleon to the Legislative Body. It was read to the Chamber by M. Rouher on Monday, the 12th inst.,...
We have elsewhere discussed the meaning of the Emperor's letter,
The Spectatorwhich seems to us illusory, but it was followed by the resignation of the Ministry. M. Rouher's dismissal is definitive ; M. de Lavalette retires from the Foreign Office ; and...
Though a colonial empire, ranging over the diameter of the
The Spectatorearth does not interest the House of Commons, the ladies' grat- ing in that assembly does. Yesterday week, when Lord Bury seemed to have some difficulty in getting any hearing...
The news from New Zealand is depressing enough. By the
The Spectatorlatest telegram (dated Sydney, June 19th) it appears that "the rebels have surprised the troops,—four officers and nine privates were killed." This must refer to an expedition...
Lord Bury is to call the attention of Parliament on
The SpectatorThursday next to the affairs of New Zealand. Let us exhort honourable members not to regard the debate (on the De minimis non curat lex principle) as if it were one on the...
The Church Bill was read a third time in the
The SpectatorLords on Monday and passed. After the third reading, however, the Peers accepted two very important re-amendments. By the first, introduced by Lord Devon, strongly supported by...
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There are signs that the Spanish Government means to sell
The SpectatorCuba. The want of money at home is extreme, the Treasury cannot bear the expense of further reinforcements, and it is evident from the tone of the new Captain-General that he...
The dreaded 12th of July passed off in Ireland withont
The Spectatoran insurrection. There was a riot or two of course, and two or three lives were lost, and a few Catholic schools were sacked ; but in Ulster those are trivialities. The...
Sir Roundell Palmer, in a peculiarly striking speech, drew from
The SpectatorMr. Bright's admission the inference that the spirit of Protestant ascendancy, however broken, still lingers amongst us, and shows itself in this inability of the British...
The morale of our London Police is clearly in need
The Spectatorof improve- ment. Five clerks in a joint stock bank were on Thursday charged with assaulting the police in the Haymarket, and with using obscene language. An inspector, three...
Mr. Gladstone explained on Thursday night that he was going
The Spectatorto propose that the House of Commons should disagree to every amendment of the slightest importance proposed by the Lords. A half-exception was the amendment of the Lords...
Lord Derby, with some forty-seven other Peers, have signed the
The Spectator"protest" against the third reading of the Irish Church Bill. The eight reasons given for the protest were the old stock reasons. But two of the signataries, Lord Cairns and the...
Earl Grosvenor on Tuesday asked the House of Commons to
The Spectatorremit the whole or part of a sum of £.260,000 borrowed by Cheshire to pay compensation to the owners of cattle slaughtered during the plague, and now a burden upon the county...
On Thursday night the Lords' amendments in the preamble, on
The Spectatorthe date, on the deduction of curates' salaries, on the glebe houses, on concurrent endowment, and on other smaller matters were actually disagreed with.
The debate of Thursday was not one of great note.
The SpectatorMr. Dis- raeli, who would not fight a stroke for concurrent endowment, was advisedly weak. Dr. Ball defended concurrent endowment, quoting from Mr. Bright's letter written 17...
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The popular demonstrations against the Lords' Amendments have been coarse
The Spectatoraffairs,—the stump reduced almost to a level with the mud. Thus one speaker at St. James's Hall argued - that because the French priests support Napoleon against the people, the...
Mr. Locke King brought on his annual motion for the
The Spectatorabolition of primogeniture on Wednesday, and it was carried for the first time by a vote of 169 to 144. Those numbers, however, are very small for this House, where members...
The Tablet of last week contains a letter full of
The Spectatormisunderstand- ings as to the relation of the London University examination in intellectual and moral philosophy to the Roman Catholic body. It assumes that the University has...
The Austrian Red Book contains a despatch from Count Beust
The Spectatorwhich throws some light upon Lord Clarendon's Belgian policy. It appears that so far from pressing Belgium to yield in the railway negotiations, his lordship rather dissuaded...
The Prince of Wales, on Tuesday, laid the first stone
The Spectatorof a new .orphanage at Watford, Hertfordshire, whither the Clapton , Orphanage, now sixty years old, intends to migrate ; and the proceedings were marked by a noteworthy...
The Bishops' Resignation Bill was read a second time in
The Spectatorthe House of Lords on Tuesday, ensuring at least /2,000 a year to the retiring Bishop, besides all the temporalities and other emolu- ments, and in certain cases the episcopal...
The French Atlantic Cable has been laid successfully. There are
The Spectatornow three of these lines in working order. By the time there are thirty, M. Reuter will probably be ready to give the public a little non-commercial news from the States, where...
Mr. Eastwick, Member for Penrhyn, on Friday se'ennight elicited from
The SpectatorMr. Grant Duff a formal statement of the policy of the India House in Central Asia. It amounts to this,—that Government intends to let Central Asia be. In a very able speech,...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorNAPOLEON'S COMPROMISE. " T ET me act as I please, and I will let you talk as you 12 please." That is the substance of the compromise which the Emperor of the French has so...
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THE LORDS' AMENDMENTS AND THE COMMONS.
The SpectatorI T is now clear that not a single amendment of the slightest moment carried by the Lords will be accepted by the House of Commons,—but it is not yet clear what the result of...
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THE TWO-HEADED PARLIAMENT.
The SpectatorTS it not just possible,—we ask the question with a full sense J. of the annoyance it will create,—that the working of this Constitution of ours, as it stands, has become...
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THE (ECUMENICAL COUNCIL.
The SpectatorT HERE seems to us no doubt at all,—from whichever point of view we approach the question, the Romanist or our own,—that the (Ecumenical Council will form one of the great...
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THE COMMONS ON PRIMOGENITURE.
The Spectator1TE DNESDAY, as most of our readers are aware, is the VY day given up by the House of Commons to individual crotchets, ecclesiastical reforms, the rights of women, the teetotal...
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EQUALITY IN HEAVEN.
The SpectatorV ERY few, indeed, of the popular notions about "Heaven,"— using that word as the popular synouyme for the future life, and not as the alternative to Hell,—will bear the most...
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THE PRIZE BABIES.
The SpectatorI T is really a very embarrassing task to inspect Prize Babies. Nothing short of that devouring and not unfrequently unhappy pasilon of devotion to the service of the public by...
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THE PROVINCIAL HISTORY OF ENGLAND.
The SpectatorCX.—•TH-E WELSH MARCH :--SHROPSHIRE.—GEOGRAPHY. S HROPSHIRE forms a nearly square block of territory, with an area of 1,291 square miles, or 826,055 statute acres (of which...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE COLONIAL CHURCH. [To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR:] Sis.,—As many of your readers, doubtless, take an interest in watching the working of the Synodical system in the...
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NEW ZEALAND.
The Spectator[To ma EDITOR OF T1E " Branum:1 am sorry to have misled your readers, even for a week, by my letter contained in your issue of February 6, and thank Sir George Grey for...
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ART.
The SpectatorTHE ROYAL ACADEMY. riELED NOTICE.] THE sculpture exhibited in the Central Hall is - well seen there. The sculpture gallery proper is a small space for its purpose, but of...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorMR. GLADSTONE ON HOMER.* Mit. GLADSTONE, besides doing much in the way of compressing and arranging the materials which were included in the Homeric Studies of 1858, has also...
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MR. STOPFORD BROOKE'S SERMONS.* THESE sermons appeal to modern minds,
The Spectatorand especially to minds familiar with the London of our day. The practical philan- thropist, grappling with the social 'difficulties of an overgrown city, must gladly know that...
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THE LANE LORD STRANGFORD.*
The SpectatorE2011160/f remarks, we think, in his English Traits, on his having met not a few men in English society who were unknown to the world, and had done nothing to be known, but who...
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THE QUEEN OF THE AIR.* Ir the subject of this
The Spectatorwork were that which the title-page announces, we should firobably have been able to welcome in it, if not any contribution of serious value to the understanding of mythology,...
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JOHN GREY, THE NORTHUMBERLAND AGRICUL- TURIST.* WE confess to a
The Spectatorwish that this book bad been written by some one else. It is a most unfair wish, when the author has done her • Memoir of John Grey, of Dilston. By Josephine E. Butler....
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The North British Review. July. (Edmonston and Douglas.)—We have in
The Spectatorthis number an appropriate tribute to the memory of a philoso- pher from whom the .North British has received no little of its inspira- tion, though we do not find it mentioned...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorTheological Review, Silly. (Williams and Norgate.)--This is a notice- able number, for the merit, and still more for the peculiar interest, of some of the articles. Among these...
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Mexico and the United States. By Gorham D. Abbot, LL.D.
The Spectator(New York : Putnam.)—Dr. Abbot is a fervent admirer of Mexican Repub- limns, and an equally fervent enemy of the Pope. He might have found space in his volume, which is indeed...
Early Sassanian Inscriptions. By Edward Thomas. (Triibner.)— The central point
The Spectatorof interest in this volume, which generally does. credit to the zeal and energy of the writer, is the account of the in- scriptions of Sapor, especially that in which he...
Medicine in Modern Times. (Macmillan.) — This is a volume or discourses
The Spectatordelivered to a professional audience, at the meeting of the British Medical Association, held last year at Oxford. Their interest is, as may be supposed, for the most part of a...
The Girl He Married. By James Grant. 3 vols. (Tinsley.)—We
The Spectatorcan always look to Mr. Grant with some confidence for a readable novel,. with characters, if not profoundly studied, yet distinctly marked, and with,—for that is an unfailing...
Sir Edward Cast gives us in two parts his third
The Spectatorvolume of Lives of Warriors of the .Seventeenth Century. (Murray.) — The first of the two is devoted to military, the second to naval, heroes who have had com- mands "before the...
The Dublin Review. New Series. July, 1869. (Burns, Oates, and
The SpectatorCo.)—Whatever Protestants find objectionable in the Dublin Review,— and as the best informed organ of the logical Ultramontane Catholi- cism, they will, of course, find...
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Two old favourites, the Swiss Family Robinson and Evenings at
The SpectatorRome, have been put into words of one syllable by Mary Godolphin. (Rout- ledge.)—We do not feel altogether convinced of the benefits of the plan ; a rigid adherence to it...