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There is, however, a strong rumour afloat, which we partly
The Spectatorbelieve, that all the redistribution clauses in the Reform Bill will be dropped, on the ground of want of time. The Bill will then pass as a franchise Bill only, Mr. Disraeli...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE Luxemburg Treaty was signed in London this day week, and is, we suppose, by this time ratified. The Conservative papers are very great on the success of Lord Stanley in...
The Reform Bill for Scotland was introduced on Monday night. .
The SpectatorThe borough franchise is the same in form as the English, but it will work rather differently. There are no compounding Acts in Scotland, but as a rule the tenant who pays less...
A meeting of the same Union was held on Wednesday,
The Spectatorat St. James's Hall, and was attended by some ten members of Parlia- ment, including Mr. Bright and Mr. Forster. The meeting pledged itself, in a series of resolutions, to...
It is particularly requested that all applications for copies of
The Spectatorthe SPECTATOR, and communications upon matters of business, should not be addressed to the Editor, but to the Publisher, 1 Wellington Street, Strand, W.C.
Up to Friday night France has not given the slightest
The Spectatorsign of an intention to disarm, and according to the Berlin cor- respondent of the Times considerable uneasiness is still felt in that capital. He states on official and...
A deputation from the National Reform Union—a new and more
The Spectatormoderate Reform League—waited on Mr. Gladstone on SaetisClay, to express their dislike of the Tory Bill and their con- fidence in himself. In reply, Mi. Gladstone told them that...
Mr. Disraeli seems to have been much irritated by the
The Spectatordeputa- diaries," and regretted that persons of that kind " should have come forward to pay their homage to one who, wherever he may sit, must always be the pride and ornament...
Mr. Gladstone made an important speech last night in favour
The Spectatorof the motion for the complete abolition in Parliamentary boroughs of the Small Tenements' and other local compound- ing Acts. He showed that this was quite in harmony with the...
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Lord Robert Montagu, the new Vice-President of Education, ought to
The Spectatorpass an examination in modern history. It seems that Mr. Cole, the South Kensington man, who is exhibiting shelves of Blue-Books at the French Exhibition, wants to publish a...
Mr. Disraeli has just escaped running foul of the Record.
The SpectatorHad he proposed an addition of eight members instead of seven, the number of the House of Commons would have been the mystic number of the Beast, 666 Mazzini, who is rather the...
Lord' Granville, the Chancellor of the University of London, presided
The Spectatoron Wednesday at the ceremony of admitting to degrees the graduates of the past year, and conferring on the successful candidates for honours the distinctions they had won. Lord...
Mr. Watkins on Tuesday proposed a curious rider to Household
The SpectatorSuffrage. A house is not to be a house unless it has two rooms, on the distinct ground that a family which lives in one is not civi- lized. Mr. Disraeli, of course, " regretted...
Mr. Gladstone is to be elected a member of Brooks's
The Spectatorby a some- what unusual process, invented apparently expressly for that end, which the Echoes of the Clubs, —a new gossiping periodical cor- responding to its name,—describes in...
The lodger franchise was debated again on Tuesday, after the
The Spectatorclose of the conversation on the Scotch Reform Bill, and Mr. Disraeli assented to the enfranchisement of lodgers in rooms (not less than two) of 101. clear annual value, who are...
This struggle reminds us of a good legend told of
The SpectatorMr. Glad- stone's unpopularity in the Carlton some eleven or twelve years ago, when he first began to betray the undergrowth of Liberal ideas in his mind. It is said that some...
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Sir Roderick Murchison has shown very satisfactorily that the Johanna
The Spectatorman on whose authority we have hitherto believed Dr. Livingstone's murder, has given to different people two quite different and inconsistent accounts of the transaction, and...
Somebody, who signs himself " Telam," has raised an odd
The Spectatorques- tion in the Times. Is it wrong to feed a wild beast with live animals? The boa is so fed with rabbits, and "Telam " says that is very cruel. Clearly it is cruel if the boa...
Mr. Disraeli on Monday informed the House that Mr. Walpole
The Spectatorhad resigned, but hinted that he would remain in the Cabinet. If so, it is a pity he should think it beneath his dignity to take the Duchy of Lancaster, to be vacated by Lord...
Mr. Kitch is a builder in Bridgewater. He employed a
The Spectatornon- society man, one Jordan, and the Union ordered bier dismissal, under penalty of a strike. Mr. Kitch prosecuted the secretary, and the magistrates convicted him. He...
There was a row in the House on Thursday night
The Spectatorof the worst American kind. Mr. Layard complained that Mr. Lewis, Member for Marylebone, had called him something or other not specified, and Mr. Lewis retorted that Mr. Layard...
• Mr. Jefferson Davis has been released on a writ
The Spectatorof Habeas 'Corpus from a Virginian Court, and held to bail. He will probably not be tried, and has in fact escaped with an imprison- ment of two years, not a tenth of the...
The final settlement of the Luxemburg question, the prospect of
The Spectatorlarge arrivals of gold from Australia and the United States, and the great abundance of money seeking employment, have given additional firmness to the market for home and...
Colonel Barttelot obtained leave on Tuesday for another Com- mittee
The Spectatorof Inquiry on the Malt Tax, but the foolish and obstinate man rejected Mr. Gladstone's suggestion that it should be instructed to inquire also into the relation of this...
Mr. Tomline, Member for Shrewsbury, has written a clever letter
The Spectatorto a gentleman in Suffolk, a county where Mr. Tomline is perhaps the most conspicuous accumulator of land. He thinks Mr. Disraeli's measure equivalent to simple household...
Mr. Bates writes to Thursday's Times that he attributes the
The Spectatorcold temperature of the last few days to our having got bank into the same plane with the orbit of the meteorites which gave us six months ago so brilliant a spectacle. If so,...
The list of Consol-holders has been published this week, and
The Spectatoris interesting. On the first dividend day in 1865 less than 127,000 persons held the entire National Debt, and less than 70,000 held the greater part of it. It is asserted that...
Yesterday and on Friday week the leading British Railways left
The Spectatoroff at the annexed quotations :— Friday, May 10. Friday, May 17'- Great Eastern Great Northern . - Great western.. Lancashire and Yorkshire 281 1101 411 121 281 110 421...
The closing prices of the leading Foreign Securities yesterday and
The Spectatoron Friday week are subjoined :— Friday, May 10. Friday, May 17. Mexican 161 101 Spanish Passives .. • .. 211 224 Do. Certificates .. • • .. 14 141 Turkish 6 per (alk,...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The Spectator. ANOTHER LECTURE FOR MR. GLADSTONE. IF Mr. Gladstone would only learn that earnestness is a quality to be economized! He is always wasting it, till men of the world, who know...
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THE " COLLECTIVE GUARANTEE."
The SpectatorYet Lord Derby's and Lord Stanley's language, in speaking of this guarantee, strongly support the view that England has gone into this guarantee without the slightest vestige...
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A DISRAELI IN FUSTIAN. T HE Times observed on Monday that
The Spectator"there are very few people in the political world who are in a condition to deny that it is fair to expect a man to vote with his master, his employer, or his landlord, unless...
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THE EXPECTED COUP D'ETAT IN ITALY.
The SpectatorS EVERAL journals, notably the Chronicle and the Pall Mall Gazette, have recently published an extraordinary story of an intrigue now going on in Italy, the object of which is...
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IRISH RAILWAYS.
The SpectatorT HE Report of the Commissioners on Railways is a very able, very tedious, and very annoying document. Nobody can read it without being bored, some really brilliant...
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A REVERIE ON MR. POYNTER'S "ISRAEL IN EGYPT"
The SpectatorM R. POYNTER'S great picture in the Royal Academy of the Israelites made by their Egyptian taskmasters to "serve with rigour," is one which takes hold of even the dullest ima-...
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THE PHYSIOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF THE SUN
The SpectatorAND MOON. IN a recent work of some interest but little method, Dr. Forbes I Winslow* has given us some account of a very curious subject, professedly the physiological...
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I F there is any English county which is entitled to
The Spectatora distinct treatment as a Province in itself, it is the County of Kent. From the time of the first Roman expedition to Britain it has -constantly had a distinctive character...
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THE LAND LAWS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR.") SIR,-I have been long familiar with the assertion that "the settlement of land stands or falls with that of personalty." It is, indeed, much...
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RELIGIOUS FATALISM.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,—While thanking you for the geniality of your remarks on my book, I cannot see your difficulty in understanding how selfish people can be...
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B OOKS.
The SpectatorTRANSLATIONS FROM SCHILLER'S MINOR POEMS.* SCHILLER is in some respects even more difficult to translate than Goethe, as poetry which depends chiefly on the mere lyric ring of...
THE COURTSHIP OF PIETY.
The SpectatorBlue-eyed MISS PIETY, walking sedately, Mused thus beside the classic Isis lately :— " Must I for ever spend my days apart, Watching the mild flame of a maiden heart ? Or...
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HOOK'S ARCHBISHOPS OF CANTERBURY.*
The SpectatorDR. Hoorc tells us that in this volume he concludes the history of the Primates who governed our Church antecedently to the period of the Reformation, that in the next the...
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THE COUNTESS DE BOIGNE.*
The SpectatorThis book is a curiosity in its authorship and in itself. The writer of it, the Comtet3se de Boigne, has left the mark of all her own peculiarities in the characters, the...
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FROM WATERLOO TO THE PENINSULA.*
The SpectatorMn. SALA'S special correspondence is amusing, and Mr. Sala's books are amusing, but we prefer to have them separate. When the two are combined their effect is somewhat patchy....
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorThe Philosophy of Classification, being a Base for Thought, a Measure- ment for Morality, and a Key to Truth. By Frederick J. Wilson. (Pitman.)—As we start with an admission...
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Lima : Sketches of the Capital of Peru. By Manuel
The SpectatorA. Fuentes. (Triibner.)—The illustrations of this work are by far the most valuable part of it, but some of them are extremely good. The style of the letter-press savours of the...
Saint Alice. By Edward Campbell Tainsh. (Hurst and Blackett.) —Mr.
The SpectatorTainsh is one of those who write with ease. He has filled three volumes with matter which a terse and compact writer would have got into one. His novel is therefore somewhat...
The Church: its Origin, its History, its Present Position. By
The SpectatorDrs. Luthardt, Kahnis, and Briickner, Professors of Theology, Leipsic. Translated by Sophia Taylor. (Edinburgh : T. and T. Clark.)—With the exception of some stiffness, and...
Breathings of the Better Life. Edited by Lucy Larcom. (Boston,
The SpectatorTicknor and Fields ; London, Trubner.)—A book of devotional selec- tions on the plan of connecting a text of Scripture with some passage of sacred poetry, and some meditation in...
Change of Air. By J. C. Atkinson, M.D. (Triibner.)—We can
The Spectatorhardly commend Dr. Atkinson'a treatise as satisfactory to general readers. It may possibly be beneficial to some medical advisers, if they are content to follow out its...
Jamaica in 1866. By Thomas Harvey and William Brewin. (A.
The SpectatorW. Benuett.)—The writers of this volume "resigned themselves to the service of proceeding to Jamaica" shortly after the insurrection, as a deputation from the Society of...
collection of all tho Apocryphal Gospels, prefaced by a sketch
The Spectatorof their history, of their relation to the Gospel history, and of their reception by the Church. This introduction is extremely able, and marked by a close acquaintance with all...
with the old system of large and nauseous doses. He
The Spectatormight almost have taken for the motto of his book the old rhyme, which declares that brandy is for all men the very best of physic, he seems to have pro- scribed it so often,...
Plays and Poems. By Charles Waddie. Printed for private distribu-
The Spectatortion. (Edinburgh : Neill and Co.)—As Mr. Waddle has sent us a copy of these plays and poems, we presume that he invites our criticism. We assure him that we have no wish to be...
The Minor Prophets. Translated from the original Hebrew. By John
The SpectatorBellamy. (Simpkin and Marshall.)—This new translation, which, it is needless to say, is in some respects a considerable departure from the authorized version, is accompanied by...
The Millennitan ; or, the New Golden Age. A Lay
The Spectatorof Edon Restored. By a Pilgrim from the Holy Land. (Adams and Francis.)—On so grave a subject we must needs speak under correction, but this poem seems to us a very fair attempt...
The Child's Country Book, in Words of Two Syllables. By
The SpectatorThomas Miller. (Routledge.)—Mr. Miller's idea is good, and the execution is such as will cause the book to take admirably with children. Of course it is written for the quite...
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Whose Are the Fathers? By John Harrison. (Longman.)—They may be
The SpectatorMr. Harrison's, for all we care. But if Mr. Harrison wished us to wade through his 720 pages, he should have written his introduction in a more inviting style and a more...
A Kalendar of the English Church and Ecclesiastical Almanack for
The Spectatorthe Year of Grace 1867. (Church Press Company, Limited.)—This must be a useful book to many who will not appreciate its peculiar doctrines. It must be amusing to many more who...
Hymns and Lyrics for the Seasons and Saints' Days of
The Spectatorthe Church. By the Rev. Gerard Moultrie, M.A. (Masters.)—Two or three of the poems in this volume deserve a favourable mention, but the majority can hardly detain us. Mr....
The Seven Cries from Calvary. By the Rev. William Bramloy-Moore,
The SpectatorM.A. (W. Rant and Co.)—The title of this book is in questionable taste, and the style of the discourses themselves might be greatly im- proved. Sometimes, too, we notice points...
Greece, Ancient and Modern. Lectures delivered before the Lowell Institute.
The SpectatorBy C. C. Felton, LL.D., late President of Harvard University. Two vols. (Boston, Ticknor and Fields ; London. Triibner.)—Those two volumes contain four wanes of lectures ; the...
Holy Meditations for Every Day. Compiled and edited by B.
The SpectatorE. B. (F. Warne and Co.)—Our praise of a book such as this may seem earned Holy Meditations for Every Day. Compiled and edited by B. E. B. (F. Warne and Co.)—Our praise of a...
The Christian Year-Book; containing a Summary of Christian Work, and
The Spectatorthe Results of Missionary Effort throughout the World. (Jackson, Walford, and Hodder.)—The title of this book tells its story, and we have only to add that " A Summary of...