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The method of the President's election, like the method of
The Spectatorthe Pope's election, lends itself to log-rolling, and tends to the selection of safe, rather than of original men. Each party looks out at first for the candidates against whom...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorF RANCE has many faults, but she is rarely tedious. She has got through a grave political crisis within the week, though it involved the fall of a Ministry, the resignation of a...
To the amazement of the Ministers, and indeed of the
The Spectatorwhole country, H. Casimir-Perier did not accept the resigna- tions tendered. On the contrary, he informed M. Dupuy that he must retain power for a time, for that he himself had...
NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS.
The SpectatorWith the " SPECTATOR" of Saturday, January 26th, will be issued, gratis, a SPECIAL LITEBARY SUPPLEMENT, the outside pages of which will be devoted to Advertisements. To secure...
The result is said to have been unexpected. The more
The Spectatorfanatic Socialists did not support M. Brisson, who is a deter- mined Radical of the older type, though they preferred him to all other candidates; and his total support...
NOTICE.—With this week's number of the " SPECTATOR" is issued, gratis,
The Spectatoran Eight-Page Supplement, containing the Half-Yearly Index and Title-Page,—i.e., from July 7th to December 29th, 1894, inclusive.
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On Tuesday, at a meeting of the County Council, Mr.
The SpectatorBurns made a speech which contained two very remarkable passages. London was pleased, he said, that its public bodies, "instead of listening to cranks and utopian schemes put...
• Mr. Balfeur's second speech, delivered on Thursday, was one
The Spectatorthe general drift of which we regret. He defended the right of the Government to overrule the popular wish of a mere dependency, like India, in relation to any policy which it...
• The utter recklessness of life in America, of which
The SpectatorMr_ John Burns has recently been speaking, has been illustrated afresh by a frightful accident in Montana. It is, we believe, illegal to store explosives in railway stations,...
Mr. Balfour addressed his constituents in East Manchester on Wednesday
The Spectatorat the Volunteer Drill Hall, Ardwick, where three thousand of his constituents were assembled. He anticipated a General Election within a comparatively short time, certainly...
The Duke of Argyll began a fine speech in Glasgow
The Spectatoron Tuesday to the West of Scotland Liberal Unionist Associa- tion, which was interrupted in a quarter of an hour by a fainting-fit, which put an end to it. He declared his...
The report of the National Liberal Federation to the Cardiff
The Spectatormeeting on Thursday was not a very hopeful document. It was conceived in a melancholy spirit. In reviewing the general situation it does not pretend to ignore the difficulty of...
The by-election at Evesham comes off on Tuesday, and is
The Spectatore :citing a great deal of local interest. It is said that the number of strangers imported to canvass on one side or the other, is extraordinarily large. There is to be a...
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At the Newmarket Petty Sessions on Tuesday, an applica- tion
The Spectatorwas made on behalf of the Anti-Gambling League against the Stewards to the Jockey Club (under the Betting. Houses Act of 1853) for permitting betting in the rings or inclosnres...
On Wednesday a very important and representative depu- tation from
The Spectatorthe Trade-Unions waited on Mr. Asquith and sub- mitted to him, item by item, a wide and far-reaching Labour programme. Mr. Woods, 34.P., demanded that the principle of a living...
The Cultnrkampf in Germany has come to a final end,
The Spectatorthe Reichstag having voted that the Jesuits shall be re- admitted into the Empire. There is some doubt whether the Federal Council will agree to this vote, Bavaria being most...
The "crisis" in Hungary has ended, as usual, without any
The Spectatorparticular consequences. Baron Banffy becomes Premier, with Dr. Wekerle's old programme, including two ecclesiastical Bills, and with a Ministry, said by the Times'...
The Annual Report of the British South Africa Company, issued
The Spectatoron Thursday, shows that the railway-lines are gradually but surely creeping up the heart of Africa. Since the last Report, the line has been opened from Vryburg to Mafeking (one...
The death of Mr. Fronde, Regius Professor of History at
The SpectatorOxford, has been followed by that of Sir John Seeley, Regius Professor at Cambridge, which occurred suddenly on January 14th. Sir John Seeley first attracted attention by a...
No news of importance has been received this week from
The Spectatorthe Far East, though the two divisions of the Japanese Army have combined after taking Kaiphing, and are now ready for the attack on Nenchang. It is believed that the Japanese...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY
The SpectatorTHE RESIGNATION OF THE FRENCH PRESIDENT. CASIMIR-PERIER is a, very weak man. He has ja_VI • actually resigned the Presidency of the French Republic in a pet, and that in the...
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THE FALL OF M. D1TP1TY. T HE resignation of M. Casimir-Mier
The Spectatoris, of course, an event of the first importance ; but the incidents which led up to it inspire the friends of the French Republic with even more dismay. The significance of...
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MR. BALFOUR AND THE NATION. AI R. BALFOUR is almost assailed
The Spectatorin some of the Government journals of Thursday, for having addressed his constituents on Wednesday in a speech of less than the conventional length. Is it seemly, is it...
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THE DUKE OF ARGYLL. T HE Duke of Argyll's sudden illness
The Spectatorin the very opening of his speech at Glasgow, may, we heartily hope, soon pass away. But statesmen are not all pro- vided with such an iron constitution as Mr. Gladstone's,...
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A NAVAL LOAN. T HE air is full of rumours in
The Spectatorregard to the financial projects of the Government. It is said that a compro- mise has been found between the conflicting demands for a popular Budget and a continuance of the...
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MR. JOHN BURNS ON AMERICA.
The SpectatorM ANY of our readers have doubtless seen the speeches made both to the public and to interviewers, in which Mr. John Burns, since his return from America, has revealed his...
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THE BISHOP OF CHESTER AND THE "TIMES."
The SpectatorA S Bishops enjoy no immunity from human frailties, we must not wonder that they do not always know when they are well off. Yet when all allowance has been made on this head, it...
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INSULT AND INSOLENCE.
The SpectatorT HE Irish Daily Independent, the Parnellite organ, has been hard at work insulting Mr. Morley. It has lavished more lively insult upon him than an Oriental lavishes upon the...
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CLERICAL MAGISTRATES.
The SpectatorW E are a little surprised to find that a social question which has cropped up at intervals for the last fifty years, and has always died away again, has once more come to the...
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SEA-FOWL AND THE STORM.
The SpectatorT HE furious gale from the south-east which raged in the Channel at the end of last week, sprang up so suddenly that the seaports received only three hours' warning, and the...
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SENTIMENT AND SEPULTURE.
The Spectator[To TEL EDITOR OF THZ " EIFICFATOR:J fear the article on "Sentiment and Sepulture," in the Spectator of January 12th, is likely to give pain to many who- have laid the dust of...
LETTERS TO THE EDITUJ1.
The SpectatorSIGNOR CR I S PI. [To THZ EDITOR OF THZ " SPRCTATOR:11 SIR,—If you will permit a man who has known Signor Crispi since he has been Prime Minister of Italy, and necessarily...
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A FRENCH "WHITAKER."
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR Or THE "SPECTATOR. " ] • Srn,—In your review of the " Almanach Hachette" in the - Spectator of January 12th, you say that a Frenchman does Ant seem to "demand the...
'VARIETY OF CHARACTER IN INSECTS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR." J have just read the latest " dog-story " in a letter -addressed to you in the Spectator of January 12th. The following sentence in this...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorJOHN ADDINGTON SYMONDS.* IN the later years of the last century, and in the early :years of the present, it was the habit of devout people to keep diaries of their spiritual...
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LIFE HERE AND HEREAFTER.*
The SpectatorCANox MAcCoLL's Sermons are never commonplace and never conventional. In this volume there is a considerable variety of subject, and sometimes a very great amount of originality...
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SIR VICTOR BROOKE.*
The SpectatorTHE book before us is a little hard to class, being a record of one who was essentially one of those "private persons," as they would have been called in a classic day, whose...
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GUSTAVUS III. AND HIS CONTEMPORARIES.* THERE is a touch of
The Spectatorcontempt in the description applied by Carlyle to the third Gustavus of Sweden. "A shining sort of man," he called him, mach in the same way as one might describe a paste buckle...
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THE CASSEL REMBRANDTS.*
The SpectatorTHE publisher of the English translation of Michel's Rem- brandt has followed up that enterprise by issuing the portfolio before us, in which seventeen out of the twenty-one...
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TALK AT A COUNTRY-HOLTSE.* THERE are no lines of Tennyson's
The Spectatorbetter known, or oftener quoted, than his description of an English home in "The Palace of Art," ending with- " A haunt of ancient peace." An Englishman clings involuntarily to...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorA Study of the Argonautzca of Vcderies Flaccus. By Walter C. Summers, B.A. (Deighton, Bell, and Co., Cambridge.)—This unpretending pamphlet contains much important matter, does...
The Water - Supply of Towns and the Construction of Waterworks. By
The SpectatorW. K. Burton. (Crosby Lockwood and Co.)—Mr. Burton describes himself as "Professor of Sanitary Engineering in the University of Tokyo," and "Consulting Engineer to the Tokyo...
Walton and the Earlier Fishing Writers. By It. B. Marston.
The Spectator(Elliot Stock.)—Mr. Marston introduces his volume by some pleasant reminiscences of his own ; how he caught Prussian carp before he could read, fished for dace from the meadows...
Science and a Future Life, with other Essays. By Frederic
The SpectatorW. H. Myers. (Macmillan.)—We must apologise for having delayed so long our notice of these very able essays. The "unity of purpose" which the author claims for the six is...
We have received the "Third Volume" of Cambrian Minstrelsy (Alawon
The SpectatorGuiana). Music, edited by Joseph Parry, Mus.D. Words in English and Welsh, edited by David Rowlands. (T. C. and E. C. Jack, Edinburgh.)—There are sixty songs and twenty- eight...
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SCHOOL-BOOKS.
The SpectatorIntroduction to lhe Greek Testament. By Theophilus D. Hall, M.A. (John Murray.)—This volume is intended to help those who have not learnt Greek in their youth, to acquire so...