Page 1
The arrival of the new French Resident-General, General Lyautey, at
The SpectatorFez last Saturday was signalized by a strong general attack on the city by tribesmen. The attack began about ten o'clock. The situation was at one time very serious. A large...
The New Jersey primaries have given Mr. Roosevelt an- other
The Spectatorsweeping victory. He carried all the twenty-eight delegates to the Republican Convention. The New York correspondent of the Times says that Mr. Taft's friends had been hoping...
A negro rising is in progress in the eastern end
The Spectatorof the island of Cuba, and although the situation is not as yet serious rumours of intervention by the United States are spreading rapidly. A fleet of eight American battleships...
On Tuesday they returned, and on that day and on
The SpectatorWednesday the city was again in great danger. On Tuesday night some hundreds of Berbers forced their way in and there was band-to-hand fighting in the streets. The Times...
We do not pretend that the comments are all favour-
The Spectatorable, but no harm can come of the discussion, and very much good may be done if the idea builds itself up in the public mind that an alliance is the only logical culmination to...
•
The SpectatorNEWS OF THE WEEK A MEETING between Lord Kitchener, Mr. Asquith, and Mr. Churchill at Malta has caused intense curiosity and a multitude of rumours during the week. As we...
Page 2
Mr. Lloyd George,.who was the principal speaker at a great
The Spectatordemonstration in favour of Disestablishment at Swansea on Tuesday, said that the connexion of the State with religion was an injury to the spiritual life of the country. Turning...
Meanwhile Sir Edward Clarke's inquiry, which opened on Friday week,
The Spectatorwas concluded last Saturday, and on Tuesday night his report was issued by the Board of Trade. Of the seven questions disputed Sir Edward Clarke decided two against the men and...
The Report of the American Senate Committee on the '
The SpectatorTitanic' disaster was issued on Monday. There was a. remarkable contrast between the sobriety of the Report and the extraordinary speech in which Mr. Smith, the Chairman of the...
It would be absurd to pretend that these findings are
The Spectatorwith- out value and importance merely because we know that the Chairman proved himself ignorant of nautical affairs. We fancy that his colleagues must have been largely respon-...
Lord Kitchener's first report upon Egypt and the Sudan was
The Spectatorissued on Thursday night, and is on the whole thoroughly optimistic in tone. The total revenue of Egypt for the year 1911 was £E16,793,000, which gave a surplus of £E1,921,000....
The London transport strike has continued throughout the week without
The Spectatorinterruption, but owing to the firm action of the authorities it has not as yet produced any very serious effects upon the public food supply. On Monday a force of over a...
Such, a lack of "proper discipline" might easily appear in
The Spectatorany ship belonging to any line. Boat-drill is not carried out thoroughly, and the ship's company generally comes together for the first time a few hours before the ship sails....
Page 3
Two interesting pieces ,of University intelligence appeared in Thursday's Times.
The SpectatorOne relates to the proposed professor- ship of town-planning at London University, an idea which originated with Mr. John Burns, who suggested some time ago that some wealthy...
The men for whom the Welsh miners worked grudged them
The Spectatorevery inch of sunlight and breathing space. In the thinly popu- lated districts of Wales they could deprive a man of his liveli- hood for his opinions and exile him from the...
We note with deep regret the death, from typhoid fever,
The Spectatoron Thursday last, at the early age of forty-five, of Mr. Wilbur Wright, to whose experiments, in partnership with his brother Orville, the present development of the aeroplane...
The All-for-Ireland League held its Convention at Cork on Sunday
The Spectatorlast. The main resolution, proposed by Mr. William O'Brien, welcomed the Government Home Rule Bill as offering a reasonable basis of permanent reconciliation between the two...
On Wednesday night Mr. Balfour spoke at the Commemora- tion
The SpectatorFeast of the Grocers' Company. In the course of his speech he raised the question why it was that the Restoration was received in England with almost universal satisfaction. The...
The protected cruiser Melbourne,' which is being con- structed for
The Spectatorthe Royal Australian Navy, was launched at Birkenhead on Thursday. This ship is the second to be launched of the four cruisers which, with six destroyers and three submarines,...
The result of the polling in the South Hackney division
The Spectatorwas declared late on the evening of the 24th ult., the figures being Mr. H. Morison (L.) 5,339, Mr. J. C. Gibson (U.) 4,836, or a Liberal majority of 503. Compared with December...
Mr. Keir Hardie, who presided at a woman suffrage meet-
The Spectatoring on Saturday night at Merthyr, referred to a fresh develop- ment on the part of the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies. Hitherto the Union had not taken any...
The Royal International Horticultural Exhibition at Chelsea, which was opened
The Spectatoron Wednesday week, is generally admitted to be the most wonderful ever seen in London. Indeed, one of the foreign jurors declared that a similar exhibition had never been seen...
Page 4
TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorNAVAL POWER AND THE MEDITERRANEAN. T HE meeting of Lord Kitchener, Mr. Asquith, and Mr. Churchill in Malta has caused a bountiful crop of rumours and a good deal of uninforming...
Page 5
THE METHODS OF THE NEW UNIONISM.
The SpectatorT HE elaboration of Sir Edward Clarke's report on the cause of the present strike of transport workers is apt to obscure the real points at issue. Naturally Sir E dward Clarke,...
Page 6
THE ALBANIAN - MACEDONIAN COMMISSION.
The SpectatorT HE news contained in the Times leader of Tuesday is the most important we have yet had from that " regenerated " Turkey of which so much has been expected and so little...
Page 7
F ROM the initial and inevitable chaos following upon the abdication
The Spectatorof the Manchus and the inauguration of the Chinese Republic there have, as yet, emerged neither individual leaders nor organized forces of authority sufficient to enable us to...
Page 8
THE MAN WHO KNEW HIS OWN CHIEF END.
The SpectatorARNABAS is nearly always portrayed for us as a man of overflowing enthusiasm and generous sympathies. We do not often hear any commendation of his sure judgment. Yet the man's...
Page 9
PUBLIC SCHOOLS AND "CASTE" T HE labour unrest and the Daily
The SpectatorMail in combination have given some well-known novelists the opportunity to offer us their thoughts on the present distress. The effect is rather like that of an illuminated...
Page 10
THE BRIDGE-BUILDERS.
The SpectatorI T stands where the workmen of the Empire built it before Rome fell, and the men of the legions crossed it going north to colonize. The plain where it stands is wider now than...
Page 11
CORRESPONDENCE.
The SpectatorSOME MODERN FRENCH BOOKS. [TO TH2 EDITOR 011 THE " SPROTATOR."] Sin,—Among French memoirs recently published few will be found more interesting than M. de Freyeinet's...
Page 12
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The Spectator" COMMAND OF THE SEA." [To THE EDITOR 07 TIER "SPACTATOR.] Six,--May I venture to criticise the able article on the Navy in your last issue P Its spirit is right, but its...
Page 13
"TILE WELSH CHURCH BILL. A CALVINISTIC METHODIST AGAINST IT.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the Free Press.] Sir,—I wish to ask your permission for me to write these few words in your paper. I am a Calvinistic Methodist, but I strongly object to...
CHURCH LANDS.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—In the interests of the charity to which Mr. Pearson's friend has promised a contribution in the event of its being proved that the...
DISESTABLISHMENT OF THE CHURCH IN WALES.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OP THY "SPECTATOR. "] Sin,—I venture to enclose for your perusal a letter, which appeared in the Denbighshire Free Press relative to the Welsh Church Bill,...
WELSH DISESTABLISHMENT.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE d'srmoTiroa."J SIR, — The Welsh Church Bill will soon be dealt with in Com- mittee, and the outcome depends upon the spirit in which the parties interested...
[To THE EDITOR OP TEE " SPECTATOR. " ] The Political History
The Spectatorof England," vol. v., p. 497, contains an appendix on the disposition of monastic lands by Henry VIII. which seems to represent the best results of research available on the...
Page 14
THE EFFECTS OF DISESTABLISHMENT.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR Or TRIO " SPECTATOR:1 Sin,—Will you permit me to reply to the question which "A Liberal Nonconformist" asks in his letter which I have read in the Spectator of...
THE HOME RULE BILL : RECRUITING IN IRELAND.
The Spectatorpro TDB EDITOR or TEE " ISPEOTATOB."1 SIR,—Mr. Asquith's appeal in introducing this measure was for those "who have borne and are bearing their share—and a noble share it has...
THE HOME RULE BILL AND THE IRISH.
The Spectator[TO TEE EDITOR OF 5115 "SPRCTATOR.".1 Sin,—Among the consequences of the Parliament Act which have probably not been foreseen is the difficulty placed in the way of the House...
THE PROPOSED ALLIANCE.
The Spectator[TO TEE EDITOR OP TEE " SPRCTATOR.1 SIR, —May I venture to utter a most earnest protest against the idea of a definite alliance with France on the lines sug- gested by you P It...
GOETHE AND THE PANAMA CANAL. [To TEE EDITOR 01 TEE
The Spectator"SrscuTon."1 SIR,—In Oxenford's translation of the third volume of Eekermann's Conversations with Goethe (published 1148), compiled from Eckermann's own notes and from another...
Page 15
THE CARE OF THE FEEBLE-MINDED.
The Spectator[TO TRII EDITOR. OP THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—ThOugh I earnestly desire the segregation of the feeble-minded under certain conditions and with proper safe- guards, I bog leave to...
PROTECTION OF WOMEN: GUILDHALL MEETING.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR Or TRH "SPECTATOR.'] Srn,—Your article of May 11th on the " Criminal Law Amendment (White Slave Traffic) Bill" seems to me prac- tically to endorse the steps...
THE AGRICULTURAL LABOURER AND A MINIMUM WAGE.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF TIM "SPEOT•TOR."] Sin,—In the interview with Mr. Lloyd George the repre- sentative of the Daily News and Leader asked: "Will you give us a Minimum Wage Bill...
"CAN DO."
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF TRIO " SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—In an article on "The Inquiry into the Labour Unrest" appearing in your issue of April 6th there appears the following :- "It is a...
Page 16
" MOTHER! MOTHER!"
The Spectator/I.. THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] Sra,—The letter under the above title which appeared in your last week's issue recalls to my mind a story told in connexion Ivith the late...
VAIN REPETITIONS.
The Spectator[To TEE EDITOR Or THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—I have just finished reading an octavo volume of which the sufficiently striking title is, let me say, " Thomas Jacob- son's...
ON A WORD IN "THE COMEDY OF ERRORS" (ACT IV.,
The SpectatorSc. 3). pro , r111: EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] SIR,—In a chapter on Shakespeare put forth some fifty years ago a scholar glanced at those who would corrupt into bob or fob a...
THEODORIDES' EPITAPH.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR."1 SIB,—There is another well-known rendering, more literal and no less melodious :— " Tomb of a shipwrecked mariner am I, But thou sail on...
A WHITE WAGTAIL.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR Or THE "SPECTATOR." ] Sin,—For several days past we have seen here quite close to the house a perfectly white wagtail with a yellow bill. It comes with an...
PROFITABLE EGG FARMING.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR Or TIM "SPECTATOR.") Sin,—As an American whose profession is that of agricul- tural expert the writer was interested in reading a letter, from H. B. Buchanan,...
Page 17
BOOKS .
The SpectatorTHE WHITE SLAVE TRAFFIC IN THE UNITED STATES.* WE wish that all books ou the White Slave Traffic were writteft , with the ability and understanding of this work. When we say...
POETRY.
The SpectatorCOLOURS OF LIGHT. THIS is not easy to understand For you that come from a distant land Where all the colours are low in pitch— Deep purples, emeralds soft and rich, Where...
WHAT EVERY TRAVELLER KNOWS.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OW THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—The suggestion which you make in the Spectator of May 11th that the seats in third-class railway carriages should be numbered, and that...
NAPLES SOCIETY FOR THE PROTECTION OF ANIMALS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP TUE "SPECTATOR. "] 8111,—r should be very grateful to you if you would again find room in your columns for an appeal on behalf of the Naples Society for the...
NOTICE.—When "Correspondence" or Articles are signed with the writer's name
The Spectatoror initials, or with a pseudonym, or are marked " Communicated," the Editor must not necessarily be held to be in agreement with the views therein expressed or with the mode of...
Page 18
- JOHN ANDREW DOYLE.* "THE writer of the essays which
The Spectatorform the contents of this little Volume was one who left an enduring recollection of his personality upon those whose privilege it was to know him, and the essays themselves...
Page 19
ABOUT IRISH , 141FE4'.*
The SpectatorIT has often been asked, Where in literature shall we find the real Irishman ? Are we to look for him !in therages of 'Charles Lever or iu those of Miss Jane Barlow? Mr....
Page 20
TWO BOOKS ON BILLIARDS.*
The SpectatorGAMES, and especially ball games, provide many incidental pleasures. There is the sheer physical joy of a well-delivered stroke known to every cricketer, tennis player, golfer,...
Page 21
BY LAND AND BY WATER.* THE charm of Mrs. Fuller
The SpectatorMaitland's matter is in the manner of the telling. The book is delightful or meaningless according to the powers of appreciation of the reader. She writes day by day of the...
Page 22
THE STUDY OF WORDS4' Am:tonal Mr. Pearsall Smith sets out
The Spectatorto deal with "the English language " as a whole, he in fact limits himself almost *From Pillar to Post. By LieuteColonel Lowther. London: Edward Arnold. [15s. not.] t The...
FROM PILLAR TO POST.* WHY is it that we hear
The Spectatorso little of the military style P Can it be mere intellectual snobbery or a jealous trade unionism of writers pure and simple that prevents its recognition P For nothing, in...
ETON MEMORIES.* IN this book Mr. Nevill has added a
The Spectatornumber of his personal recollections to a sort of anthology of Eton anecdotes, and the result is not wholly satisfactory. The anecdotal part of the book, which runs over the...
Page 23
The Satanist. By Mrs. Hugh Fraser and J. 3. Stahlain,nn.
The Spectator(Hutchinson and Co. 6s.)—What is a " Satanist" ? The dictionaries say "an exceedingly wicked person "; but the word means more than that. A " Satanist" is on the side of Satan,...
The Boom in the Tower. By E. F. Benson. (Mills
The Spectatorand Boon. 65.)—Mr. Benson says that his amiable object in writing those stories has been to make his readers feel uncomfortable and unwilling to look round to see what is in...
FICTION.
The SpectatorTHE SIGN.• THE work of Mrs. Fedden is unfamiliar to the present writer, but The Sign is of a quality rarely found in a novice, though instances are not wanting of writers who...
mystery. The ohaptor headed "The House of Spells" is a
The Spectatorgreat mistake; it may suit "Delilah," but not Keston the hero.— Mother. By Kathleen Morris. (Macmillan and Co. Se. 6d.)—A powerful plea for tho "simple life," with special...
A Little Aversion. By Clara J. Martin. (J. W. Arrowsmith,
The SpectatorBristol. 6s.)—It can hardly ho by accident that Miss Martin reminds us so often of Jane Austen. The social arrangements of the people whom she describes are the same that we...
Page 24
Messrs. A. and C. Black send us some Geographical Pictures
The Spectatorin which we have represented various processes described as "Sculpture of the Earth's Crust," such as weathering of the surface through various agencies, e.g., rain, heat,...
The series of " Books on Egypt and Chalchea "
The Spectator(Kogan Paul, Trench and Co.,68. each net) is to have an addition, of which the first and second volumes are now before us, both from the indefatigable pen of Dr. E. A. Wallis...
SOME BOOKS OF THE WEEK.
The Spectator[Under this hroding 166 et obi ea such Books of the week as babe not been o nett ed for review in other forms.1 Ideals of Living. Selected and edited by Grace E. Hadow....
Messrs. E. J. Burrow and Co. are publishing a quite
The Spectatorremarkable series, or, to speak more exactly, throe series, of " Guides " in Abbey Guides, Cathedral Guides, and Large Parish Church Guides. Specimens of those are before us,...
We may call attention to what seems a good manual
The Spectatorof "Prayers for Home Use," entitled Abide With Us, by Constance Cook (Marshall Brothers, 2s. 6d.), and may mention along with it a devotional manual for communicants, Service...
The Complete Bowler. By James A. Manson. (A. and C.
The SpectatorBlack. 3s. 6d. net.)—By " Bowler " is meant a player at bowls, not a cricketer handling the ball as against the man who handles the bat. Mr. Manson tolls us all about the game,...
The Thunder Weapon in Religion and Folklore. By Mr. Blinkonberg,
The SpectatorPh.D. (Cambridge University. 5s. net.)—Here we have an interesting discussion of the belief in the "thunder- bolt." It is to be found very widely in literature, the Slam of Zeus...