Page 1
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The Spectator' Y in the week the leading journal announced to those - whom it might concern that there was no Government, and that which was supposed to be such has since been so conducting...
Page 2
Warn ant( Vrarttltings in Valiant.
The SpectatorPRINCIPAL BUSINESS OF THE WEER. HAWSE OF LORDS. Monday, April 26. No business of importance. HAWSE OF LORDS. Monday, April 26. No business of importance. Tuesday, April 27....
Page 6
ht Tartrefolio.
The SpectatorA Court of Common Council was held on Monday to receive a report relative to proceedings in Parliament upon the London Corporation BM. The sitting was "secret." A deputation of...
of tuna
The SpectatorTax QUEEN departed from Aldershot on Saturday, after inspecting the troops, and arrived in Buckingham Palace in the evening. The Prime of Wales arrived about the same time from...
Page 7
IRELAND.
The SpectatorThe annual show of the Royal Irish Agricultural Society on Wednes- day, gave the Earl of Eglinton an opportunity of making a speech in which he compared the state of Ireland now...
SCOTLAND.
The SpectatorThe Association for the Improvement and Extension of Scottish Universities have presented a memorial to Lord Derby setting forth the measures they think called for. They ask for...
Vrottiarial.
The SpectatorThe Liverpool Chamber oi Commerce has adopted a petition to the House of Commons on the subject of the government of India. Their scheme of government differs from that proposed...
Page 8
Foreign rt0 Calautal.
The SpectatorIraurr.—The Paris elections on Monday passed off very quietly. Little more than one-half of the electors on the register went to the poll. The contest in the third...
Page 9
3iiiortlIfttanno.
The SpectatorThe Gazette announces that the Queen has appointed H.R.H. the Duke of Cambridge, E.G., his Grace the Duke of Newcastle, the Right Hon- ourable Earl Grey, the Right Honourable...
Page 10
POSTSCRIPT.
The SpectatorBSTITEDIY. The discussion in the House of Commons last night on the Indian re-. solutions turned entirely on the question whether the present is the time for legislation....
Page 11
ROBERT STEPHEN RINTOUL.
The SpectatorThe interest which attaches to the biography of a man like Ro- bert Stephen Rintoul does not arise from stirring adventure or startling transition. The times in which he lived...
MONEY MARKET.
The SpectatorSTOCK EXCIWNE, FRIDAY ArITANOON. This has been a week of considerable animation in all departments of the Stook Exchange. On Monday business commenced heavily, but during the...
Page 14
THE PARLIAMENTARY DUEL.
The SpectatorTHERE are passages in the great epic of Homer which show the main movement of the drama and the progress of important battles in suspense, while the st r uggle between two...
TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE L.A.TE M.R. RINT0l7L AND THE "SPECTATOR." We publish in another part of our columns an ample biography of the remarkable man, whose name has hitherto been identiflee with...
Page 15
WM LORDS, THE JEW BILL, AND THE CONSTITUTION. TICE politics
The Spectatorof England are changingfrom a field of intellectual and, moral effort, and party struggles, into a barren arena, where men without convictions wrangle over questions without...
Page 16
EXCLUSION GIVING WAY.
The SpectatorTan great public interests are forcing . their way notwithstand - ing the encrusted resistance of the privileged classes. For the moment, the weakness of the Government is...
THE RESOLUTIONS AND THE BILLS.
The SpectatorOBSTINACY and incompetency are related qualities. This is true of Parliamentary assemblies and of individuals alike. But the House of Commons might plead a peculiar excuse for...
Page 17
THE REFORM INSTALMENT BILL.
The SpectatorTHE success of Mr. Locke King's motion amounts to a Parlia- mentary declaration that the system of promises has broken down. The plan of introducing measures "for the rejection...
Page 18
LAW BARBARISMS.
The SpectatorNo injury is done to humanity when a creature like Giovanni Lani is erased from the list. Any argument against capital punishment cannot rest upon personal claims on behalf of...
$ift Attg.
The SpectatorTIER ROYAL ACADEMY EXHIBITION. The private view of the Royal Academy, which took place yesterday, disclosed an unusually good exhibition. There is effort, discipline, emu-...
Page 19
THE OLD WATER-COLOUR SOCIETY.
The SpectatorWe expressed last week, in distinct terms, the points of weakness and sluggishness which canker our existing water-colour school in the bulk ; we therefore spare ourselves now...
Page 20
DEATHS.
The SpectatorOn the Ilth March, killed, at Lucknow, while leading an assault, William Robert Moorsom, Captain 13th Light Infantry, Quartermaster-General of Division to Gene- rals Havelock...
MESSRS. DICKINSON ' S EXHIBITION.
The SpectatorThe gallery of photographic-artistic portraits opened by Messrs. Dickinson of Bond Street last year is again before the public ; com- prising many of the former examples, with...
PICTURE SALES: MR. MILLER ' S GALLERY.
The SpectatorAs our columns for the last few weeks have witnessed, this is the thick of the art-exhibition season. But the exhibitions which charge a shil- ling admittance are not by any...
MARRIAGES.
The SpectatorOn the 13th April, at the Episcopal Chapel, Muthil, Perthshire, Charles Green- hill, Esq. ' Captain Coldstienin Guards, only son of David Greenhill, Esq., late of the Hon. E. 1....
ght /runt.
The SpectatorFROM THE LONDON GAZETTE, APRIL 27. WAR Orricz, Pall Mall, April 27.—Caralry—lOth Light Drags.—Lieut. J. 3. Wynniatt, from the 52d Foot, to be Lieut, paying the difference, vice...
BIRTHS.
The SpectatorOn the 19th April, in Green Street, Grosvenor Square, the Hon. Mrs. William Napier, of a daughter. On the 22d, in Lower Seymour Street, the Wife of Lieutenant-Colonel Smyth,...
Page 21
PRICES CURRENT.
The SpectatorBRITISH FUNDS. (Closing Prices.) Saturi. Monday. Tussday. Weds**. Thurs. Friday. 3 per Cent Consols 97 97 971 971 971 Ditto for Account 97 971 971 971 971 9 71 97 3...
(Pak.
The SpectatorFROM THE LONDON GAZETTE, APRIL 27. Bankrupts.-IticitAnn EVANS senior, Napier Street, Great Dover Street, Newing- ton, veterinary surgeon-Join; THOMAS KEEL!., Howland Street,...
Page 24
London: Printed by Jesse. CaarreN, of 265, Strand, In the
The SpectatorCounty of Middlesex, Printer, at the office of Josses Cass- aba, 17, Bouverie Street, In the Precinct of Whitettiars, Lo In the City of London; and Published by the afbresaid...
Page 25
c rttafor s,upfientettt.
The SpectatorMAY 1, 1858. BOOKS. HOGG'S LIFE OF SHELLEY.. Tax outlines of Shelley's career are well known and the world has ample means to 1111 them up in part. known, in his book,t...
Page 26
COLONEL MACDOUGALL'S CAMPAIGNS OF HANNIBAL. * A GREAT variety of circumstances
The Spectatorhave combined to render the military actions and proceedings of Hannibal obscure and un- certain in their particulars. The passage by which in Napoleon's phrase he "forced" the...
Page 27
WANDERINGS IN THE LAND OF HAM. * TEE land of Egypt
The Spectatoris "the land of Ham" of this volume, intro- duced by a journey from Paris to Marseilles and a voyage to Alexandria in a French steamer. The "dau ghter of Japhet" is a young lady...
Page 28
ANNALS OF WINDSOR BY TIGHE AND DAVIS. * A VERY painstaking
The Spectatorand elaborate archieological work, although relating to a place at once the monarch's and the Muses' seat," cannot be so attractive as many books that appeal more di- rectly to...
Page 29
ANASTASIA. • THIS elaborate "poem" belongs to that school of which
The SpectatorBrowning is longo intervallo the head, and Bailey and Sidney Dobell the only members likely to remain distinguished ; though now and then a disciple may turn up, as in the case...
Page 30
PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED.
The SpectatorBOOKS. Poets and Poetry of Germany. Biographical and Critical Notices. By Madame L. Davesies de Pontes, Translator of "Egmont," &c. In two volumes. The Web of Life. By Allan...
Page 31
SANITARY CONDITION OF LONDON.
The SpectatorLesketh How,. An2bleside, 20th April 1858. Snt—In the number for this month of the "British and Foreign Medico- Chirurgical Review," under the head of Medical Intelligence, the...
Itittrs fa t iiitnr.
The SpectatorTILE NEW ZEALAND LAND FUND, Badley, 41iingdon, Berks, _April 22, 1858. Si—Permit me, through the medium of your paper, to correct an im- pression which might be created by Sir...
3L 115 It.
The SpectatorNotwithstanding the brightness of the new star that has risen in the Haymarket, it is time that it were viewed under some other aspect. It is time that Mademoiselle Titiens...
tr#t fil4patrt5.
The SpectatorNo dramatic novelty has been produced during the week. King Lear, at the Princess's, remains the principal theatrical attraction, and much as doctors differ in ordinary cases,...
THE INDIAN COUNCIL.
The SpectatorBelfast, 22d April 1858. SIB—It appears that a part of the Council of India must be elective. I do not see the necessity : for I believe that the independence of the Council...