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On Tuesday Mr. Roosevelt had a personal triumph in being
The Spectatorelected to the temporary chairmanship of the New York Republican State Convention by a majority of 122 (567 to 445) over Mr. Sherman. The " Old Guard " know that they are...
NEWS OF THE W EEK.
The SpectatorT HE chief event of the week on the Continent has been the Berlin riots. Serious street-fighting took place on the nights of Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, but on Thursday...
The Daily Chronicle of Thursday reports an interview between its
The Spectatorcorrespondent at Lisbon and Senhor Branco, the Foreign Minister. The situation is admittedly critical. Half the seats of the Members elected to the Cortes have been challenged,...
Mr. John Redmond continues his begging-tour in America.
The SpectatorAt Buffalo on Tuesday he declared that unless the House of Lords surrendered its power to reject Bills, the fight against it would instantly revive, and there would be a...
Another new record has been added to the achievements of
The Spectatorthe aeroplane, but unhappily at the cost of the airman's life. On Friday week M. Chavez succeeded in flying across the Alps by the Simplon Pass. The route chosen was that by the...
It is evident that the German Government from the beginning
The Spectatortook a very serious view of the rioting,—a fact which will cause little surprise when it is remembered that, though no very large body of workmen was involved, the mass not only...
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It would be a very great convenience if we bad
The Spectatoran exact definition of the sense in which the Archbishop uses the word " Church " when he speaks of the Church in potential conflict with the State,—in the matter of...
Possibly an expression, if an unintentional one, of the opinions
The Spectatorof the Bishop of Ely on this subject may be dis- covered in his admirable presidential address to the Congress. In tracing the influence of the Congress during the last fifty...
The Jubilee Church Congress opened on Tuesday at Cambridge, where
The Spectatorthe first Congress met in 1861. Services were held at Ely Cathedral and at Great St. Mary's, Cambridge. At Ely the Archbishop of York preached on the growth of the corporate...
A New Zealand correspondent sends us a copy of the
The SpectatorNew Zealand Times containing a striking poem entitled " The White Peril." The writer, Mr. Edward Tregear, takes for his text three passages from the Labour Reports of 1908,...
It was announced on Friday that at a meeting of
The Spectatorthe Executive of the Labour Party held on Thursday it had been decided that they should recommend the Annual Conference, which meets at Leicester next February, to eliminate...
An interesting discussion of the question of "Heredity and Social
The SpectatorResponsibility" took place on Wednesday morning. Dr. G. E. Shuttlewortb, who read a paper on the duty of the State towards its feeble-minded children, expressed the -view that...
On Thursday the Congress discussed the difficult and vexed question
The Spectatorof the revision of the Prayer-book. We cannot find space to enter into the subject in detail here, but we may note that Dr. Swete, Regius Professor of Divinity, Cambridge,...
Mr. Tregear dismisses in his opening stanzas the menace of
The Spectatorbattle, of Germany, or of Asia. Utter destruction cannot come from " the men of the Failing Broods " ; and why should the Asiatics " leap at our rifles' mouths who have only to...
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Lord Charles Beresford has addressed an open letter to Mr.
The SpectatorAsquith, which was published in the papers of Wednesday, on the naval situation. He says that if steps are not taken in the next few weeks, the defence of the Empire will be "...
lir. Lloyd George spent two hours and a half on
The SpectatorWednesday in an argument with some suffragists from his constituency upon his action in voting against the second reading of Mr. Shackleton's Bill. He declared that he had been...
Mr. Osborne contributes to last Saturday's Morning Post a very
The Spectatorinteresting letter on the real significance of the Trade- Union Congress vote. After pointing out that the machinery of the Trade-Unions has been captured by the Socialists, and...
The New Age has called us to task with some
The Spectatorasperity for our statement two weeks ago that " the country is now face to face with a well-engineered conspiracy on the part of the Socialists to lay hold upon Trade-Union...
A second open letter was addressed by Lord Charles Beres-
The Spectatorford to Mr. Asquith on Thursday, in which he deals with the unguarded state of our sea trade. British trade in the event of war would be exposed to the attacks of privateers on...
The Daily Chronicle on Thursday drew attention to the success
The Spectatorof the Territorial Artillery during the recent training, and quoted Colonel Gaedke's observation that "of the three chief arms the artillery came out best." He goes on:—" This...
A paragraph in Thursday's Daily Mail shows that the Colonial
The Spectatorofficers and men who attended the Army Manoeuvres were much struck by the physique of the British troops:— " They think that all the forces might be better led, but they do not...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorAUSTRIA-HUNGARY AND TURKEY. THT statesmen who are responsible for the conduct of r e urkish affairs have been deluged of late with declarations from various sides that "...
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THE ARMY MANCETTVRES.
The SpectatorT HE Army Manoeuvres are over, and we are now face to face with a good deal of heated controversy as to the way in which they were carried out, and as to the dis- positions of...
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THE POLICY OF 1 . 14.6 VATICAN.
The SpectatorT HOSE friends of the Roman Church who hoped that the Vatican would not be guilty of more practical mistakes in dealing with Modernism than were embodied in the Encyclical...
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'11.111 WEST INDIES AND FREE-TRADE.
The SpectatorTHE Tariff Reform Press has naturally seized upon the Report of the Royal Commission on Trade Relations between Canada and the West Indies as a point in favour of Colonial...
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TEXTS.
The SpectatorTT is very difficult to read the New Testament without theological emphasis. The Gospels have been "pointed" by the theologians just as the Psalms have been "pointed" by the...
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LOUIS PASTEUR.
The Spectator(Died September 281k, 1895.) T HERE are more than sixty Pasteur Institutes : but I am thinking of the Paris Institute. At the end of one of its long corridors, down a few...
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THE PILGRIMS' WAY.
The Spectatorlast twenty years have added quite a little library to the literature which has grown up round that fascinating subject, the road taken by the pilgrims of the Middle Ages...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorMR. STEPHEN GWYNN AND '111.E1 HOME-RULE DILEMMA. [TO TEE EDITOS O7 TKO SPECTATOZ."] Sic, It is difficult to express in becoming language the indignation which the two letters...
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MR. STEPHEN GWYNN'S EXHAUSTED PATIENCE. [To MR EDITOR or 11111
The Spectator" SPsCTATOR.1 Srn,—It is only to-day (September 24th) I have seen Mr. Stephen Gwynn's apologia for, if not indeed apotheosis of, his friends who organised the ambuscades at...
[To TIM EDITOR 011 ma " SPROTITOR. ") Sin,—It is truly delightful
The Spectatorto find Mr. Gwynn, the literary' apostle of the Irish Party, and Mr. Aston, of the defunob Devolution movement, joining hands to attack me. It is a matter for thankfulness that...
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INVALIDITY AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE IN GERMANY.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OE THE " SPECTITOR..1 Sn2,—Week-end parties of ardent Tariff Reformers continue to prove conclusively how it happens that iu Germany a nation is made prosperous...
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NONCONFORMISTS AND PRAYER-BOOK REVISION.
The Spectator[To TIM EDITOR Op IRE ..sreceeroa..i SIR,—About half the nation are at any rate sufficiently satisfied with the contents of the Book of Common Prayer, provided by national...
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TARIFF REFORM AND SOCIALISM.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] SIR,—Mr. Skelhorn (Spectator, September 17th) really ought to study definitions of terms used in current political con- troversies before...
SCOTTISH NOBLEMEN AND THE CHURCH OF SCOTLAND.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THII "ErscrAroa."] Sin,—With some part of Mr. D. Scott Moncrieff's letter in your last issue I cannot agree, but he is certainly right in his strictures on...
CONCURRENT ENDOWMENT.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR.") SIR, —I shall be glad to be allowed through the medium of the Spectator to advocate concurrent endowment for Wales. In Mr. Asquith's Bill it...
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INDIAN UNREST.
The Spectator[To TS. EDITOR 07 TEE " SPECTATOR "] SIR,—In connexion with the valuable series on "Indian Unrest" published in the Times, it may be of interest to note that nearly...
[TO THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR"]
The SpectatorSin,—The Inland Revenue have issued a circular calling the attention of law-agents to the fact that the new Land-duties are payable on the deaths of proprietors in addition to...
THE LAND-TAX MUDDLE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR 07 THE " SPECTATOR "] SIR,—Acquaintance with actual conditions seems to show the impossibility in very many cases of getting a fair and antis- factory basis for...
THE OSBORNE CASE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR 07 THE "SPECTATOR " ] Snt,—As I feel that harsh and unjust judgments are often passed by members of the middle classes on the character and motives of the Labour...
[TO THE EDITOR 07 THE "SPECTATOR "]
The SpectatorSIR,—Mr. Leslie Ashe might misconstrue my silence, other- wise I should not trouble you with a second letter on this subject. Part of my contention he concedes when he says that...
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JOURNALISM AND THE UNIVERSITIES.
The Spectator[To TUX Eorroo or THE "Szooraros."] Sin,—Your article of September 24th is most enlightening, and will, I hope, disabuse the minds of some who think that Universities are...
SPAIN . FROM WITHIN. [To :az Elmo& or an ••Itraerress.1 Sra., — Yonr
The Spectatorreviewer in his courteous and oomplimentary review of my book, " Spain from Within " (Spectator, Septem- ber 10th), observes with truth that amassment has began in Spain of...
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DIRS. RANY.A_RD, MISS CATHERINE MARSH, AND OTHERS.
The Spectator[To Tug EDITOR OF TER "SPECTATOR " ] Eint,—In a letter signed "L. C. F. C." published in the Spectator of September 24th the writer makes a kind reference to the London...
ART.
The SpectatorTHE PORTRAIT PAINTERS. WITH the passing of the New Gallery into the hands of practitioners of another and more popular art, a somewhat serious situation has arisen for...
THE . " WITCH DOCTOR'S " SECRET. [To TER EDITOR 01
The SpectatorTIM "sexcreron."1 SIR,—The enclosed cutting from a recent issue of the Leeds Mercury will be of interest to your readers.—I am, Sir, &c., Y. " The strange secret of the...
Olt .,THE ITo THY EDITOR OF TRH " STSCTLTOR."] SrE;YOUI
The Spectatormay care to publish a sere Virgtliana on the tragical. expleit,,of X. Chavez, in flying, over 4he Simplon:-- "petierunt aethera pinnies • • • • • • • • . —et scopulos lacrimosis...
POETRY.
The SpectatorTHE FORD. ["So that the Night Watch of Byddyscloill shall join tho Night Watch of Tyndaill at the Stoneyford."—Leges Marchiarunt.] First Watchman. 0 WATCHER at the ford, your...
NOTICE.—When Articles or "Correspondence" 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...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorBISHOP BUTLER.* BISHOP BUTLER has never been, and can never become, a popular writer, though he has always had enthusiastic admirers outside the ranks of professed students of...
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LADY D OROTHY NEVILL'S REMINISCENCES.* THOSE who read Lady Dorothy Nevill's
The Spectatormemoirs a few years ago will, of course, turn with pleasure to this new volume. After reading it we are tempted to say that Lady Dorothy Nevill might go on indefinitely writing...
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• • • ROBERT DODSLEY.*
The SpectatorMa. STRAUB gave us not long ago a very interesting volume on Baskerville, the great English printer of the eighteenth century, and now he has increased our indebted- ness by his...
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BRITISH POWER ON THE CONTINENT.* THERE is a very great
The Spectatordifference between Frenchmen and Englishmen when they engage in speculation. The French- man is without embarrassment ; he is positive even when Ire is fanciful, and, having...
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A BOOK ABOUT CHINA.*
The SpectatorWE have failed to find much about the " marvel and mystery" of China in this volume ; but the failure has not hindered our enjoyment of it. Mr. Liddell went out to paint...
DR. FORBES WINSLOW'S EXPERIENCES.f. DR. Founss WINSLOW would have done
The Spectatorwell, we think, to , keep silence about the family quarrel which he relates at length. Such statements are justified when a man has to defend himself from unmerited obloquy. We...
BRITAIN IN AFRICA.t Tan National Society are doing a good
The Spectatorwork in bringing out the handsome and comprehensive guide to the British Empire of which this volume is the first instalment. In writing Imperial history it is difficult to...
WESTMINSTER SERMONS.*
The SpectatorDn. HENSLEY HENSON'S sermons are always interesting. A moment's reflection will turn this commonplace sentence into great praise. Interestinguess is the quality which the great...
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NOVELS.
The SpectatorTHE DAY'S PLAY.* "A. A. M." or Punch needs no introduction. For the last few years he has contributed with such an admirable consistency to the gaiety of the readers of that...
RKADABI.S NOVELS.—The Fortune Hunters, and other Stories. By Violet Jacob.
The Spectator(John Murray. 6s.)—The most important story is that which gives a name to the volume. Of the rest, we prefer "The Lights of Jerusalem"; but all are worth reading.— Queen Sheba's...
Nine to Six-thirty. By W. Pett Ridge. (Methuen and Co.
The Spectator6s.) —Early in the story Barbara emerges from the condition of the household drudge, "put upon" by her elder sisters, into the capable woman of business. The activities of such...
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Naw EDITIONS.—The Coronation Service: with Introduction and Notes. Edited by
The Spectatorthe Rev. Joseph H. Pemberton. Fifth Edition, Revised and Enlarged. (Skeffington and Son. 2s. 6d. net.)— Mediaeval London. By William Benham, D.D., and Charles Welch. (Seeley and...
SOME BOOKS OF THE WEEK.
The Spectator[Under this heading ws notice such Books of the week as hays not Leer reserved for review in other forms.] Medical Supervision in Schools. By Edward Millar Steven. (Bailliere,...
Argentina, Past and Present. By W. H. Koebel. (Kegan Paul,
The SpectatorTrench, and Co. 12s. 6d. net.)—Mr. Koebel gives to the subject of his former work, " Modern Argentina," a fuller and more detailed treatment, and adds to it a sketch of the...
Religion and Art in Ancient Greece. By Ernest A. Gardner.
The Spectator(Harper and Brothers. 2s. 6d. net.)—This is one of the " Harper's Library of Living Thought" Series, and contains an admirable summary of expert judgments and opinions on the...
The Church Plate of Radnorshire. By J. T. Evans. (James
The SpectatorH. Alden, Stow-on-the-Wold. 21s.)—Mr. Evans goes carefully through the Radnorshire parishes. All of these, with one unimportant exception, he personally visited, examining the...
Prevention.—We welcome the first number of a new quarterly periodical
The Spectatorentitled Prevention, the organ of the National Social Purity Crusade, and published by them (Craven House, Kingsway, W.C., fid.) No doubt there will be differences of opinion in...
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LONDON: Printed by L. Uroorr GILL at the London and
The SpectatorCounty Printing Works, Drury Lane, W.C. ; and Published by Josx Earn for the " SPECTATOR" (Limited) at their 02os, No. 1 Wellington Street, in the Precinct of the Savoy, Strand,...
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SPECIAL LITERARY SUPPLEMENT
The SpectatorTO No. 4,292.] FOR THE WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1910. r REGISTERED FOR } GRATIS. TIIANSMISSIObt ADROLD
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorBLACK PRINCE.* 'Pi:1mm are certain names which live in the popular imagination as representing a great epoch. Our school-books for generations have taken the Black Prince as the...
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ANIMALS OF NORTH AMERICA.*
The SpectatorTHE main lines of Mr. Thompson Seton's fascinating volumes are, as might be expected, a little different from those of other natural histories. The author of Wild Animals I have...
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THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR.* Mn. FORMBY'S book is an attempt
The Spectatorto give us a broad and concise presentation of the Civil War considered from causes to results, while avoiding the technicalities and personal details which help to swell a...
BESS OF HARDWICK.*
The SpectatorIN the year 1520 according to Mrs. Rawson, in 1518 thinks the writer in the Dictionary of National Biography, Elizabeth Hardwick, the daughter of a small Derbyshire squire, was...
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NATIONAL AND LOCAL FINANCE.*
The SpectatorIx describing for us the development of our English system of local government, in attempting to discover some principle of division as between subjects proper for local and...
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THE GEOGRAPHY OF REIGATE.*
The SpectatorTHE idea of Miss Smith's volume is excellent. It is to take a sheet of the one-inch Ordnance Survey—in this case the map of Reigate—and to write the geography of it in full. By...
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RADIOCHEMISTRY.*
The SpectatorMn. CAMERON has chosen a topic of exceptional interest, and one on which, in that he has carried out important experi- mental investigation, he is entitled to speak with...
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PLANTS, ANCIENT AND MODERN.*
The SpectatorTHERE is a wide gap between the Bennettitem of the lower Mezozoic rocks and the Ranunculacez of the high Alps. But some day, perhaps, botanists will have worked out the con-...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorTHE DISSOLUTION OF THE MONASTERIES. The Dissolution of the Monasteries. By Francis Aidan Hibbert, M.A. (Sir I. Pitman and Sons. Cs. net.)—Mr. Hibbert confines his...
QUIET DAYS IN SPAIN.
The SpectatorQuiet Days in Spain. By C. Bogue Luffmann. (John Murray. 8s. net.)—Mr. Luffmann tells us that he has wandered over forty- two of the forty-nine provinces of Spain. Sometimes he...
A HISTORY OF ABINGDON.
The SpectatorA History of Abingdon. By James Townsend, M.A. (H. Frowde. 7s. 6d. net.)—The one notable thing in the history of Abingdon is the Benedictine Abbey. This was one of the earliest,...
THE SOUTH DEVON AND DORSET COASTS.
The SpectatorThe South Devon and Dorset Coasts. By Sidney Heath. (T. Fisher Unwin. 6s. net.)—This volume is one of the " County Coast Series." The subject is full of interest, even above the...
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MASTER WORSLEY'S BOOK OF THE MIDDLE TEMPLE.
The SpectatorMaster Worsley's Book of the Middle Temple. Edited by Arthur Robert Ingpen. (The Chiswick Press. 30s.)—Charles Worsley (1670-1739), member of a family now represented by the...
SICILIAN WAYS AND DAYS.
The SpectatorSicilian Ways and Days. By Louise Caico. (John Long. 12s. 6d. net.)—This is a very interesting and curious book. The author has lived for some time in a remote region of the...
THE POETS OF DUMFRIESSHIRE.
The SpectatorThe Poets of Dumfriesshire. By Frank Miller. (James Mac- Lehose and Sons. 103. net.)—The county of Dumfries is certainly a Parnassus. It may claim what is almost the very...
HEATHFIELD MEMORIALS.
The SpectatorHeathficld Memorials. By Perceval Lucas. (Arthur L. Hum- phreys. 21s. net.)—Heathfield is a Sussex parish, about half-way between Mayfield and Hurstmonceaux. Its name suggests...
PRIVILEGE AND DEMOCRACY.
The SpectatorPrivibige and Democracy. By Frederic C. Howe. (T. Fisher Unwin. 7s. 6d. net.)—Dr. Howe is a fervent follower of Mr. Henry George, and sees the salvation of his country (the...
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J. B. PATON.
The SpectatorJ. B. Paton, D.D. By James Merchant. (James Clarke and Co. 4e. 6d. net.)—The story of this "Educational and Social Pioneer" is well worth reading. Dr. Paton was educated for the...
THE WORKS OF SIR JOHN SUCKLING.
The SpectatorThe Works of Sir John Suckling. Edited. with Introduction and Notes, by A. Hamilton Thompson, M.A. (G. Routledge and Sons. 6s.)—Sir John Suckling wrote between two and three...
have been busy on the poet during the interval. Mr.
The SpectatorBailey's new version, therefore, has justification. He is, of course, under obliga- tions to his illustrious predecessor : of these he makes ample acknowledgment ; and he has...
Ilia. BOOK OF GORLEY.
The SpectatorThe Book of Gorley. Written and Illustrated by Heywood Sumner. (H. M. Gilbert and Son, Southampton.)—This is one of those local books which are frequent nowadays, and of which,...
THE ULU ItCH OF ENGLAND AS CATHOLIC AND REFORM - RD.
The SpectatorThe Church of England as Catholic and Reformed. By the Rev. W. L. Paige Cox. (Elliot Stock. 3s. 6d. net.)—Mr. Cox describes his book as an " eirenicon," nor is the description...
THE ODES OF HORACE.
The SpectatorThe Odes of Horace, and other Verses. By Francis Law Latham, M.A. (Smith, Elder, and Co. 6s. net.)—The Sixteenth Epode (Altera jam teritur bellis tivi/ants aetas) has inspired...
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CHRONICLES OF THEBERTON.
The SpectatorChronicles of Theberton. By Henry Montagu Doughty. (Mac- millan and Co. 7s. Gd. net.)—Mr. Doughty has made a highly interesting book: almost any parish affords an intelligent...
FROM THE THAMES TO 1Hes SEINE.
The SpectatorFrom the Thames to the Seine. Written and Illustrated by Charles Pears. (Chatto and Windus. 12s. 6d. net.)—Mr. Pears, wisely relegating the technical instructions intended for...
Bible Notes : Vol. VI., Writings of St. Paul. By
The SpectatorRobert S. Franks, M.A. (3 George Street, Croydon. ls.)—This volume, together with one previously issued by the same writer on " The Life of St. Paul," supplies an excellent...
THE DRAMA OF SAINT HELENA.
The SpectatorThe Drama of Saint Helena. By Paul Fthneaux. Translated by Alfred lieu, B.A., and the Author. (Andrew Melrose. 10s. 6d. net.)—We cannot but think that these discussions about...
Dr. Duncan of .Ruthwell. By his Great-granddaughter, Sophy Hall. (Oliphant,
The SpectatorAnderson, and Ferrier. 3s. Gd. net.)—Dr. Duncan's claim to commemoration may be very briefly stated; but it means much. He invented the savings-bank. Here is the story of how he...
ORIGINAL ILLUSTRATIONS OF ENGLISH CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY.
The SpectatorOriginal Illustrations of English Constitutional History. By D. S. Medley, M.A. (Methuen and Co. 7e. Gd. net.)—We may explain that " Original Illustrations " are illustrations...
European History Chronologically Arranged. By Arthur Ifassall, M.A. (Macmillan and
The SpectatorCo. 8s. Gd. net.)—This is a book of tables, in which information, genealogical and historical, is arranged in a way which cannot fail to make the volume highly useful to the...
THE LIFE AND WORK OF SIR SYED AHMED KHAN.
The SpectatorThe Life and Work of Sir Syed Ahmed Khan. By Major - General G. F. I. Graham. (Hodder and Stoughton. 5s. net.)—This is a new edition of a work published in 1885, when the...
The Civil War in Lancashire, 1642 - 101. By Ernest Broxap, M.A.
The Spectator(Manchester University Press. Is. Gd. net.)—The Royalists made less of a fight in Lancashire than might have been expected, when the character of the people, with its strong...
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Talcs from Irish History. By Alice Birkhead, B.A. (Methuen a.y.d
The SpectatorCo. is. 6d.)—This book is written with much force and fresh- ness. The subject is less known than it should be, and Miss Birkhead has done well in brin g in g it forward in this...
Specintina Codicum Graecorum Vaticanorum. Colle g erunt Pius Franciscus de' Cavalieri et
The SpectatorJohannes Lietzmann. (Parker and Son, Oxford.)—Here are fifty specimens of Greek manuscripts vary- in g in date from the fourth to the sixteenth century. The first is from the...
The Broadlands Cookery-Book. By Kato Emil Behnke and E. Colin
The SpectatorHon.slowe. (G. Bell and Sons. 2s. 6d.)—The first park of this little book deals with " the principles and practice of food reform," and in the last we are g iven receipts for...