20 JUNE 1863

Page 1

NEWS OF THE WEEK.

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T IIE North Pole has been sold by private transfer. The "International Financial Society" have purehased all the rights and territories of the Hudson's Bay Company for...

NOTICE.

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. •4 THE SPECTATOR" is published every Saturday Morning, in time for • despatch by the Early Trains, and copies of that Journal may be had the same Afternoon 'through...

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TOPICS OF THE DAY.

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THE DEBATE ON THE KENSINGTON JOB. ]IR. STEERS, Purveyor to the House of Commons, is becom- i11 ing a national nuisance. He feeds the members so badly that they cannot bear to...

Page 5

THE CONFEDERATE EVANGEE.

The Spectator

T HE Confederates are at least admirable for the frankness and enthusiasm of their faith. While their unfortu- nate English advocates try with painful industry and contor- tions...

-; THE NEW WHIGS IN POLAND.

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/A RE debate of nextMonday night will be an important one for Independent Liberals. Perhaps the chief of the many causes which have estranged the bulk of the nation from these...

Page 7

THE CRAWLEY SCANDAL.

The Spectator

T HE defence offered by the Commander-in-Chief in the Craw- ley case on Monday night is only partially satisfactory. It proves that he has no wish to allow injustice, but it...

Page 8

LANCASHIRE PROSPECTS.

The Spectator

T HERE are degrees even in blackness, and so the prespects of Lancashire may, perhaps, with truth be said to be growing lighter, but verily the remaining tinge is sadly deep in...

Page 9

MORMONISM IN WALES.

The Spectator

rilHE rapid growth of Mormonism in Wales seems to be entirely 1 escaping the attention of those who ought to have done all that was possible to prevent it. Ministers of all...

Page 10

THE PRINCESS AT THE OXFORD COMMEMORATION.

The Spectator

T HE history of an English fête, if it be truly written, is very apt to be a record of an unequal contest between clouds dropping with rain and human beings trying to be happy...

Page 12

LADIES' COMMITTEES.

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W OMEN are individuals—in some sense very much more so than men ; and, as a consequence, perhaps, are not very well adapted for recording minutes. When you record a successful...

Page 13

THE FRENCH SUCCESS IN MEXICO. [FROM OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT.] Tune

The Spectator

17, 1863. TILE celebrated boast of Caesar "Veni, vidl, vici," is not, at any rate, one to which Napoleon is entitled to lay claim. Who could ever have foreseen, some months ago,...

Page 14

THE TRUTH AS TO VOLHYNIA AND PODOLIA.

The Spectator

Lemberg, June 15. A VISIT of three weeks to Volhynia, Podolia, and Ukraine, where I had the opportunity of witnessing the true state of things with my own eyes, has convinced me...

Page 15

THE REV. J. D. MAURICE ON SUBSCRIPTION. To THE EDITOR

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OF THE " SPECTATOR." Sin,—The debate of June 9th in the House of Commons can scarcely be obsolete at the end of ten days. The Standard announces, I hear, that Mr. Disraeli's...

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BOOKS.

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HORSEBACK IN MANTCHU TARTARY.* Mn. FLEmiNG is a traveller after the ancient rather than the modern fashion, and the great volume in which he has recorded his experiences will...

Page 18

MADAME SWETCHINE.*

The Spectator

WE have been told that when first the name of " Swetchine " appeared in large characters, repeated over and over again in the windows of booksellers in Paris, strangers, and...

Page 20

MEDLEVAL MISSIONS.*

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MR. MACLEAn'El able essay is almost certain to arouse inquiries in the minds of his hearers which, strangely enough, his studies do not seem to have excited in his own. He tells...

Page 21

HE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF AN IRISH REBEL.* L?,• are° over the

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French army list, one is surprised at the num- ber of English, or rather Irish, names with which it abounds. , / From Field-Marshals Niel and MaeNfahon down to the sous-...

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we, at contains an amount of accurate and well-digested know-

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quarrel with him for trusting his master too implicitly. e can- Aedge such as is often found wanting 14 works of much greater not believe macte to be an adverb with the e...

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CURRENT LITERATURE.

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The Great Stone Book of Nature. By D. T. Ansted, M.A., F.R.S., ac. (Macmillan and Co.)---Under this somewhat fanciful title, Mr. Ansted has given us an excellent elementary...

The Ordinances of Spiritual Worship. By the Rev. E. T.

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March Phillips, M.A., late Rector of Hathern. Edited by his Daughter. (Long,mans).—This is a selection, consisting partly of essays and partly of sermons, from such of the...

George Harrington. By David Macrae. (Scottish Temperance League, Glasgow.)—If this

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story had not been designed to advocate teetotal doctrines, it would have been a very fairly creditable production. It is well written, decidedly interesting, and shows that its...

The House of Scindea. By John Hope. (Longmans.)—The author of

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this small volume, who formerly held the combined appointments of superintending surgeon of Scindea's contingent and surgeon to the Court of Gwalior, wishes to arouse public...

The Book of Job. By the late Rev. George Croly,

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LL.D. (Black- wood and Sons.)—This small work, which is edited by its author's sou, contains the views held by the late Dr. Croly on the subject of the "Book of Job." These...

Tableau from Geology, and Other Poems. By Matthew Brydie. (Hardwicke.)—The

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leading " poem" in this volume is a kind of des- cription, in blank verse, of various stages in the process of Creation, and is introduced by a declaration that its author is "a...

Something New; or, Tales for the Times. Edited by E.

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W. Jacob. (Faithfull.)—This volume, which is edited by a late captain in the 99th Regiment, consists of a collection of tales by various writers, which are published by...

The Life of Our Lord upon the Earth. By the

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Rev. S. J. Andrews (Strahan and Co.).—A very compact and complete summary of the results arrived at by those inquirers who have devoted themselves to the difficult task of...

BOOKS RECEIVED DURING THE WEEK.

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Meditations on Life and its Religious Duties, translated from the German by Frederica Rowan (Triibner).—The Student's Greek Grammar, by Dr. George Curtin', edited by William...