Page 1
A meeting of the Liberal Unionist Party was held yesterday
The Spectatorweek, at the office of the Liberal Unionist Association, when Lord Hartington addressed them, denying that the Liberal Unionists had the slightest desire to dictate to the...
On the evening of yesterday week, another night was lost
The Spectatorin the discussion of Mr. A. Acland's amendment, which proposed to apply the produce of the new spirit-duties to educational purposes. Mr. Caine contended that the licensing...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE details of an Anglo-German agreement as to the dis- tribution of East Africa were officially published on Tuesday both in Berlin and London. The document is not yet...
It is a pity that Mr. Stanley has called Emin
The SpectatorPasha's satrapy " Equatoria," for the name would have exactly described the dominion of the British East Africa Company. " Mackin- nonia," we fear, will not do, but " Cecilia"...
The Germans are delighted with the . agreement, and thank their
The SpectatorEmperor with enthusiasm. They are aware that Heligo- land is nothing, but declare that they can see the British flagstaff from Cuxhaven—a bold metaphor, as the distance is...
NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS.
The SpectatorWith the " SPECTATOR" of Saturday, .Tune 28th, will be issued, gratis, a SPECIAL LITERARY SUPPLEMENT, the outside pages of which will be devoted to Advertisements. To secure...
Page 2
On Tuesday night, in answer to Mr. Caine and Sir
The SpectatorWilliam Harcourt, Mr. W. H. Smith explained that while Lord Hartington had rightly supposed that the Government were willing to grant a Committee of Inquiry into compensation to...
When the House once more got into Committee on the
The SpectatorLocal Taxation Bill, a vehement discussion arose about Lord Hartington's indication at the Liberal Unionist meeting on Friday, that a Committee of Inquiry was to be appointed on...
On Monday night there was no pretence of concealing the
The Spectatordesire simply to badger the Government out of all patience and self-control, a strategy which fortunately did not succeed. The first dead-set was made upon Mr. Balfour with...
There was a curious scene in the House of Commons
The Spectatoron Thurs- day, the Ascot Cup day. A five-lined whip had been issued for half-past 4, but nobody supposed that any division would be taken till half-past 5. After question-time,...
Mr. Courtney, the Chairman of Committees, disallowed the Closure at
The Spectatorhalf-past 7, but intimated that, if members of the minority hung back from taking part in the debate, they could not complain of him for allowing the Closure after they had in...
It is rumoured in Berlin and Vienna that the Russian
The Spectatorpolice recently discovered that the fortress-palace of Gatschina had been undermined by the Nihilists. That does not sound true, as undermining requires time, opportunity, and...
Hereupon Mr. Gladstone gave notice of an amendment to Mr.
The SpectatorSmith's proposed Standing Order, declaring that so great a change should not be made until the subject had been examined into by a Select Committee. Next, Mr. Labouchere, in...
Page 3
The Bulgarian Government has sent in to the Porte a
The SpectatorNote, believed to be serious, demanding the recognition of Prince Ferdinand. In this note, X. Stambouloff declares that the Turkish Government has delayed recognition for five...
An outbreak of cholera, supposed to be Asiatic, in Puebla
The Spectatorde Rugat (Valencia) and some neighbouring villages, has greatly alarmed both Spain and France. The disease, whether sporadic or not, has been spreading since the middle of May,...
We mentioned last week the alarm excited both in Germany
The Spectatorand Austria-Hungary by the military demands for money, and this week that alarm has been accentuated. The Austrian Minister of War, in a moment of over- confidence, informed the...
Mr. Parnell is evidently trying to secure followers of a
The Spectatornew type. His nominee for North Donegal is Mr. Rochfort Maguire, a Protestant, who took a double-first at Oxford, went to South Africa, and managed the negotiations between the...
The democracy in America, when called the consumer, appears to
The Spectatorhave no rights at all. Mr. Blaine actually pub- lishes the following letter to a citizen of Maine who had sug- gested that to remit the duty on sugar would help to deplete the...
The Standard announces that, on the intervention of Lord • Salisbury,
The SpectatorMr. Monro will probably withdraw his resignation. As we have said elsewhere, we do not see' why he should not ; and he may assist, as he is very popular, in calming the agita-...
Mr. Gladstone made an admirable speech on Wednesday to the
The Spectatordepositors in the Savings - Banks connected with the South-Eastern and Metropolitan Railway Companies. It is called in the newspapers a speech on "thrift," but it was hardly...
Page 4
LORD SALISBURY IN AFRICA. L ORD SALISBURY, by an arrangement full
The Spectatorat once of astuteness and civil courage, has secured for his country a great triumph in Eastern Africa. The key to the position there is the island of Zanzibar. Any maritime...
TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE CRISIS IN THE COMMONS. T HE Opposition appear to us to be forgetting the wise maxim of all conflict,—not to lose your head, and not to alienate the sympathy you have gained...
Page 6
'THE GOVERNMENT AS IT HAS BEEN.
The SpectatorT T is an expedient time, we think, to remind our readers of what this Government, considered as a Govern- ment and not as an instrument for passing a single Bill of third-rate...
Page 7
MR. MATTHEWS AND MR. MONI10.
The SpectatorT HE easiest arrangement of the personal difficulty in the Police Force would probably be for Mr. Monro to withdraw his resignation, and for Mr. Matthews to accept the...
Page 8
is dwindling to small proportions. It is quite evident had
The Spectatorbeen consulted, and the more generously they had from Mr. Matthews's speeches in the House, that he is been treated by him,—and of still greater astonishment willing to be as...
Page 9
THE INSURANCE OF CHILDREN. T HE Bishop of Peterborough has carried
The Spectatorthrough the second reading in the Lords of a Bill to amend the law relating to insurances on the lives of children. The objects of the Bill are two,—to limit the sum for which...
Page 10
THE EFFECT OF THE NEW CAREERS ON WOMEN'S HAPPINESS.
The SpectatorM SS ALFORD'S success in the Classical Tripos following so closely on Miss Fawcett's Senior Wranglership, and two other less brilliant Wranglerships gained by women, :makes it...
Page 11
ARTIFICIAL PRECIOUS STONES.
The SpectatorWE wonder if Mr. Charles Bryant, whom we assume to the well-known mineralogist and jeweller, is quite- as confident as in his letter, published in Monday's Standard, he...
Page 12
CORRESPONDENCE.
The SpectatorNOTES OF A PILGRIMAGE. V.-GALILEE. IT was from the little Latin hospice built in commemoration of Elijah's contest with the prophets of Baal on one of the peaks of Carmel,...
Page 14
THE SEPTUAGINT THE MAIN SOURCE OF NEW - TESTAMENT QUOTATIONS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THR " SPECTATOR. "] SIR, — In the Spectator of the 14th inst., an anonymous. correspondent calls in question my statement and your own,_ that the greater...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE NEW HEAT OF PARTISANSHIP. [To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] Sta.,—Home-rule has at least this Evangelical characteristic, that it divides households and families as...
Page 15
THE ELEPHANT RYDER.'
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR 07 THE "SPECTATOR.'] Sin,—I cannot help thinking that there is something ques- tionable in the story of Ryder,' the elephant, quoted by you from Colonel...
EVOLUTION.
The Spectator[To Tax EDITOR OT THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,—The conclusions of your excellent article of the 7th, .entitled "M. Daudet on Evolution," have been anticipated by Lord Tennyson in the...
THE GORDON STATUE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR Ol TaI " EPECTATOR."1 SIB,—Your criticism of the Gordon statue as it stands in the Academy is just. As it stands in the Barrack Square at Chatham, facing the arch...
POETRY.
The SpectatorA VISION OF SOUND. RUSH of waves ! where waters meet : Roll of wheels along the street ! Clatt'ring hoofs that nearer come, Barking dogs that guard their home !...
Page 16
BOOKS.
The SpectatorGEORGE BUCHANAN, HUMANIST AND REFORMER.* OF the many eminent men that Scotland has produced, the- name of one only of those born before the eighteenth century - is known beyond...
Page 18
THE EARLY DIARY OF FRANCES B1JRNEY.* THE opinion of most
The Spectatorreaders on perusing the Early Diary of Miss Burney would probably separate itself into three distinct expressions,—firstly, a feeling of gratified surprise at finding a diary so...
Page 19
THE AMERICAN EDITION OF BAGEHOT'S WORKS.* Tins is a curious
The Spectatormonument of the genius of American , enterprise. It is an extremely careful edition of Bagehot's works in five handsome volumes, corrected (perhaps a little over-corrected) by a...
Page 20
TENNIS.*
The SpectatorTHE "Badminton Library " continues to maintain its encyclo- pa3dic character. The services of experts are secured without stint, one may suppose, of expense, and every subject...
Page 21
M. DE BORNIER'S " MAHOMET."*
The SpectatorTEBBE can be no doubt that this tragedy would be very effective on the stage. And so thought the Committee of the Thekre Francais, when in the year 1888 they read it and...
Page 22
A MAN OF MARK.*
The SpectatorA bon-mot, to which fate has since added an ironical comment, has been attributed to the ex-Emperor of Brazil. On being shown one of those mechanical wonders which always...
Page 23
The Origin of the Human Reason : being an Examination
The Spectatorof Recent Hypotheses Concerning It. By St. George Mivart, Ph.D., M.D., F.R.S. (Kagan Paul.)—This book marks another stage in the controversy between the author and Mr. Romanes...
The Emancipated. By George Gissing. 3 vols. (Bentley and Son.)—There
The Spectatoris some powerful writing in this book. A reader may well be in doubt—possibly the author wishes to leave him in doubt—whether emancipation is, indeed, a good thing for woman....
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorBy far the most significant article in the Universal Review for this month is from the pen of Count Tolstoy,. on " Marriage, Morality, and Christianity." It affords a striking...
Cross - Roads. By May Crommelin. 3 vols. (Thirst and Blackett.)—The cross-roads
The Spectatorare, of course, the old opposites, " Love " and " Duty," which are represented, indeed, on the cover, in deplorably diverse directions. Margaret Aylmer is the daughter of a...
An Arabic - English Dictionary on a New System. By H. Anthony
The SpectatorSalmon6. 2 vols. (Triibner and Co.)—Mr. Sahuone claims con- siderable advantages for his Dictionary. First is its moderate size,—and, indeed, it is not larger than the medium "...
A Catalogue of Books in the Hampstead Public Library and.
The SpectatorLiterary Institution. Compiled by Members of the Committee. (Printed for the Library by the Women's Printing Society.)—This Cata- logue has more than a local value, and seems...
The Portfolio, June. (Seeley and Co.)—The feature of the present
The Spectatornumber is the first of a series of articles on " Charing Cross to St. Paul's." The illustrations are reproductions of pen- and-ink drawings by Mr. Joseph Pennell. They have been...
Page 24
An Unfortunate Arrangement. By John Hill. 2 vols. (Ward and
The SpectatorDowney.)—If an author determines to give his novel an autobiographical form, it would be as well not to make the autobiographer so thorough a scoundrel as Harold Stanton. Not...
Russia. By W. R. Morfill, M.A., Reader in Russian and
The SpectatorSlavonic in the University of Oxford. (Fisher 17nwin.)—This book is, as its author claims, something more than a compilation. It is a careful study of the rise and progress of...
The Log of the' Nereid.' By Thomas Gibson Bowles. (Simpkin
The Spectatorand Marshall.)—Mr. Bowles writes himself " Master-Mariner," and, we doubt not, can sail a yacht to perfection. But this does not imply that he is - wise in matters beyond his...