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It looks very much as if a man had turned
The Spectatorup in the Balkan Peninsula. At midnight, on the 13th inst., the King of Servia, either obeying some impulse from without, or determined to profit by the preoccupation of Prince...
King Milan, in his Proclamation to his people, of course
The Spectatorpleads provocations. One of these, a violation of his frontier, is believed to be either an invention or an accident exaggerated into an outrage. Another, "the tariff war," even...
Mr. Gladstone's speech at West Calder on Tuesday was the
The Spectatormost impressive of the Scotch speeches as yet delivered. He remarked on the sobriety, as well as the steadfastness, of Scotch Liberalism, and congratulated himself on this...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorP ARLIAMENT was dissolved on the 18th inst., and in most districts the days for the new elections have been fixed. It is greatly to be regretted that they are spread over so...
After acknowledging with great cordiality the attitude of the Free
The SpectatorChurchmen in reference to the decision which he had felt it his duty to take to put by the question of the Scotch Kirk, Mr. Gladstone went on to hope that the Tory foreign...
According to the latest intelligence, Prince Alexander has "submitted himself"
The Spectatorunreservedly to the Sultan, has withdrawn from Philippopolis pending the decision, and has requested aid from his Suzerain against Servia. The object of this move would appear...
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M. Brisson on Monday read out in the French Chamber
The Spectatora Minis- terial programme. It is a weak affair. On finance the Ministry acknowledge a deficit, and promise reductions, but threaten also to increase indirect taxation. On the...
We are tired of the speeches, but must notice one
The Spectatorby Lord Rosebery in reply to an address from the Scottish Liberal Club, presented to him on Friday week. He expressed strongly his belief that, disappointed as many Scotch...
Lord Granville, by-the-way, made one official statement which is of
The Spectatorsome importance, in relation to a recent controversy, —namely, that long before there was any Pall Mall agitation, Sir William Harcourt had determined to press through the...
We note as a matter of interest, without quite believing,
The Spectatora rumour that M. Gr6vy's re-election in December may be seriously contested. He is elected by Senate and Chamber sitting together, and must by law receive a clear majority of...
At the Dolphin dinner Sir Michael Hicks-Beach made, as usual,
The Spectatora very bitter attack on Mr. Gladstone and his Government, repre- senting him as unworthily evading the declaration of his own views on Disestablishment ; and Sir Michael...
Mandelay should fall by the beginning of the week. The
The SpectatorBur- mese ships, with the materials for blocking the Irrawaddy, were snapped up by the steam launches ; on the 17th inst. the Minhla Forts, which were bailt by an Italian...
On Colston Day at Bristol,—yesterday week,—Lord Granville presided at the
The SpectatorLiberal or Anchor banquet, at which he made an amusing speech. Referring to the Conservative dinner going on at a little distance,—at which Sir Michael Hicks-Beach was...
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What are the British Museum authorities about in allowing their
The Spectatorpigeons to be destroyed by so cruel a method as that of feeding them with grain steeped in spirits of wine ? The result has certainly been great torture, and a very lingering...
Can the astounding story forwarded by the Viennese corre- spondent
The Spectatorof the Times be true ? He declares, on the authority of Polish Relief Committees, that 34,700 Poles, men and women, have already been expelled from Prussian Poland under circum-...
Mr. Bright delivered a very characteristic speech on Dis- establishment
The Spectatorin Birmingham last Monday, on behalf of Mr. Broadhurst's candidature for the Bordesley division of Bir- mingham, and in answer to the remarks of the Tory candidate for...
The Dean of Manchester, Dr. Oakley, in the letter published
The Spectatorin Tuesday's Times, avows that he is, as we supposed him to be, wholly opposed to what is generally understood by Disestablish- ment and Disendowment ; bat he adds a very...
Mr. Bright's speech has already borne fruit. At the Con-
The Spectatorference convened by Dr. Parker to consider the subject of Disestablishment on Thursday, the leaders of the Nonconformist Party denied all responsibility for the Liberationist...
The Duke of Argyll, in a letter to the Times
The Spectatordefending Free- trade and the older Political Economy, says the refusal of man- kind to accept those doctrines every now and then makes him reconsider himself, and ask if they...
Mr. Jesse Collings wrote to Thursday's Times a long and
The Spectatorvery interesting letter on "the Land Question from the labourer's point of view." The main drift of that letter is that, even admitting England to be no longer a corn-growing...
Yet perhaps the language we have just quoted may be
The Spectatorsufficient reply to Mr. Bosworth Smith's outburst against Mr. Gladstone, in yesterday's Times, for not committing himself, as Dean Oakley tells us that nothing would induce him...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE ELECTIONS. T HE Parliament of 1880 died on Wednesday ; but its epitaph cannot be written, for no man knows, or thinks he knows, exactly what it did. It will live in history...
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MR. GLADSTONE'S MODERATION.
The SpectatorI T is quite clear that nothing which Mr. Gladstone can say or do will please the Tory Press, or, indeed, what Mr. Glad- stone so happily called the " Temporising Press" in his...
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MR. BRIGHT ON DISESTABLISHMENT.
The SpectatorT HE excellent tone of Mr. Bright's speech on Tuesday in relation to Disestablishment will, we hope, act as a sedative to the sensitive nerves of Liberal Churchmen. Not only...
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THE POLICY OF KING MILAN.
The SpectatorI T is quite impossible to defend the King of Servia. We wish well to all the Balkan States, to Slays as well as Greeks, to Servians as well as Bulgarians ; but King Milan's...
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THE LONDON ELECTIONS.
The SpectatorT HOUGH it may be doubted whether the Elections of next week will be a crisis in the history of the nation, there can be no doubt that they are a crisis in the history of the...
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M. BRISSON'S PROGRAMME.
The SpectatorW HEN M. BRISSON says that the situation created by the recent French Elections has no analogy with what is happening in other Parliamentary countries, he states a fact the...
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CALIGITLA THEEBAU.
The SpectatorT HE British Government, since 1852, has never quite taken its eyes off lliandelay. Twice for considerable periods it has had a Resident there, and when the Resident found his...
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MR. COURTHOPE ON THE FUTURE OF POETRY.
The SpectatorM R. COURTHOPE, in the interesting little book which we have elsewhere noticed, commits himself, with some re- serves, to Macaulay 's view, that" as civilisation advances,...
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DISESTABLISHMENT IN SCOTLAND.
The Spectator[TD THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR. "] SIR, — Mr. Shaw, writing in the Spectator of November 14th on the Scotch Disestablishment movement, says "that the Church Defence meetings,...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE CHURCH DEFENCE MOVEMENT. [To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR." J am one of that large section of the Liberal Party which - has always desired that the question of...
AN EXPLANATION.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIB, I infer from the private criticism of a friend of mine that my playful reference to Mr. Chamberlain in my letter to the Spectator last...
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THE TRUTH ABOUT PASTEUR'S "DISCOVERY."
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."1 SIR,—M. Jules Guerin has sent me the official " Bulletin de l'Academie de Mddecine," containing, in extenso, the report of the famous...
THE LONDON UNIVERSITY SCHEME.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—The opposition to Lord Justice Fry's scheme for the reorganisation of the-London University is commonly attributed to a jealousy of...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorTHE LIBERAL MOVEMENT IN ENGLISH LITERATURE.* MR. COITRTHOPE is an excellent critic, and there are hardly more than one or two individual criticisms in the pages of this plea-...
THE BISHOPRIC OF DERRY.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR." SIR,—Permit me to correct an error the Rev. J. A. Galbraith has made in the Spectator of the 14th inst., when referring to my paper on "...
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THE LIFE OF WILLIAM CAREY, D.D.* THERE have been many
The Spectatorlives of Dr. Carey, and he deserved many, but this is the fullest and the best. Though his external history was uneventful, though he was not a man of genius, and • Th. Life of...
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MISS GREENWELL'S MEMOIRS.*
The SpectatorDORA GREENWELL'S name is probably known but little to the public generally. She lived a retired life, and it cannot be said that her literary labours were of a kind to interest...
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SCOTCH LOCAL HISTORIES.•
The SpectatorWE are very glad to include in our list of Scotch local histories a new and abridged edition of the late Dr. Robert Chambers' invaluable Domestic Annals of Scotland. That...
PICTURESQUE CANADA.
The SpectatorPicturesque Europe and Picturesque America are now appro- priately followed up by Picturesque Canada. Nor can we bestow higher praise on these volumes than by saying that they...
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RANGABE'S " THEODORA."* Arain from the intrinsic merits of this
The Spectatorpoem, it furnishes a fresh proof that the literary ability which has marked two generations of the distinguished Phanariote family to which the author belongs is in no danger of...
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CANDIDATES AND ELECTION AGENTS.*
The SpectatorFEW people can discourse of the dangers and difficulties which beset candidates and agents at elections with more knowledge than Mr. Loader, who was election-agent for Sir...
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The Oliver Children. By Mary Davison. Illustrated by F. Dadd.
The Spectator(S.P.C.K.)—A pretty book with three pretty illustrations, written for children, who, we doubt not, will find themselves much interested in the story ; it is told very cheerily...
Amateur Work. Edited by the Author of "Every Man His
The SpectatorOwn Mechanic." Vol. IV. (Ward, Lock, and Co.)—Here a man may learn, if only Nature has given him hands (by which we mean some- thing more than extremities furnished with ten...
Messrs. Routledge have sent us their yearly volumes :—Eloutledge's Every
The SpectatorBoy's Annual, edited by Edmund Rontledge, and Routledge's Every Girl's Annual, edited by Miss Alicia Leith, each of them ex- cellent in its way, and happily adapted for its...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorGIFT BOOKS. The King's Service : a Story of the Thirty Years' War, by the Author of " The Spanish Brothers," &c. (R.T.S.), is an interesting and well-constructed story...
Two companion volumes—Good Words, edited by Donald Macleod, D.D., and
The Spectatorthe Sunday Magazine, edited by the Rev. Benjamin Waugh (Isbister and Co.)—may be mentioned together. Both are so well known, that mention is really all that they need. Good...
A somewhat similar magazine, but intended, we should say, for
The Spectatorolder children, is Our Darlings. Edited by Dr. Bernardo. (J. F. Shaw and Co.)—It has a special reference to the good work with which the editor has identified his name. With its...
Who was Philip? a Tale of Public School-life, by Rev.
The SpectatorH. C. Adams, M.A., with eight illustrations (Griffith, Farran, and Co.), is another boys' book, not likely to attract so many readers, either from the interest attaching to the...
Cassell's Saturday Magazine (Cassell and Co.) presents its annual
The Spectatorvolume in a handsome volume of more than eight hundred quarto (or are they " elephantine " octavo ?) pages. It contains seven serial stories, most of them begun and finished in...
Young Days of Authors. By Ascott R. Hope. With Illustrations.
The Spectator(J. Hogg.)—" The stories," as stated in the Preface, "are founded upon autobiographical materials, supplied by the heroes themselves, with here and there a passage quoted or...
From the Tan-yard to the White House : the Story
The Spectatorof President Grant's Life. By William M. Thayer. With Portrait. (Hodder and Stoughton.)—The author is already favourably known as the writer of the Lives of Abraham Lincoln and...
Broken Hearts are Still. By Phcebe Allen. (S.P.C.K.)—The title is
The Spectatoran appropriate one for this very melancholy story, said to be one ",of a real life." The "stillness" is that of Christian resignation, the lesson of the tale. Beyond a short...
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Friends and Foes from Fairyland. By Lord Brabourne. (Long- mans.)—We
The Spectatorhave an old complaint against Lord Brabourne in the choice of his subjects. He has a certain leaning—which we cannot praise—to the horrible. In former books he has introduced...
Arminius Varnbery : His Life and Adventures. Written by Him-
The Spectatorself. (T. Fisher Unwio.)—M. Vambery has written this story of his adventures expressly for young readers, and prefaces it with a chapter in which he commends it to them. It must...
An Address made at the Special Service of Commemoration and
The SpectatorFellowship in. Manchester Cathedral at the Time of the Burial of the late Bight Rev. James Fraser, D.D., Bishop of Manchester, to which is added a Letter from the Dean to an...
For King and Queen ; or, the Loyal 'Prentice. By
The SpectatorHenry Frith. (Cassell and Co.)—Mr. Frith takes us back to the days of Queen Elizabeth and King James. His story opens with the abortive rising of Essex, and it takes us down as...
For Name and Fame; or, Through Afghan Passes. By G.
The SpectatorA. Henty. (Blackie and Son.)—Mr. Henty encloses one of the military stories which he knows—and, indeed, has good reason for knowing—how to tell so well, in a frame which, in...
Afloat. By Mrs. Stanley Leathes. (J. F. Shaw and Co.)—This
The Spectatoris a story of a little girl who is sent adrift in a boat by the trick of an idiot, in revenge for a beating, by which her father had punished some mischievous proceedings on his...
The Postulates of Political Economy. By the late Walter Bagehot.
The SpectatorWith a Preface by Alfred Marshall. (Longmans.)—The experience of Professor Marshall as a lecturer on Political Economy at Cambridge has convinced him that the two remarkable...
Yarns on the Beach. By G. A. Henty. (Blackie and
The SpectatorSons.)—These three "yarns" are good specimens of Mr. lienty's excellent faculty of story-telling. In the first we have a story of the French war, in which Mr. Henty boldly...
Al Soldier Born. By J. Percy Groves. (Griffith, Farran, and
The SpectatorCo.) —This is a sufficiently good story of the usual military type. Cuth- bert Cumberbatch is the son of a retired officer whose own career has been unluckily cut short by an...
Famous Discoveries by Land and Sea. (Blackie and Son.)—Here we
The Spectatorhave eight stories in chronological order, beginning with Christopher Columbus's discovery or rediscovery of America, and ending with a sketch of Mango Park's travels in Africa....
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DEATH.
The SpectatorSWANWICR. — On the 1501 inst., at Bournemouth, Frederick Swanwick, of Whittington, Chesterfield, aged 75.