21 OCTOBER 1882

Page 1

NEWS OF THE WEEK.

The Spectator

p A.RLIAMENT reassembles on Tuesday, the 24th inst. As the Houses were only adjourned, and not prorogued, there will be no Queen's Speech ; and, properly speaking, all business...

Baker Pasha has submitted his plan for the organisation of

The Spectator

the Egyptian Army to the Khedive, it has been accepted in i principle, and s published textually. It is a better plan than the one attributed to the Pasha, but still imperfect....

Yesterday week was a day of many political speeches. Lord

The Spectator

Northbrook and Mr. Fawcett made considerable speeches in Liverpool, while the Duke of Richmond and Gordon and Sir Stafford Northcote addressed a select audience of Scotch...

A furious struggle is said to have been raging in

The Spectator

the ruling circle at Constantinople. The "fanatics," whom we should call the Conservatives, headed by Mahmoud Nedim, advise the Sultan to demand that England shall fix a date...

The only intelligence from Egypt received this week has referred

The Spectator

to the trial of Arabi. Having mutinied to expel Europeans, he has demanded European Counsel to defend him from the consequences of mutiny. The demand was backed by the British...

4 : 4 ,* The Editors cannot undertake to return Manuscript, in any

The Spectator

case.

Lord Carnarvon last week told the people of Newbury that

The Spectator

"three-fourths of tile literary power of the country, and four. fifths of the intellectual ability," were on the Conservative side. A writer in the Tiniest takes the trouble to...

Page 2

'Lord Northbrook's evening speech was a defence of the policy

The Spectator

of the Government, especially in relation to Ireland. He showed the great diminution of agrarian crime, especially of crimes of violence to the person,—which had been reduced...

Mr. Fawcett's speech was notable for its courage in dealing

The Spectator

lucidly with a rather 'abstract subject,—the socialistic scheme for the nationalisation of the land. To an audience of 4,000 persons, it is not easy to speak effectually on...

If the Radicals are thoroughly loyal, there is evidence that

The Spectator

'the recalcitrant Whigs are returning to their allegiance. Mr. A. Peel addressed his constituents at Warwick on Thursday, and while speaking somewhat apologetically of his vote...

Sir Stafford Northcote himself descanted on the independence' of the

The Spectator

Scotch character, and the peculiar suitability of the Con- servative cause to engage on its side that independence of charac- ter, since nothing is more alien to men of...

There is every sign that the Radicals are quite as

The Spectator

loyal to the Government as they were even in the time of the general elec- tion. At Swansea, this week, Mr. Dillwyn addressed his con- stituents, pointing out the absolute...

At Inverness, the Duke of Richmond and Gordon, assuming his

The Spectator

position as a great Scotch proprietor and politician, welcomed Sir Stafford Northcote to Scotland, to inaugurate "The Consti- tutional Association of the Northern Counties." The...

Page 3

Mr. Parnell's programme, as accepted, binds the National League to

The Spectator

seek first of all an Irish Parliament, that is, in fact, not Home-rule, but Repeal; secondly, the sale of the land to the tenants by the State, for a price to be paid in...

All the semi-official papers in Paris assert that the President

The Spectator

will probably not receive the Envoys from Madagascar. They have come to complain of French demands, and it is intended to tell them that their Queen is not Queen of Madagascar,...

A new political movement has broken out in Spain. The

The Spectator

Liberals of almost all shades think S. Sagasta, though nominally a Liberal, far too reactionary, and have asked Marshal Serrano to be the mouthpiece of their ideas. The Marshal,...

Mr. Childers has hardly had enough credit for his military

The Spectator

administration, nor should we deny a good deal to that of his predecessors, from Mr. Cardwell to Colonel Stanley. The ad- mirable letter by Mr. Childers to his constituents at...

The Irish National Conference was held in Dublin on Tuesday,

The Spectator

end was attended by about 800 delegates, half of those invited. The proceeding s were full . of repressed excitement, but were brief, and ended in a victory for Mr. Parnell. He...

The final appointment of Count Hatzfeldt as Foreign Secre- tary

The Spectator

for Germany—of course, under the Chancellor—may have important effects upon the situation in Egypt. The Count is a favourite with Prince Bismarck, he has been long at...

Lord Plunket has found out that Disestablishment has not injured

The Spectator

the cause of the Protestant Clergy in Ireland, but saved them from the machinations og the Land League, and that, in fact, Disestablishment has been " over-ruled" for their...

Consols were on Friday 101f to 1011.

The Spectator

Page 4

TOPICS OF THE DAY

The Spectator

THE TRIAL OF ARABI PASHA. I T would be difficult to imagine a better illustration of the enormous difficulties in the way of Mr. Gladstone, than this discussion about Arabi...

THE CONSERVATIVE LEADERSHIP.

The Spectator

T HE Conservatives are dispirited, and consequently are picking holes in their Chiefs. We are far from regarding those chiefs as perfect. The Marquis of Salisbury appears to us...

Page 5

THE " TIMES " ON THE CLOSURE.

The Spectator

T HE Times articles on the Closure probably suggested to Mn, Arnold his recent remarks on the English deficiency . in lucidity. They are not the articles of men who take the...

Page 6

MR. PARNELL'S NEW POSITION.

The Spectator

T "general result of the struggle among Irish Extremists, which ended for the hour in the meeting of Tuesday in Dublin, is, we think, sufficiently clear. Mr. Parnell's Anglo-...

Page 7

THE FRENCH IN MADAGASCAR.

The Spectator

T HE French Government have evidently determined to Occupy the time during which they are paralysed in Europe in carrying out a policy of Colonial expansion. It is, too, a...

Page 8

THE SCIENTIFIC REPORT ON THE CHANNEL TUNNEL.

The Spectator

T HE 13lue-book on the Channel Tunnel ought to dispose of the scheme until the Millennium. When wars have become matter of history, and nations have no longer any motive for...

Page 9

THE POLITICS OF CULTURE.

The Spectator

J OHN STUART MILL'S assumption, so often repeated by men without his intellectual right to utter an insolence, that "the Tories are the Stupid Party," naturally irritates...

Page 10

"FAITH AND UNFAITH."

The Spectator

W E called attention, in a few lines in our paper on "The Magazines," in the Spectator for October 7th, to Mr. Kegan Paul's essay on this subject in the current number of the...

Page 11

ART AND LIFE.

The Spectator

C ONTEMPORARY art in its public expects may be con. sidered a huge game, in which one side is taken by the artists and exhibitors of pictures, and the other by the great...

Page 13

CORRESPONDENCE.

The Spectator

ROLLING-STONE RAMBLES.—I. BY THE AUTHOR OP "A LAZY JOURNEY." 44 D ID you aver see such a winter as this I" asked one sufferer of another. "Yes, last summer," was the answer....

Page 14

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.

The Spectator

ANIMAL INTELLIGENCE. [To THE EDITOR Or THE " SPECTATOR."] Sia,-0 wing to my distance from town, my attention has only just been called to your review of my book on "Animal...

Page 15

POETRY.

The Spectator

TWO EPITAPHS. I" Memento mori," "Gedenke zu Loben."] "Think of Death !" the gravestones say,— " Peace to Life's mad. striving !" But the churchyard daisies,—" Nay, Think...

THOMAS PATERSON.

The Spectator

, [To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Slit, — A man of some note among the working-men of London has died this week. It was in the year 1866 ‘ that I first saw Thomas...

A NEW INQUIRY.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OF' THE " SPUTA TOR."] SIR,—Some of your readers may possibly be aware that a Society entitled the" Society for Psychical Research" has lately been established,...

"AN ENGLISH GARNER." [To TRId EDITOR OF THE " SEEOTATOR."]

The Spectator

SIR, — In an article in the Spectator, October 14th, on Vols. IV. and. V. of "An English Garner," the following lines are quoted from a poem called " Nosce Teipsum" :— " We...

INTERPRETERS IN THE EAST.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] • Su,--Permit me to correct an error into which the writer of your last week's article on "Interpreters in the East" has fallen. Instead of...

Page 16

BOOKS.

The Spectator

A SHORT HISTORY OF FRENCH LITERATURE.* A BOOK of this kind, dealing with a large and varied subject within narrow limits, and intended chiefly to subserve educa- tional...

Page 17

ALL SORTS AND CONDITIONS OF MEN.*

The Spectator

THE dissolution of the literary partnership recently ter- minated by the death of Mr. James Rice, lends additional interest of a melancholy kind to the remarkable novel which...

Page 18

THE COWARD SCIENCE.*

The Spectator

WE suppose that it is essential for controversial books of this kind to have aggressive titles, by way of calling public attention - to their aggressive character,—and this is...

Page 19

MR. GILCHRIST'S "BLAKE,"*

The Spectator

THE late Mr. Gilchrist's Life of Blake is too well known to need either praise or description on its appearance in a new edition, The book forms one of that small class where...

Page 20

TWO NEW NOVELS.*

The Spectator

Tics first of these stories is a pleasant, quiet tale, in one volume, containing nothing exciting or striking, very slight and unpretentious, not aiming at depth of plot, close...

Page 21

The Holiest Manhood, and its Lessons for Busy Lives. By

The Spectator

Jolla Ellerton, M.A., Rector of Barnes. (Macmillan and Co.)—The unity of purpose, with variety of subject, which arc to be found in these sermons mark them off from the common...

The Burgomaster's Wife, A Tale of the Siege of Leyden.

The Spectator

By George Ebers. Translated by Clara Bell. (Macmillan and Co.)— This is a novel of the historical order, relating to the famous siege of Leyden, in 1574, when it was besieged...

CURRENT LITERATURE.

The Spectator

The Faiths of the Iforld (William Bhickwood and Sons), a concise history of the groat religious systems of the world, is a series of lectures delivered in the Cathedral or St....

Page 22

The Prince of Wales's Garden Party : and Other Stories.

The Spectator

1 vol. By Mrs. J. H. Riddell. (Chatto and Windus.)—This collection of stories is likely to disappoint Mrs. Riddell's admirers, who have been accustomed to get stronger work in...

Haverfordwest, and its Story. By H. Holdefast. (L. Brigatocke.)— The

The Spectator

growing importance of Milford Haven as a commercial centre is the author's excuse for compiling this book, which gives a chatty description of the immediate neighbourhood, and...

Faustino. 3 vols. By "Rita." (Tinsley Brothers.)—Aniong the minor sciences,

The Spectator

none is pleasanter than that which is called " coin- parative folk-lore," and " Rita " has given us, not anything new, but the opportunity for seeing how close is the connection...