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This piece of news about Suleiman, which may be unimpor-
The Spectatortant or may be all-important, comes both from Vienna and Con- stantinople. It is affirmed, apparently with full authority, that Suleiman Pasha, whose absence from the front on a...
Servia has declared war, first issuing a manifesto which does
The Spectatornot remove the objections of those who hold her bound by the submission of last year. There is no manliness about the docu- ment at all. Instead of saying boldly that Servia...
There is little detailed news from Bulgaria, but the general
The Spectatordrift of all received is that the Russians are organising an advance on Sofia, in which 90,000 men will be employed under General Gourko, and that the interest of the war will...
The Queen on Saturday paid a visit to Lord Beaconsfield
The Spectatorin state, received an address at Wycombe, lunched at Hughenden, and returned after an absence of four hours to Windsor. Such a visit is so unusual, and the honour is considered,...
NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorT HE Queen has been advised to call Parliament together "for the despatch of business" on January 17, that is, three weeks earlier than usual. Of course the whole kingdom is in...
The Turkish Government has recognised the situation so far as
The Spectatorto ask for mediation. In a circular to the Powers it professes its entire innocence of having in any way provoked the war, suggests that the military honour of both nations is...
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After this, the whole of the direct taxes of 1878
The Spectatorwas voted at once, and two-twelfths of the indirect taxes and expenditure for the coming year. The right of out-door sale has been restored at once to the Republican journals....
The Rev. Mr. O'Rorke, of Maynooth, in his third edition
The Spectatorof " , The Life of O'Connell," has just added a chapter containing Mr. Gladstone's personal recollections of that remarkable man. Mr. Gladstone's opinion, shortly summarised by...
Mr. Trevelyan also spoke very explicitly on the War. Though.
The Spectatorone of those who did his best to draw the teeth of Mr. Glad- stone's Resolutions last Session, he does not disguise his own sympathy with Russia in the cause she is...
Mr. G. 0. Trevelyan delivered a speech at GalashicIs yesterday
The Spectatorweek, upon one part of which,—thatwhich deals with the relation of household franchise to the relative strength of the two parties,— we have said a good deal in another column....
The Marshal's message to the Senate and Chamber of Deputies,
The Spectatorwhich was read in the former assembly by the Prime Minister, M. Dnfaure, and in the latter by the Minister of the Interior, M. de Marchre, was a complete and frank " submission...
Sufficient notice has not been taken of the remarkable fact
The Spectatorthat no Russian or Roumanian prisoners were foued in Plevna. That means, of course, that all the wounded were butchered on the field of battle in the manner indicated by Mr....
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The Nicotera Ministry in Italy has fallen. It was detected
The Spectatorin an odd and almost comical way in tampering with tele- grams,—that is, in allowing the contents of private telegrams to be published as official news, and, on a vote of...
Mr. Arthur Arnold finds fault with the Minister of 'War
The Spectatorfor quoting the late Mr. Mill as saying that the Tory party was "a stupid party." What Mr. Mill did say, Mr. Arnold remarks, was some- thing very much less loose, namely, that...
The Home Secretary as an art critic) is a politician
The Spectatorin a new character. On Thursday week, however, Mr. Cross made a speech to the students of the Metropolitan Drawing Classes at Cannon Street Hotel, in which he pleaded strongly...
Mr. Alderman Cotton, Member for the City, made on Tuesday,
The Spectatorat the annual Sheriffs' dinner at Stationers' Hall, a very note- worthy speech. The Alderman is a typical Conservative, and the City is supposed to be pro-Turkish, but he...
Miss Cobbe, in a letter which we publish in another
The Spectatorcolumn, makes the inefficiency of the law against cruel wife-beat- ing,—a crime which is certainly rather on the increase than the decrease,—a strong argument for women's...
It is a remarkable fact that the discussion which has
The Spectatormore than once been raised in our columns as to the Christian doctrine of retribution and its continuance, has now been revived. by Canon Farrar's striking sermons, in the pages...
A report was current on Sunday of the death of
The SpectatorOsman Pasha, and on Monday the Telegraph furnished its readers with the details. He had been informed by the surgeons that amputation of one leg was necessary, and having a box...
The Chancellor of the Exchequer has replied to a Nottingham
The Spectatorcorrespondent who consulted him as to the propriety of having a metal label issued with every dog-licence, which the dog should wear on its collar, as evidence that the tax has...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE EARLY MEETING OF PARLIAMENT. T HE stars in their courses fight against Turkey. She has been beaten in the field, but only after a struggle which might have induced the...
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THE VICTORY IN FRANCE.
The SpectatorMHE victory in France is complete, and it is as new as it is complete. The parliamentary principle is vindicated ; the political prosecutions are stopped ; the newspapers are...
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THE SERVIAN DECLARATION OF WAR.
The SpectatorI T is impossible to defend the action of Servia in declaring war. Technically, we suppose, her rulers are guiltless, for technically they are only insurgents, and nobody has...
Ottoman domination. They affirm that it is necessary, by the
The Spectatoradmission of almost all experts, for this country to occupy Egypt, and that consequently it is necessary for this country to defend Constantinople, or if that is too difficult,...
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MR. TREVELYAN ON HOUSEHOLD SUFFRAGE AND THE STRENGTH OF PARTIES.
The SpectatorIN his speech yesterday week at Galashiels, Mr. Trevelyan I touched a very important point in connection with Mr. Lowe's charge against Household Suffrage, and a point whieli it...
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M. DUFAURE.
The SpectatorDUFAURE has been longer before the world than all 1.11 • other public men in France, and yet we doubt whether any of them is so little known as he is, both at home and abroad....
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MR. GOLDWIN SMITH ON LIBERAL ORGANISATION.
The SpectatorE are sorry that Mr. Goldwin Smith should have made up his mind to go back to Canada. There are many points upon which we differ from him, but the Liberal cause is not so rich...
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PEPPERINESS.
The SpectatorW E wonder what is the source of the mixture of sympathy, not to say approbation, with which pepperiness, as dis- tinguished from bad temper, is generally treated by the world,...
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CHEAP TELEGRAMS.
The SpectatorW E have often been asked why the Government makes so little effort to establish a cheaper Telegraphic system, and at last we are able to make some sort of a reply. It is not a...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorAN INCIDENT IN THE LIFE OF SIR H. PEEL. - [TO TUE EDITOR OF THE " SPINTATOR.1 Sin,—In any question of opinion relating to a social incident, I might be inclined to defer to...
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POETRY.
The SpectatorASIA 1 aha! 0 woes on woes I Again the bitter toil of faithful seer My whirling brain cloth vex with first-born bode. See ye those young ones seated at the house,— Such...
ART.
The SpectatorTHE SOCIETY OF PAINTERS IN WATER-COLOURS. LOVERS of water-colours are likely to do well this winter, if we may judge from the quality of the exhibitions opened for their...
[To Tar EDITOR OF THIC "SPROTATOR.1 Sin,—Will you kindly allow
The Spectatorme a word or two of reply to Mr. Goldwin Smith's letter of last week in reference to a passage in my biography of Lord Beaconsfield? As Mr. Smith says, the Quarterly Review is...
PROTECTION FOR ENGLISH CHRISTIANS. CT° THE Enrrou OF TEM "SrEmeron.1
The Spectator'Stn,—May I beg of you to reprint the following short paragraph from the Times of to-day (December 18th) ' WIFE-BHATERS.—Michaal Scully was brought before the magistrates at...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorTHE HOUSE OF RAVENSBURG.* Teen conception of this drama is a very fine one, and is tragic in , the truest sense ; but the finer the conception, the more difficult,....
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LANDSEER STUDIES.*
The SpectatorTHERE are two great varieties of artistic success which must be carefully discriminated, if we would form a sound judgment of any artist's work,—the success which attends some...
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LANGE'S HISTORY OF MATERIALISM.*
The SpectatorPROFESSOR LARGE, of Zurich, and latterly of Marburg, died in 1875, at the comparatively early age of forty-seven, after play- ing, as many of our readers know, no small part in...
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TURNER.*
The SpectatorFOR most people, the name of Turner is associated with the painter of dreams, and visions, and landscapes, whose forms are considered to have a very conventional sublimity,...
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CHAUCER AND SPENSER FOR CHILDREN.* Two books have been lately
The Spectatorpublished,—to one of which we have already given some brief notice—uniform in size and general appearance, with the view of bringing some of the works of two of our greatest...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorCHRISTMAS AND NEW-YEAR'S BOOKS. The Mediterranean. (Nelson and Sous.) This is a bold, yet not un- successful attempt to treat of the principal places of interest on the shores...
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Dodd's Beauties of Shakespeare. (Bickers.)—A beautifully printed edition of this
The Spectatorold collection, bound in morocco in pocket-book form, and intended for lovers of the poet to carry constantly with them. There is nothing now to be said about the collection,...
Amongst the host of now pocket-books, diaries, note-books, and memorandum-books
The Spectatorfor 1878 which we have received, none that we have seen are prettier than Messrs. Marcus Ward's, their distinguish- ing charaeteristio being that the diaries are divided into...