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The scenes in the American House of Representatives during the
The Spectatorday or two preceding the Recess seem to have been most dis- creditable. There were 600 neglected Bills to be passed, and the Session was almost unbroken from the night of the...
The Globe of Friday week printed the text of the
The SpectatorAnglo-Russian Agreement, signed on May 30th at the Foreign Office by Lord Salisbury and Count Schouvaloff. Under this agreement, the Powers agree that Bulgaria shall be divided...
A great hound of Prince Bismarck, which goes by the
The Spectatorname of the " Reichshund,"—the dog of the Empire,—has been credited this week by the " Jingo " papers with the political sagacity needful to discover that Prince Gortschakoff is...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT RE Tories are out of temper. They see that the Anglo- Russian " Agreement" published in the Globe, however obtained, has been signed on behalf of both Governments, and that it...
The reports as to the health of the German Emperor
The Spectatorare contradictory. According to the latest bulletin, he had been walking about in the garden, and was much better ; but an impression has got abroad that the irritation created...
The stories from Berlin are endless, and most of them
The Spectatorcontra- dictory, but the following appear to be true. The first meeting was held on Thursday week, as arranged, a second on Monday, and a third on Wednesday. In the first two...
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In South Northumberland it appears that Mr. Grey must resign
The Spectatorthe seat, not owing to any defeat, but to the negligence of the presiding officer, who had failed to stamp with the official stamp nine of the voting-papers presented to him....
After the presentation of the prizes to the North-London Collegiate
The Spectatorand Camden Schools for Girls last Tuesday, Lord Granville said that the objection was still entertained to such schools that they would turn young ladies into pedants and blue-...
On Monday Mr. Roebuck addressed his constituents in the Albert
The SpectatorHall, Sheffield, in defence of himself and the Government, and in favour of his own re-election at the next dissolution, both for his own sake and Lord Beaconsfield's. He asked...
The Bill enabling unmarried female householders to vote for Members
The Spectatorof Parliament was defeated on Wednesday, by 219 to 140. There was little originality in the debate, and none of the political leaders took part in it. Mr. Courtney, who moved...
Mr. Banbury has wisely abandoned his crazy motion condemn- ing
The SpectatorMr. Gladstone's article in the Nineteenth Century for sedition. The disgust of the Government at so silly a proposal, and the dismay of his party at the false position into...
A somewhat confused debate took place in the House of
The SpectatorCom- mons on Tuesday night, on the subject of a motion of Mr. W. Holms, for a Select Committee to inquire into the operation of the Scotch Church Patronage Act of 1874, and its...
The Old Catholic' Synod at Bonn has decided, by 75
The Spectatorvotes against 22, that the canonical prohibition of marriage for mole- elastics above the rank of sub-deacons does not constitute any Obstacle to the marriage of Old Catholic...
The election for Southampton terminated yesterday week in the success
The Spectatorof the Conservative candidate, Mr. Alfred Giles, by a majority of 248, over the Liberal candidate, Mr. H. M. Bompas, Q.C. (2,552 against 2,304 votes), so that the Conservatives...
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The Committee of the House of Commons on Public Busineeg
The Spectatorhave presented a " first Report," and a very grotesque document it is. The Committee recommend that whenever a Member has been twice formally declared by the Speaker to be out...
The House of Commons, on Monday, came to a vote
The Spectatorof some importance. The Bill before it was only a local Bill, allowing a tramway company to use steam ; but it brought down a very full House, and the discussion turned entirely...
The Lancashire strike has ended in the complete victory of
The Spectatorthe masters, the men returning to their work at the reduction of 10 per cent. The immediate causes of the surrender are stated by the Weavers' Committee to have been the...
A somewhat dreary dinner, relieved by a speech of Lord
The SpectatorGranville's on Lord Russell's character as a debater and a talker, was held at the Cannon-Street Hotel on Tuesday, to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the repeal of the...
The report, by Mr. Consul-General Fawcett, upon the murder of
The SpectatorMr. Ogle, Times' correspondent at Volo, has been presented to Parliament, and republished by the Times without comment. ft is briefly that Mr. Ogle was extremely imprudent,...
But Lord Granville's personal memories of Lord Russell were very
The Spectatorfresh, and as the loss of that great reformer was also fresh, Ms speech on the subject had all the vividness of a green leaf -amidst a host of sere and withered leaves. Lord...
Bishops are already flocking to London for the Pan-Anglican Synod,
The Spectatorwhich is to commence on Tuesday week, July 2nd. We do not know what will come of that meeting, but a proposal of a somewhat grandiose description has already been broached that...
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MR. ROEBUCK AT SHEFFIELD.
The SpectatorI Mr. Roebuck's speech at Sheffield, on Monday, hems& it the 1 great critical question of the occasion whether or not he was the man he was five-and-forty years before. No one...
TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE ANGLO-RUSSIAN AGREEMENT. T HERE has never been a moment during these two years when it was more necessary for English Liberals, and indeed, for all reasonable politicians,...
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VEk'YK PASHA ON ASIA AND EUROPE.
The SpectatorV NGLISHMEN are often surprised at the preference which many Orientals display, and which most, we think, feel at heart, for their own life over the life of Europe. The latter...
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THE BURIAL OF HANOVER.
The SpectatorN OTHING in history is more strange, though it seems to us all so natural, than the quiet, persistent, immovable 'refusal of the English people, a refusal continued through oven...
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exertions. relief from the ports of the Empire to the
The Spectatorwretches What these incidents are it would be almost needlessly who so terribly need it. There are distinct traces of shame startling to explain, were it not for the fact that,...
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THEREPORT OF THE COPYRIGHT COMMISSION.
The SpectatorT HE Report of the Select Committee on Copyright deals with ground covered by fourteen Acts of Parliament. Of these Acts, the Commissioners have to speak in that dis- respectful...
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INTERNATIONAL GAMBLING.
The SpectatorA FAILURE was announced early this week, which was a signi- ficant sign of the times. A corn-dealing firm "went" for £90,000, or some such trifle, and it was announced in...
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MR. DISRAELI ON WHIST.
The SpectatorA MONG Mr. Disraeli's early squibs is a bit of rhodomontade called " The Infernal Marriage," in which he narrates a journey of Proserpine's, taken for the benefit of her health,...
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PARIS IN JUNE, 1878.—No. I.
The SpectatorT HE approach to Paris, after the train has passed Creil, gliding over the restored bridge whose demolition was one of the blunders of the war, is more than usually beautiful...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorLAST WORDS ON THE NORTHERN UNIVERSITY. [TO THE EDITOR OF TIER SPROTLTOR.71 Sur,—In his former letter, my friend, Dr. Carpenter, omitted from his sketch of the history of the...
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A PRECEDENT FOR MR. GLADSTONE.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR, — Why do those who would defend Mr. Gladstone against Mr. Hanbury cite such old-world precedents as Burke and Fox, or Chatham and the...
THE ' GROSSER KURFURST.'
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. " ] SIR, — The question of the steering orders on shipboard has assumed very curious proportions, although the subject is too technical to...
DR. JOHNSON'S " CREDULITY."
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR' OF THE " SPECTATOR. "] Six, — May I be allowed to suggest, with all respect, that the statement, in your article of Mr. Leslie Stephen's book, that John- son...
INSPIRATION, AS HELD IN SCOTLAND. [To THE EDITOR OF THE
The Spectator..SPEOTATOR.1 SIR,—In the close of a paragraph on p. 687 of the Spectator for June 1st, you say of a motion carried in the Free-Church Assembly, that it is " an admission that...
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ART.
The SpectatorTHE ROYAL ACADEMY. [FINAL NOTICE.] "HENRY IRVING as Duke of Gloster," by E. Long, A. (472), is one of the few satisfactory portraits in this year's exhibition, which is an...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorVICTOR HUGO'S " HISTORY OF A CRIME." * IT might seem a work of supererogation to review a book of which the ninety-eighth edition—and that far from the latest—lies before us ;...
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PROTEUS AND AMADEUS.*
The SpectatorTins is one of the most fascinating little books on natural theology which has been published for many years back. The title is, perhaps, a little too scholastic ; but the...
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HISTORY OF IRELAND.*
The SpectatorIN speaking of this volume, we do not intend to enter into the question of its value from an archaeological point of view ; nor does the author's manner of dealing with his...
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MEMOIRS OF GEORGIAN A., LADY CHATTERTON.*
The SpectatorLADY CHATTERTON was a highly accomplished woman. She painted beautifully, we are told, in oil colours, composed music, played on the harp, understood several languages, and...
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PROF. BONAMY PRICE ON POLITICAL ECONOMY.*
The SpectatorWHEN we say of Mr. Price that he is far more of the "teacher," in the best sense of the word, than of the " professor," as people generally understand that term, we pay him, in...
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Food from the Far West : or, American Agriculture, with
The SpectatorSpecial Reference to the Beef-Production and Importation of Dead Meat from America to Great Britain. By James Macdonald. (W. P. Nimmo.)— Mr. Macdonald was commissioned, he tells...
Winna. A Novel. (Charing Cross Publishing Company.)—In spite of very
The Spectatorfaulty construction, and a curiously blundering style, we are disposed to speak favourably of this story, mainly because it is, that best of all things in a novel, interesting....
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorExpository Essays and Discourses. By Ssmuel Cox. (Hodder• end Stoughton.)—This volume is full "earned and ingenious comment on various difficult theological subjects and obscure...
Money, and its Laws. By H. V. Poor. (C. Kegan
The SpectatorPaul and Co.)— Mr. Poor is hard on political economists. Beginning with Aristotle, who was "eminently unscientific," he carries us down in a history of monetary theories to...
Waifs and Strays from the Far East, being a Series
The Spectatorof Disconnected Essays on Matters relating to China. By Frederic Henry Balfour. (Ti iihnor and Co )—We do not know if this is Mr. Balfour's first appearance in the world of...
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Broad Outlines of Long Years in Australia. By Mrs. Henry
The SpectatorJones, of Binnum Binnum. (S. Tinsley and Co.)—Our first surprise upon opening this volume is to find that it is a novel, our next, upon perusing it, is that any lady of the...
The Art of Grafting and Budding. By Charles Baltet. (Macmillan
The Spectatorand Co.)—This work, which is a translation of M. Charles Baltet's " L'Art de Greffer," will be a most interesting one to all gardeners. Every mode of grafting and budding is...
The Bampton Lectures, 1876 ; the Witness of the Psalms
The Spectatorto Christ and Christianity. By W. Alexander, D.D., Bishop of Derry. (John Murray.) —The eloquence and beauty of these sermons, which must hold a fore- most rank among the...