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NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorTHE Belgian affair is no nearer a solution. The French Govern' ment still insists that the contract for selling the Luxemburg Railway shall be carried out, and M. Frere-Orban...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorCOUNT VON BISMARCK'S LAST SPEECH. T HE debate of the 16th inst. in the North German Parliament is one of the most important which has yet occurred in that body. It revealed at...
MR. DISRAELI'S PAPAL "ESTABLISHMENT."
The Spectatoryi R. DISRAELI is an instructive speaker, if only for the exquisite precision with which he usually manages to invert the truth. Nothing was ever more complete in this way than...
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THE NEW INDIA BILL.
The SpectatorI T has at length been found necessary to infuse a little more vitality and variety into the Council of India. That body, one of the most remarkable and, in its way most...
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THE SURPRISE OF TUESDAY.
The SpectatorA COORDING to his own account of the matter Mr. Lowe on Tuesday night sprang a mine upon a new Tower of Babel, which the lawyers have been conspiring to build on the rather...
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THE TORIES AND THE TENURE.
The SpectatorT HE Tories are changing their tactics with some adroitness. They see very clearly that their chance of resisting the Irish Church Bill in the Commons is very slender, and they...
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A PRINCE ON TRADES' UNIONS.
The SpectatorA N anonymous volume, published in three several sizes,* is now selling like wildfire in Paris. Although the preface is only dated March 15, 1869, it has already reached its...
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" BARBARIC " SPLENDOUR.
The Spectator91EIE Times has been publishing for some weeks very long accounts of the magnificent entertainments with which the Pasha of Egypt and the Sultan of Turkey have welcomed the...
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THE ABOLITION OF S18TEltS-1N-LA.W."
The SpectatorI N a House of 387 Members, a majority of only one less than 100 has decided, according to the view taken of the vote by most of the opponents of the Bill, to "abolish...
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THE PROVINCIAL HISTORY OF ENGLAND,
The SpectatorXCVILL—LINCOLNSHIRE. THE TOWNS. 13 ES ID E S the City of Lincoln, this county contains the boroughs and market-towns of Boston, Grantham, Grimsby, and Stamford, and twenty-five...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorSELF-SUPPORTING EMIGRATION. [TO TEE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR:] you permit me to ask, in reply to "R. B. D. M.," what good reason there is for a nation refusing to assist its...
ART AND OPINION.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR. OF THE "SPECTATOR.") Sut,—If your powerful article on my very slight little essay in the Contemporary Review makes me look foolish, I may receive that as a...
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PROFESSOR HUXLEY.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR Or THE "SPECTATOR:1 SIN—As my letter criticizing Professor Huxley's Edinburgh address has been once or twice alluded to by other correspondents, perhaps I may be...
BLACKER THAN THEY WERE PAINTED.
The Spectator[To TER EDITOR Or THE "SPECTATOR."[ SIN—I have only just seen your paper of the 3rd April, in Which there is a notice of the Meath .Diocesan Synod. There I read, in connection...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorA TRANSLATION OF UHLAND.* Titanic are difficulties peculiar and special to all translations, and we are not sure that the simpler and more youthful products of national...
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THE USE OF ALABAMAS IN WAR.*
The SpectatorWE have not many faults to find with this narrative of Captain Serames's adventures in the Confederate service. Notwithstanding a few Americanisms, a free use of slang, a tone...
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THE FEUDAL CASTLES OF FRANCE.* THE views of Chaumont, Chenonceaux,
The SpectatorLoches, and Blois, taken from the author's sketches, will no doubt attract many readers who cannot be expected to care much for the semi-historical, semi t o pographical gossip...
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CHARLTON'S PLAYS AND POEMS.* The best part of this volume
The Spectatoris comprised in the republished translations of two excellent plays, the" Son of the Wilderness," which may be already well known among readers of German, and the "Gladiator of...
CHANGING BASE.*
The SpectatorNEARLY all English readers will find some interest in a well written account of the life of a schoolboy, and those who believe that the public-school system in the form we are...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorThe Dublin Review, for April. (Burns and Oates.)—The feature of this number is the editor's review (since republished) of Mr. Ffoulkes' "Letter to Archbishop Manning." Every ono...