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The objections to this scheme are three. The first is
The Spectatorthat if " all " landlords are to be paid off, which is promised, " all " land- lords may ask for payment, and, as Lord Selborne has shown in his weighty letter of Friday...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorM R. GLADSTONE on Friday week explained his Land- purchase scheme, in a speech which must have been curiously unlike his usual speeches. Read carefully, it is lucid enough ; but...
The plan is to allow all landlords in Ireland—the all
The Spectatorwas emphasised more than once—to claim from the Treasury a certain amount of Consols at par. This amount is to be twenty years' purchase of the "net rental,"—that is, the...
The disbanded soldiery in Burmah still continue to give trouble.
The SpectatorThey form bands under leaders who claim to belong to the family of Alompra, and occasionally show extreme audacity. On Thursday se'nnight, for example, they fired Man- delay...
President Cleveland has sent a Ismarkable Message to Con- gress.
The SpectatorHe says the present unsatisfactory condition of the relations between labour and capital is largely due to the " grasping and heedless exactions of the employers," as well as...
NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS.
The SpectatorIt is our intention occasionally to issue gratis with the SPECTATOR Special Literary Supplements, the outside pages of which, will be devoted to Advertisements. The Sixteenth....
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Lord Spencer and Mr. Morley addressed a great meeting at
The SpectatorNewcastle on Wednesday night, on the Irish policy of the Government. Lord Spencer's speech was manly, but, like all converts, he was disposed to go too far in his new creed. He...
The annual meeting of the Two Thousand of Birmingham was
The Spectatorheld on Wednesday, with Mr. Schnadhorst in the chair. The subject of discussion was the Home-rule Bill, and it was soon apparent that the Association intended to do a very...
On Wednesday, again, the Duke of Argyll made a powerful
The Spectatorspeech at Glasgow against the Irish policy of the Government. He• professed his sincere faith in Mr. Gladstone's earnestness and sincerity and "juvenile enthusiasm," but said...
Mr. Chamberlain also condemned that scheme utterly, de- claring that
The Spectatorhe would rather go out of politics altogether than vote for it ; but on the Home-rule Bill he was, in form at all events, more doubtful. We do not think he is doubtful, for he...
Mr. T. P. O'Connor, the leader of the Irish in
The SpectatorEngland, made a speech to his constituents in Liverpool on Wednesday, full of ability and of the self-restraint which his party is just now showing. He spoke of Mr. Chamberlain...
Mr. Morley's speech was not equally sanguine. As usual, he
The Spectatorsees very clearly indeed the difficulty of doing anything except what the Government are doing. He regards their line of policy as the line of least resistance ; but that is the...
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Among the many doubtful cases brought by the adherents of
The SpectatorM. Pasteur's inoculations to prove that he has discovered a real protection against hydrophobia, we do not know of any in which the symptoms of hydrophobia had been fairly...
At the annual meeting of the Young Women's Christian Association,
The Spectatorheld in Exeter Hall last Friday week, the 16th inst., and attended by members from all parts of the country, Lady Frances Balfour read a paper on the work of the Travellers' Aid...
The Daily News states, we suppose on some authority, that
The Spectatorgrave apprehensions are still entertained of war between Greece and Turkey, and it is certain that M. Delyannis keeps on increasing the force on the frontier, and that the...
Calamities in Austria always assume large proportions. The town of
The SpectatorStry, in Galicia, was on the 17th inst. totally destroyed by fire, and seven thousand people rendered homeless. Only one or two buildings were saved, and the wretched people,...
Mr. Labonchere took the chair at a great meeting iu
The SpectatorSt. James's Hall on Thursday, to support the Home-rule measure of the Government. His speech was of the kind which we expect from Mr. Labonchere. He was very sarcastic about the...
Heroism is not yet extinct among English-speaking people, though it
The Spectatormay be dying in the House of Commons. In December last the American ship Cleopatra ' was descried by Captain Hughes, of the Liverpool steamer 'Lord Gough,' near the St. George's...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE LAND-PURCHASE BILL. M R. GLADSTONE'S Land-purchase Scheme is a bad one. We write the words with regret, for we entirely agree with him that, owing to the past history of...
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THE DEMOCRATIC DEMAND FOR IRISH MEMBERS.
The SpectatorT HE tendency of modern Liberalism, and especially, as we think, of modern Democracy, is towards Constitutional pedantry. Home-rule for Ireland means, if it means any- thing, a...
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LORD SPENCER'S PROMISES.
The SpectatorU NDOUBTEDLY Lord Spencer's Newcastle promises will have a much greater effect upon the average political mind, than any other element in his manly but strangely optimist...
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THE NEED FOR UNITY.
The SpectatorT HE weakest point in the position of those who resist the Home-rule Bill is the tendency they betray to split into sections, which may work together when the testing-hour...
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THE NEWS FROM MANDELAY.
The Spectatorr ERE is no nuisance in a recently annexed province equal to a Special Correspondent who does his duty, and has to report by telegraph. He cannot report anything but dis-...
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THE INFANTS' BILL.
The SpectatorT HE excitement of this Session, when we are thrown back against our wills to defend first principles, which many of us had supposed were finally settled, makes all more ordi-...
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BENCH AND BAR.
The SpectatorT O those who live, as we do, in a revolutionary age, it is an immense consolation to find that some institutions are still founded on a rock. The integrity of the United...
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MR. IRVING'S CLAIMS FOR THE ACTORS.
The SpectatorM R. IRVING, in his speech on behalf of the Dramatic and Musical Sick Fund, made a complaint that Music is treated as the spoiled child of the Fine Arts, while the Drama is...
MR. JUSTICE WILLS'S CHARGE.
The SpectatorW E are not about to discuss the evidence in the Bartlett case. Twelve journalists, if they saw the witnesses, and were not too impatient to hear out the evidence, would, we...
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THE EVOLUTION OF HELIOLOGY.
The SpectatorT HE world was learning much, and thinking more, and stirring with fresh wonder. And there came to it a Teacher well assured. His sight was swift and keen. But its range was...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorGENEROUS POLITICS. LT0 THE EDITOR OF TEE " SPECTATOR."] SIR,—You are no doubt right in believing that the appeal to the simple democratic sentiment in behalf of...
THE RIVAL PLANS OF HOME-RULE.
The SpectatorTO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR. "] SIH,—I think it was Mr. Shaw-Lefevre who a few months ago, after describing in one of the Reviews the two possible plans of Home-rule—the...
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ULSTER AND THE HOME-RULE QUESTION. I To THE EDITOR OF
The SpectatorTHE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR, —Perhaps you may find space in your columns for the -enclosed extracts from articles on the Ulster linen trade, pub- lished in the Belfast Morning News,...
PRACTICAL POLITICS AND POLITICAL PRINCIPLE.
The Spectator[To TRH EDITOR or THE "SPECTATOR. "' Snt,—Now that Archdeacon Denison and myself have " shaken hands" over our controversy, I should like to examine in a friendly spirit what...
AGGRESSIVE IRRELIGION IN FRANCE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR.") Srn,—In your article on " Aggressive Irreligion in France," you ask why the Republic does not adopt the policy advocated by Mr. John...
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MARY FRAMPTON'S JOURNAL. LTO THE EDITOR OF TEE " SPECTATOR."]
The SpectatorSlit, — My attention has been called to the notice of "Mary Frampton's Journal " in the Spectator of April 10th, which renews in the grossest terms the charge against the...
MAN'S KNOWLEDGE OF GOD.
The SpectatorITo THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR:1 Sift,—In your review last week of Mr. Armstrong's book, you cite a passage expounding the argument for the existence of God derived from...
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POETRY.
The SpectatorIEORACE.—BOOK I., ODE 24. TO VIRGIL, ON THE DEATH OF QUINCTILIUS. BLUSH not for tears in ceaseless sorrow shed For one so loved. Melpomene, inspire The dirge low-breathed,...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorBRUTUS DLTOR.* THE author who terms himself " Michael Field " keeps up his reputation for force and a certain grim grandeur of conception better than he keeps up his reputation...
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KOREA.*
The SpectatorTax author of this interesting volume is an American citizen, who, having been attached as Foreign Secretary and Counsellor to a Special Mission from Korea to the United States,...
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AN INTERESTING LIFE.*
The SpectatorTins unpretending volume suggests, among other things, one special advantage that Scotland has derived from having been for some time without an all-absorbing ecclesiastical...
TWO ASPECTS OF MONEY.*
The SpectatorMR. DEL Mart calls his book A History of Money in Ancient Countries, from the Earliest Times to the Present. The phrase is a contradiction in terms. Moreover, on turning over...
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THE EARLIEST ENGLISH CONSTITUTIONAL TREATISE.* Tuts volume is rather like
The Spectatorone of those books of poetry described by Sir Benjamin Backbite, in which a rivulet of text meanders through a meadow of margin, so small is the propor- tion of the original...
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Lives of Greek Statesmen. Second Series : Ephialtes—Hermocrates. By the
The SpectatorRev. Sir George W. Cox, Bart., M.A. (Longmans.)—This is the second instalment of an excellent little work, the first part of which was noticed in our columns last year. It may...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorThe At tistd' Manual of Pigments. By H. C. Standage. (Crosby Lockwood and Co )—Too little is known by the modern artists of the chemical nature of their paints, whereas, in the...
A Lone Lassie. By J. Jemmett-Browne. (Sampson Low and Co.)
The Spectator—This is the autobiography of a young lady whose parents alternately desert her and are devoted to her ; however, she generally seems quite competent to take care of herself,...
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From Out the Silent Past. By Mrs. Herbert Martin. 2
The Spectatorvole. (Ward and Downey.)—This is one of the stories which turn on a change of identity, so to speak. The first part tells us of the marriage of a certain Dudley Wynn, to a...
An Historical Atlas. By Robert H. Labberton. (Macmillan and Co.)—There
The Spectatoris no lack of historical atlases now-a-days, but the more the better, especially when, as in this case, they are clear, well selected, and to some extent novel. There is no more...
Her Success. By Annie Thomas. 3 vole. (F. V. White
The Spectatorand Co.) —The " she " whose " success " is related in this story is an un- principled young woman who achieves the glory of marrying a worthless old nobleman, and meets a proper...
The Influence of the Roman Law on the Late of
The SpectatorEngland (Cam- bridge University Press) is an extremely interesting essay by Pro- fessor Scrutton, of University College, London, which gained the Yorke Prize in 1884. The...
Life and Speeches of Joseph Cowen, M.P. By Evan Rowland
The SpectatorJones. (Sampson Low and Co.)—Mr. Cowen is quite right in carefully preparing his speeches and addresses. If, however, we are asked, as Mr. Cowen and his admirers practically ask...