24 MARCH 1866

Page 1

The Government, it appears, has not yet even decided when

The Spectator

it will bring in its Bill for the redistribution of seats. Sir H. Hoare asked on Monday whether it would be early next session, but Mr. Gladstone informed him that while the...

The Coadjutor Bishop of Jamaica, Dr. Reginald Kingston, does not

The Spectator

appear to have a very distinct conception of the drift of English public opinion as to the recent orgies of our troops in,- that island. He writes to the • Times of Monday a...

Very alarming telegrams continue to arrive from Canada. An invasion

The Spectator

of Fenians was expected on St. Patrick's Day, 17th inst. ; the Government had called out 10,000 volunteers, and the response was almost unexpectedly eager. The Catholic Bishops...

The rumours of coming war between Prussia and Austria grow

The Spectator

every day more alarming, so much so, that trade in Vienna has re- ceived a serious check. On the one hand, it appears certain that. the Kaiser, whether to indicate his...

NEWS OF THE WEEK.

The Spectator

T HE event of the week has been an announcement made by Earl Grosvenor, that he should on the 12th inst. move a resolution declaring it inexpedient to discuss any Bill for the...

The news from Jamaica last Saturday fax more than bore

The Spectator

out the worst fears entertained amongst is concerning the conduct of the Army in suppressing the disturbances. Even the Times now speaks in a tone of denunciation as strong as...

Page 2

carry it out in very energetic fashion. The United States

The Spectator

troops linateamerica. There he will proltabl,t towel with O'Mahony will make short work-of the Fenians, whether in, Chicav or New and the.Sanate, and so foem a thirckFeniamparty.

Home Secretary." would have no loss." Called to order, the

The Spectator

Marquis allowed that his

The Spectator

elaborate dogmatic test now administered to hundreds of whom to

The Spectator

63. A subsequent amendment in favour of the right of the scarcely a unit accepts it with any intelligent conviction ; Mr. press to trial by jury was lost only by a vote of 188...

intimidation is likely to be pretty extensively used if the

The Spectator

Reform Thursday by 101 to 70' ordered Mr. Cowper to admit all the best . Bill passes, and may require special legislation. Altogether the architects. We wonder how much work Mr....

The cattle-plague returns are worse than' useless, Every week playeekdaring

The Spectator

service time with some °thee children at some game we have the returns of the previous week—then admitted, au& with pennies A child missed a penny, and Willard, after count-...

The Spectator

Committee have confirmed the election of two Tories, add- for

The Spectator

all this fun, will do well to remember the facts at the next ing, with the greatest gravity, that about twenty persons had election. The latest idea, is to prohibit the import...

mature art, and seconded by Mr. Trevelyan in a speech

The Spectator

of con- siderable promise, though thought in the House a little too full of The. Marquis of Westmeath has original vibws of Parliamentary University chat. Mr. Coleridge...

Page 3

Of some of the sermons which Messrs. Bouverie, Bright, and

The Spectator

Co. may have heard, if they availed themselves of the delay decreed, we have spoken elsewhere. The only one reported which .did not " whittle away " the idea of humiliation...

The Bank of France return is very favourable, the supply

The Spectator

of bullion having been augmented to the extent of 900,0001., whilst bills discounted show a decrease of 1,947,0001. The Paris rate has been reduced 3i per cent.

Mr. Cowper introduced on Tuesday a very good Bill for

The Spectator

the preservation of the commons round London, of whieh ' within, a .radius of fifteen miles, there are 180-10,500 acres in all. The Bill renews the existing provision giving...

J. W. Leigh, twenty-seven years of age, a "remarkably keen,

The Spectator

determined-looking man, with an expressive cast of countenance," was sentenced, to death on Thursday at Lewes. He had killed his sister-in-law, Harriet Horton, for calling him a...

Sir, James Wilde has decided that a Mormon, miteriage is

The Spectator

no marriage in an English.. Divorce Court. That Court proceeds tile theory of Christian marriage, and cannot recognize &contract which involves the right of polygamy. If it...

The Directors of the Suburban Village and General Dwelling& Company

The Spectator

have announced the closing of the share list this day for London, and on Monday next for the country.

The closing pricer of the. leading Britiab. Railways yesterday and

The Spectator

on Friday week were as under Caledonian Great Eastern Great. Northern Great Western. . • .. Do. W est Midland, Oxford Lancashire and Yorkshire London and Brighton Lcndou and...

Home Securities have continued very inactive during the week, and

The Spectator

prices have declined. On Saturday last Consols left off at 871 f for money, and 871 1 for account. Yesterday the closing quotations were :—For transfer, 861 1 ; for time, 861, 87.

A Bill has been introduced into Congress to enforce treaty

The Spectator

of copyright with Great Britain, and. every author of eminence in America has signed a, petition in its favour. They see at last, whatever the Protectionists may do, that...

Tuesday, the lamination day, was a greater humiliation to the

The Spectator

House of Commons on Monday night than on. the subsequent morning itself: 4. bitter little deb* spraug up. on Mr. Glad- stone's motion fig putting off the meeting of the. Select...

Yesterday and on Friday week the leading Foreign Securities left

The Spectator

off at the annexed quotations :- Friday, March 16. Friday, March 23. Mexican .. .. Spaniel' Passive •• .. • . Do. Certificates .. .. Turkish 8 per Ceuta., 1853.. . 1882, ....

An admirable idea has this week been embodied in the

The Spectator

shape of an " Operatives' Housebuilding Company, Limited." It is that the occupants of the bloelas —all to be built for the present in the most thickly populated...

Page 4

TOPICS OF THE D.Y.

The Spectator

EARL GROSVENOR'S MOTION. T HE Landlord of the House of Commons declines Earl Rus- sell's Reform Bill. A few days ago the House was con- sidering one of the hundred metropolitan...

Page 5

THE CONFLICT AT WASHINGTON.

The Spectator

-filHE view taken in . England of President Johnson and his recent quarrel with the majority in Congress, is probably wider astray from that warranted by the facts of the case...

Page 6

THE " MRS PARTI" IN FRANCE, 1 T is not

The Spectator

without reason that the division of 'Monday on M. I. Buffet's amendment in the Corps Legislatif is considered an event. It is true the minority in its favour was only 63, while...

Page 7

embarrassed by infinite risks of defining instead the contiguous errors.

The Spectator

The charm of intellectual domineering is felt chiefly by ignorant persons, and as the ignorance diminishes the respect for others' freedom is pretty sure to strengthen. If the...

Page 8

THE COMING STORM IN EUROPE. T HE dull, dumb, instinctive wisdom

The Spectator

of the British people, the wisdom which, like the swallow's flight southward instead of northward, does not depend on intellect, was never more clearly shown than in their view...

Page 9

THE ANGLO-SAXON LET LOOSE.

The Spectator

W E have no need now to justify the course we pursued iu- regard to the Jamaica cruelties. As in the matter of the American war, so in this, the " audacity " of the Spectator...

Page 10

DEMORALIZING PRAYERS.

The Spectator

I T is impossible to deny that all those clergymen from whose vigour of mind and piety of heart we expect the best teach- ing on any critical religious question, devoted...

Page 12

New York, March 2, 1866.

The Spectator

THE political news of the week is brief but important. It is that the proposed amendment to the Constitution changing the basis; of representation, and intended to bring about...

Page 13

CLASS REPRESENTATION FOR PETTICOATS.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] SIR,—The right to the franchise of that great recently dis- covered creature, the working man, is presented to us under half- a-dozen...

Page 14

BOOKS.

The Spectator

GUSTAVE DORE'S FAIRY REALM.* G USTAVE Domes mode of illustrating the Fairy Realm is characteristic. So far as natural scenery is concerned, when- ever there is opportunity for...

THE HUMILIATION SERVICE.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] Sin,—We have just passed the day appointed by the Bishop for " humiliation " for the cattle plague. The shops were shut, and we went to...

Page 16

THE HOUSE OF COMMONS.*

The Spectator

Mn. BAGEHOT continues in the Fortnightly the wise chat which is his forte upon the British Constitution. This is the sixth paper of a series which is by far the best Mr. Bagehot...

Page 17

THE HISTORY OF FLORENCE.* Tuts is Mr. Trollope's great work,

The Spectator

and reflects much credit on his industry, his powers as a narrator, and his views of history. We can see that his whole heart is in his task, yet his judgment is never warped by...

Page 18

DRAFTS. ON. MY MEMORY.*

The Spectator

How to make a book when you have got nothing' to say, is a problem which has puzzled the brains of many abler writers than Lard William Lennox. To him, however, belongs the...

Page 20

The Future of the Haman Race. By W. Ellis. (S.nith

The Spectator

and Elder).— This is a thoughtful and well reasoned volume, by a utilitarian theorist. Mr. Ellis says that he is unlearned, and that his appeal is to the un- learned. The only...

is a man of reading and experience, and in this

The Spectator

little volume lays down a few general principles which may be studied by every one with ad- vantage. He deals with such questions as the nature of the vital prin- ciple, the...

Every-Day Scripture Difficulties. Part Two. By J. E. Prescott, M.A.,

The Spectator

late Fellow of C. C. C., Camb. (Longmans.)—Mr. Prescott in this second part deals with the difficulties that are to be met with in the Gospels of St. Luke and St. John. He has...

taking place in men's thoughts about religion, when we find

The Spectator

sermons such as these preached in the pulpit of the Presbyterian Cathedral of Glasgow. In the very home of dogmatic theology, dogmatism fs decried, and the simplest elements of...

CURRENT LITERATURE.

The Spectator

Peking and the Pekingese. By Dr. D. F. Rennie. An account of Pekin written in the inconvenient form of a diary, and valuable chiefly because its author is friendly to...

Page 21

Haydn's Dictionary of Dates, relating to All Ages and Nations.

The Spectator

Twelfth edition. Corrected to February, 1866. By B. Vincent, Assistant-Secretary and Keeper of the Library of the Royal Institution. (Moron.)—This well known volume professes to...

Dictionary of British- Indian Dates. (Blackwood.)—This little pocket volume will

The Spectator

be found a very useful book of reference by those who wish to refresh their memory as to the facts of British-Indian rule. It com- prises within its 177 pages a mass of varied...

Treatise on Deferential Equations. Supplementary volume. By the late G.

The Spectator

Boole. Edited by I. Todhunter. (Macmillan.)—The present volume has been printed from the manuscripts that the late Professor Boole had prepared for the purpose of enlarging his...

Geology for General Readers. By David Page, F.R.S.E., F.G.S. (Black-

The Spectator

wood.)—Mr. Page is as enthusiastic as he is learned in geological matters. He is never weary of writing on his favourite subject, and takes as much pains to fix the attention of...