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On Monday the country was startled by hearing of a
The Spectatorsup- posed Fenian outrage on Lady Florence Dixie, sister of the Marquis of Queensberry, and author of books showing that she tie a courageous woman who is not afraid of danger....
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorS IR GEORGE JESSEL, Master of the Rolls, and head of the Court of Appeal, died early on Wednesday morning, after a -dangerous illness of some weeks, during only the last two...
A reward of £1,000 has been offered to any person
The Spectatornot a police agent who shall give such information as may lead to the detection of the author of the attempt made on Thursday week to explode the Local Government Office at...
Mr. A. M. Sullivan, writing to the American papers on
The SpectatorFebruary 24th,—i.e., three weeks before the explosion at the Local Government Office,—delivers a very sensible homily on the impolicy as well as the wickedness of the so-called...
The air is heavy with rumours of coming explosions, many
The Spectatorof which are probably circulated in order to inspire alarm. Half the magazines and arsenals in the country are to be blown up, and the House of Commons is threatened by a new...
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Mr. Smith, the Member for Westminster, has brought Sir W.
The SpectatorHarcourt down on him. Mr. Smith, in a speech to his electors on March 19th, taunted the Liberal Government with having brought matters "to such a pass that they could hardly...
It is rumoured that M. de Lesseps will be able
The Spectatorto carry out his plan of introducing the Mediterranean into the, Sahara. The long line of " Chotts," or swampy salt lakes, stretching from Gabes eastward into Southern Tunis,...
The office of Lord President of the Council, vacant by
The Spectatorthe resig- nation of Lord Spencer, who, however, does not quit the Cabinet, has been bestowed upon Lord Carlingford ; and the Privy Seal will,. it is generally believed, be...
The Transvaal debate was continued on Friday in an able,.
The Spectatorvigorous, and occasionally very bitter speech from Mr. Forster,. who considered that the Government had pledged itself to the- Bechuanas, and ought to defend them, even if...
Germany and Spain have declared a war of tariffs. The
The SpectatorCommercial Treaty has expired, and Spain, pending a new one, has subjected German goods to the duties imposed on imports from all non-favoured nations. The German Federal...
Sunday, the Communists' anniversary in Paris, passed off in perfect
The Spectatortranquillity. The Government contrived to con- Sunday, the Communists' anniversary in Paris, passed off in perfect tranquillity. The Government contrived to con- vince the...
Prince Bismarck has got rid of the last of the
The Spectatorgreat group who have stood round his Emperor since 1870. General von Stosch, head of the German Admiralty, recently resigned, but the Emperor refused to receive his resignation....
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The Government has appointed a Royal Commission to inquire into
The Spectatorthe condition of the " Crofters," or small tenants, in the Highlands and the Hebridean Islands, especially Harris, Skye, and Lewis. Something like famine is approaching there....
Mr. Bright addressed the students of Glasgow University on 'Thursday,
The Spectatoras the Lord Rector of their choice, in an address marked by some magnificent passages of his familiar style of eloquence. His subject was the misery and cost of the useless wars...
A memorial, signed by influential clergymen, of whom the Bishop
The Spectatorof Dover, the Bishop of Newcastle, and the Bishop Designate of Truro (Canon Wilkinson) are apparently the most important, is to be presented to Mr. Gladstone against the...
Mr. Bright maintains that since the beginning of the century,
The Spectator£4,414,000,000 sterling have been spent by this country upon war; but we suppose that he includes in this all the expenditure which is more or less precautionary against attack,...
The Catholic Bishops of the West of Ireland have been
The Spectatorpress- ing the Government to discourage emigration and to mitigate the distress of the present unfavourable season, by making advances to tenants in the distressed districts of...
There was a sharp debate on Tuesday as to the
The Spectatorrules to be followed by the Grand Committee on Trade to which the Bankruptcy Bill is to be referred, Mr. Raikes especially desiring to know whether the Chairmen of these Grand...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE GOVERNMENT AND ITS WORK. W h do not at all like the tone in which the coming work of the Session is being discussed. The leading poli- ticians are obviously arguing among...
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SIR GEORGE JESSEL.
The SpectatorO NE of the greatest administrative forces in England has disappeared with Sir George Jesse]. A more extra- ordinary intellectual engine than his brain has not been seen at work...
LORD DUFFERIN'S DESPATCH.
The Spectatorbecome so essentially defective, so wanting in uprightness, in- dependence, and honesty, that true self-government, or rather —to coin a word indispensable for the moment—trae "...
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MR. CHAMBERT.A IN'S BANKRUPTCY BILL.
The SpectatorW I, can heartily support Mr. Chamberlain's proposal for a new Bankruptcy Law, as explained in his wonder- fully careful and lucid speech of Monday. There may be details in...
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MR. CHILDERS AND THE CONNAUGHT EMIGRATION.
The SpectatorT HE Connaught Bishops have hardly illustrated that dis- interested desire to promote the permanent welfare of their people for which we give them credit, by their corre-...
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THE INCREASE OF THE LONDON POLICE.
The SpectatorI N a state of high civilisation, security of person and pro- perty might be supposed to be the most valued of bless- ings. What men take great pains to gain they ordinarily...
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SOCTALISM AND ANARCHISM AT GENEVA.
The SpectatorT HOUGH among the thirty thousand foreigners who have chosen Geneva as their temporary dwelling-place there is a considerable proportion of Russian Nihilists, French...
THE DYNAMITE DANGER.
The SpectatorI N the Spectator of October 19th, 1878, the present writer called attention to the very slight evidence producible for the fixed impression in the European mind that Science...
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CONTENT.
The SpectatorT HEquestion which has lately been raised in these columns as to the spiritual character of Content deserves some consideration. It seems a bold thing to say, but we will never-...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorCONTENTMENT AND THE CHURCH CATECHISM. (To THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR."] -Sni.,—Does not the question altogether turn on what is meant by contentment ? To be contented is, of...
[TO TEE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR. "]
The Spectator-S111,—Mr. S. Headlam denies that the words " my betters " mean -" those of higher rank than myself." Shakespeare, however, uses the phrase in a convincing way. I quote a few...
POETRY.
The SpectatorBRAITH WAITE AND BUTTE RMERE RAILWAY. A CRY FROM LANCASHIRE TO TFIE PEERS. You ask high thought, pure poetry, and prate Of England's wealth and happiness secure, Then, whirled...
"TO THINK LONG."
The Spectator(To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR. " ] SIR, — The phrase "To think long," in the sense of "feel weari- ness," could probably be paralleled from other English writers besides...
" WANTING IS—WHAT ?"
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECT•TOR."1 Sia,—I would suggest two other interpretations of the words, " Where is the spot ?" in Mr. Browning's enigmatical poem, " Wanting is—what...
LTo THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR. "]
The SpectatorSin,—In your interesting notice of Mr. Browning's new volume, you give a paraphrase of the fourth line of his introductory lyric which seems to me hardly correct. The limb is,—"...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorTHE CORRESPONDENCE OF CARLYLE AND EMERSON.* THIS correspondence is less interesting as a correspondence, than it is as affording traits of the two correspondents. On the whole,...
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EVERY-DAY ART.*
The SpectatorThis is by no means a common-place book. Not that the author can be said to have propounded anything distinctly original with respect to his subject, but he discourses ably on...
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PROFESSOR NICHOL'S HISTORY OF AMERICAN LITERATURE
The Spectator[SECOND NOTICE.] THE limits which were imposed upon Professor Nichol by the extent and variety of his subject compelled him to compress into a single chapter of forty...
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A COUNTRY CLERGYMAN OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTITRY.*
The SpectatorTHIS is a slight book, and possibly too thin in matter to satisfy the curiosity of the general reader. It is not likely to be sought after with eagerness by the subscribers to...
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THE SCIENCE OF FORESTS.* AMONG the many lessons which are
The Spectatorbeing taught us by Science,. in this age of progress, none is, perhaps, of more consequence to mankind in general than the ameliorating effect of arbori- culture on soil and...
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TWO CENTURIES OF THE ENGLISH CHURCH.* WE have read this
The Spectatorbook with great care, and some interest. The subject forms a significant portion of the history of England, but the treatment it has received from Mr. Molesworth is far from...
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MR. PICTON'S LIFE OF OLIVER CROMWELL.* THAT the reading public
The Spectatortakes interest in the history of Eng- land during the seventeenth century seems to be proved by the large number of books written upon the subject. Nor is this surprising, for...
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MR. GRENVILLE-MURRAY'S ACQUAINTANCES.* No doubt, as the preface tells us,
The Spectatorthe author of this book, MR. GRENVILLE-MURRAY'S ACQUAINTANCES.* No doubt, as the preface tells us, the author of this book, " during a long and chequered experience of life had...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorAlirabi ; or, the Banks and Bankers of the Nile. By a Hadji of Hyde Park. (Blackwood.)—If this volume could be looked at simply as a story, it would probably be found...
The Greater Poems of Virgil. Edited by J. B. Greenough.
The SpectatorVol. L (Ginn, Heath, and Co., Boston, U.S.)—This first volume contains the Bacolics and Books I. to VI. of the 2Eneid, a curious departure from custom, and, we may add, from...
American Humourists. By the Rev. H. R. Haweis, M.A. (Chatty
The Spectatorand Windus.)—Mr. Haweis's book is disappointing. In the first place, the style is unpleasing, even provoking. The writer arranges what he has to say in little snippets of...
Mollie Darling. By Lady Constance Howard. 3 vols. (F. V.
The SpectatorWhite and Co.)—The author of this novel, doubtless, means well. Her sympathies are with right and goodness, such as she con- ceives them to be, but she has not a very judicious...
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The Married Women's Property Act (1882) : What it Does,
The Spectatorand What it Does Not Do. (Ward and Lock.)—Here we have a review of the state of the law relating to the status of married women as it was up to January 1st, 1883, and the...
My Beautiful Daughter, by Percy B. St. John (J. and
The SpectatorR. Maxwell), is fall to overflowing of old-fashioned love-affairs and villainies, and is written in crisp paragraphs, on an average not more than two or three lines in length....
The Mississippi, by Francis Vinton Greene (Triibner), is the •
The Spectatoreighth of a series of volumes descriptive of the campaigns of the American Civil War. So far as maps, statistics, and actual narra- tion of military movements are concerned, it...
Melodramatic vigour, strong situations, and ejaculations in very dubious French
The Spectatorand German, are the leading features of On Dangerous Ground, by Edith Stewart Drewry. (F. V. White.)—Lady Glen- Luna, the would-be murderess and social panther of the story,...
Weighed and Wanting. By George Macdonald, LL.D. (S. Low.) —This
The Spectatoris probably the poorest and least pleasant story Dr. Macdonald has ever published. The Raymounts are a disagreeable family ; there is not a truly manly or womanly character in...
The Blackest of Lies, by Albany de Fonblanque (Remington), Is
The Spectatora very unpleasant story about very unpleasant people, such as a hysterical clergyman and a Jesuit Father who is given to thieving and poisoning, and a lady who drinks to excess...
Eve Lester. By Alice Mangold Diehl. (Bentley.)—The girl who gives
The Spectatorher name to this novel shows force in her vigorous efforts to overcome the obstacles that a bad education has placed between her and a life of true womanhood, and her portrait...
William I., German Emperor, and King of Prussia. By W.
The SpectatorBeatty-Kingston. (Routledge.)—Mr. Kingston was special corre- spondent to the Daily Telegraph during the Franco-German war, and its representative at Berlin during the seven...
Nature Studies. By Grant Allen, Andrew Wilson, Thomas Foster, Edward
The SpectatorClodd, and Richard A. Proctor. (Wyman and Son.)—This is another pleasant volume added to the "Knowledge" library. Out of the twenty-four essays which it contains there is not...
Sweet Inisfail. By Richard Dowling. (Tinsley Brothers.)— This is not
The Spectatorone of Mr. Dowling's best stories ; indeed, it has every appearance of having been written in a hurry. Other- wise, nearly one-half of a volume would not have been devoted to a...
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NEW EDITIONS. —Life of Lord Wolseley. By Charles Rathbone Low, I.N.
The Spectator(R. Bentley and Son.)—This is the second and enlarged edition of a book first published in 1878. Mr. Lowe has now added to it an account of Sir Garnet Wolseley's administration...
Talbot's Folly. By W. B. Guinee. (Tinsley Brothers.)—This is a
The Spectatorstory with a well-constructed plot, and fall of a humour which, if rather broad and rollicking, is enjoyable, if too much of it is not taken at a time. Talbot, the hero, is a...
Debrett's Peerage, Baronetage, Knightage, and Companionage, 1883. Edited by R.
The SpectatorH. Moir, LL.D. (Dean and Son.)—Debrett now appears for the 170th time, containing about two months' later information than can be procured from kindred works. Hitherto confined...
We cannot profess to be acquainted with the subject of
The SpectatorThe Practical Pigeon-keeper, by Lewis Wright (Cassell and Co.), but we may commend it to the notice of those who are interested in the matter. The writer's " Practical...