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BOOKS.
The SpectatorTHE CONTEMPORARY ENGLISH VIEW OF NAPOLEON.* NAPOLEON received something less than justice from the great majority of his contemporary critics. The reason was obvious. HI was an...
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LETTERS OF AN ANTIQUARY.*
The SpectatorTins selection from the correspondence of Ralph Thoresby, author of the Dutatus Leocliensis and the Vicaria Leodiensis, and contributor to Gibson's Camden, contains many points...
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AN BUSH HEROINE.* Mits. HINICSON has given us a volume
The Spectatorwhich is as difficult to describe as it is delightful to read. Her reminiscences have few dates and scarcely a pretence at arrangement. At one moment they deal with the past of...
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CHRISTINA OF DENMARK.*
The SpectatorTas Duchess Christina is an excellent subject for that kind of historical biography of which Mrs. Ady was one of the pioneers, and in which she has had so many followers and...
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RECENT VERSE.* IT would be hard to find poets more
The Spectatoropposite in poetical temperament than the two who come first on our list. Mr. Binyon notinappropriately dedicates his new book to Mr. . L Auguria. By Laurence Blnyon. London:...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorTWO NEW VOLUMES IN " Illh LOEB CLASSICAL LIBRARY." Dio's Boman History. Translated by E. Cary. 9 vols. Vol 1.—Suetonius. Translated by J. a Rolphe. 2 vole. Vol. L " The Loeb...
COMMON-SENSE IN LAW.
The SpectatorCommon-Sense in Law. By Professor Paul Vinogradoff. "The Home University Library." (Williams and Norgate. ls. net in cloth; 2s. 6d. net in leather gilt.)—It is surely...
THE LAND OF OPEN DOORS.
The SpectatorThe Land of Open Doors. By J. Burgon Bickereteth. With Foreword by Earl Grey. (Wells Gardner, Darton, and Co. 7s. 6d. net.)—Earl Grey tells us in his appreciative foreword that...
THE PORT BOORS OF SOUTHAMPTON.
The SpectatorThe Port Books of Southampton, 1427-1430. Transcribed and Edited by Paul Studer. (Southampton Cox and Sharland. 15s. 9d. net.)—The Southampton Record Society is now in its...
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A HISTORY OF CHESS.
The SpectatorA History of Chess. By H. J. R. Murray. (Clarendon Press. 38e. net.)—This work of stupendous learning shows an hereditary capacity for patient research. Mr. Murray has done for...
NOTABLE WOMEN IN HISTORY.
The SpectatorNotable Women in History. By Willis J. Abbot. (Greening and Co. 16s. net.)—Mr. Abbot thinks that no one can read his sketches of seventy famous women without " appreciating some...
ROMAN PRIVATE LAW.
The SpectatorBoman Private Law : Jurisprudence. By E. C. Clark, LL.D. 2 vols. (Cambridge University Press. 21s. net.)— These two interesting volumes have been compiled by Dr. Clark, Regius...
THE JOURNAL OF THE SOCIETY OF COMPARATIVE LEGISLATION.
The SpectatorThe Journal of the Society of Comparative Legislation. New Series: No. XXX., January, 1914. Edited by Sir L Macdonell, C.B., LL.D., and E. Manson. (John Murray. So. net.)—The...
COMPULSORY ARBITRATION IN INDUSTRIAL DISPUTES.
The SpectatorCompulsory Arbitration in Industrial Disputes. By W. F. Hamilton, K.C. (Butterworth and Co. 3s. 6d. net.)—This useful little book is the result of a visit paid in 1912 (the year...
PLANT LIFE IN lab BRITISH ISLES.
The SpectatorPlant Life in the British Isles. By A. R. Horwood. Illustrated with 73 Photographs. (J. and A. Churchill. 6s. 6d. net.)—This little book is an introduction to the study of...
CHEMISTRY AND ITS BORDERLAND.
The SpectatorChemistry and its Borderland. By Alfred W. Stewart. (Longman and Co. Ss. net.)—Dr. Stewart gives the non- technical reader a lucid account of "some recent develop- ments in...
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THE PLAYS AND POEMS OF GEORGE CHAPMAN.
The SpectatorThe Plays and Poems of George Chapman: The Comedies. Edited by T. M. Parrott. (G. Routledge and Sons. 6s.)—. More than forty years have elapsed since we had a complete Chapman,...
FAMILIAR SPANISH TRAVELS.
The SpectatorFamiliar Spanish Travels. By W. D. Howells. (Harper and Brothers. $2 net.)—To travel through Spain, from lean to Tarifa, at the age of seventy-four, seeing most of what was to...
STUDIES IN WATER SUPPLY.
The SpectatorStudies in Water Supply. By A. C. Houston. (Macmillan and Co. 5s. net.)—Dr. Houston has been engaged for more than eight years as Director of Water Examination under the...
THE BEAUTIFUL RIO DE JANEIRO.
The SpectatorThe Beautiful Rio de Janeiro. By Alured Gray Bell. (William Heinemann. 42s. net.)—Of all the land-falls that are the lot of the globe-trotter, none can be more memorable than...
LORD CLIVE.
The SpectatorLord Clive : a Drama in Five Acts. By T. S. Krishna Aigar: (Trichinopoly: St. Joseph's Industrial School Press. ls.-12 annas.)—Mr. Krishna Aigar's play has many faults, judged...
VENICE AND SAN FRANCISCO.
The SpectatorVenice: the City of the Sea; and San Francisco : the City of the Golden Gate. By Joseph Pennell. (T. N. Foulis. le. 641. each net in wrapper; 2e. 6d. each net bound in Japanese...
THE EARLY WEIGHTS AND MEASURES OF MANKIND.
The SpectatorThe Early Weights and Measures of Mankind. By Sir Charles Warren. (Palestine Exploration Fund. 7s. 6d.)— Mankind's earliest standards of mensuration were based on the human...
EXPLANATORY LECTURES FOR NURSES AND THEIR TEACHERS.
The SpectatorExplanatory Lectures for Nurses and their Teachers. By H. Hawkins-Dempster. (Simpkin, Marshall, and Co. 3s. 6d. net.) —Miss Hawkins-Dempster has written a book that should prove...
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A GUIDE TO HISTORICAL FICTION.
The SpectatorA Guide to Historical Fiction. By Ernest A. Baker. (George Rontledge and Sons. 21s. net.)—This learned and comprehensive catalogue has grown out of two previous works by the...
A Topographical Catalogue of the Private Tombs of Thebes. By
The SpectatorAlan H. Gardiner and Arthur E. P. Weigall. (B. Quaritch. 10e. net.)—The "private tombs" at Thebes consist of a number of rook-cut funerary chapels of high dignitaries, from...
TOLSTOY'S PLAYS.
The SpectatorPlays. By Leo Tolstoy. Translated by Louise and Aylmer Maude. (Constable and Co. 55. net.)—Three of the six plays contained in this volume are now freshly translated by Mr. and...
A NEW VARIORUM EDITION OF SHAKESPEARE.
The SpectatorA New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare : Cymbeline. Edited by Horace Howard Furness. (J. B. Lippincott Company. 18s.)—A melancholy interest attaches to this volume of Dr....
The Churches of Kent. By Francis Grayling. "County Churches" Series.
The Spectator2 vols. (George Allen and Co. 25. net per vol.)—After dealing in a brief introduction with con- structional peculiarities and general external and internal conditions, Mr....
ELIZABETHAN DRAMA AND ITS MAD FOLK.
The SpectatorElizabethan Drama and its Mad Folk. By Edgar Allison Peers. (W. Heifer and Sons. 3s. 6d. net.)—This entertaining essay won the Harness Prize at Cambridge last year. Mr. Peers...
Thoughts and Fancies. By Mrs. D. C. Lathbury. (Hodder and
The SpectatorStoughton. is. sa. net.)—Mrs. Lathbury's little book consists of six essays, and they are all charming, though perhaps we say it that should not, for their authoress thanks the...
TWO BOOKS OF PUBLIC SPEECHES.
The SpectatorThe Book of Public Speaking : Vol. V. Edited by A. C. Fox- Davies. (Caxton Publishing Company. 8s. 6d. net.)--Seleeted English Speeches : Burke to Gladstone. Edited by Edgar B.....
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Tice Reform of the Calendar. By Alexander Philip. (Kogan Paul,
The SpectatorTrench, and Co. 4e. 6c1. net.)—Would one social life be conveniencal by a reform of the calendar which should make the same days of the week and of the month coincide year by...
Recollections of Sixty Years. By the Right Hon. Sir Charles
The SpectatorTupper. (Cassell and Co. 16s. net.)—Sir Charles Topper is the oldest statesman now living. He is nearing his ninety-third birthday, but neither in temper nor in style does his...
On the Left of a Throne. By Mrs. Evan Nepean.
The Spectator(John Lane. 10s. 6d. net.)—This entertaining and admirably illus- trated book does not claim to be a "complete biography " so much as a "personal study" of the unfortunate Duke...
Gun Dogs. By Frank Townend Barton, M.R.C.V.S. With 46 Illustrations.
The Spectator(John Long. 5s. net.)—This is a small book, illustrated with a large number of photographs, which treats of the management, breaking, handling, and feeding of dogs used in...
Calendar of Coroners' Bolls of the City of London, 1300-
The Spectator1378. Edited by Reginald R. Sharpe. (R. Clay and Sons.) —This interesting repertory of social life in mediaeval London is printed by order of the Corporation under the direction...
Matter and Some of its Dimensions. By William Kearney Carr.
The Spectator(Harper and Brothers. 2s. 6d. net.) — Mr. Carr begins by setting forth in popular language some of the latest discoveries about electrons. On these he bases his argument that...
An Englishman Looks at the World. By H. G. Wells.
The Spectator(Cassell and Co. 6s. net.)—This collection of newspaper articles is a heterogeneous compendium of Mr. Wells's im- pressions of modern life, which it is easier to read than to...
The Law of Gambling, Civil and Criminal. By Ward Coldridge
The Spectatorand Cyril V. Hawksford. (Stevens and Sone. 12s. 6d. net.)—The passing of the " Street Betting Act, 1906," and the decision of many important cases, such as "Powell v. The...
Sounds and Signs. By Archer Wilde. (Constable and Co. 4s.
The Spectator6d. net.)—This book is " a criticism of the alphabet with suggestions for reform," in which the needs of the average reader of printed type are throughout kept in view. Mr....
The Millers of Harlington, Dunbar, and Dunfermline. By W. J.
The SpectatorCouper. (T. Fisher Unwin. 8s. 6d. net.)--Mr. Cooper complains in his preface that biographers have devoted much attention to publishers, whilst they have unduly neglected...
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The House of Cecil. By C. Ravenscroft Dennis. (Constable and
The SpectatorCo. 10s. 6d. net.)—The authentic history of the Cecile begins with David Cyseell, or Syssell, of Stamford, the grand- father of Lord Burghley. But in Elizabethan times the...
My Days of Adventure. By E. A. Vizetelly. (Chatto and
The SpectatorWindus. 7s. 6d. net.)—The moat stirring episode in Mr. Vizetelly's adventurous career as a war correspondent was the Franco-German War, with which this volume chiefly deals. Mr....
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Loses.: Printed by L. Urcorr On. & See, LTD., et
The Spectatorthe London and County Printing Wells, Drury Lane. and Published by boo Prose for the ••Sracustoa" (Limited). et their Ofece, No. 1 Wellington Street, in the Precinct of the...
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It is too late now to talk of peace. Much
The Spectatorthe best thing would be for the United States effectually to occupy Mexico, and administer it for a period long enough to test the ability Of the Mexicans to govern themselves....
In the evening the King and Queen dined with the
The SpectatorPresident at the Elysee. There were over two hundred guests at the banquet. M. Poineare, in the course of his most warmly and gracefully worded speech, said that the friendship...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE outstanding fact in foreign affairs is the breakdown of all President Wilson's plans and hopes for the " elimination " of General Huerta without going to war with Mexico....
On Wednesday morning the King and Queen received representatives of
The Spectatorthe British colony at the Britiah. Embassy. In the afternoon there was a brilliant review of troops at Vincennes, ending with the indispensable and ever impressive charge of...
We note with extreme satisfaction that the Turkish Govern- ment
The Spectatorhave released Ariz All Bey, generally known as El lifaari (the Egyptian), who had made a great name for himself as a leader of the Arabs in Cyrenaica, and was recognized by the...
On Tuesday Vera Cruz was seized by American marines. The
The Spectatorcasualties are said to have been under a hundred on the American side. As soon as Vera Cruz was occupied General Carranza sent a message to the President requesting the...
The King and Queen left London on Tuesday on a
The Spectatorvisit to the President of the French Republic. The fact that Sir Edward Grey accompanied them proved that the visit was in part political. Happily it is now possible to talk of...
FOE THE
The SpectatorNo. 4,478.] WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1914. [ 11 ti. X0INTERRD AB • } Paler ...ea. Nswarara Poar POSTAOr Aaron .20.
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The second reading—for the third time. under the Parlia- ment
The SpectatorAct—of the Welsh Church Bill was moved in the Commons on Monday. Lord Robert Cecil, who moved the rejection, said that the Bill was being forced through at a time when a...
In the House of Commons on Monday, in answer to
The Spectatora question put to him by Colonel Chaloner, the Prime Minister again declined to grant a judicial inquiry into the "plot to overawe Mater by an armed occupation." On this Mr....
On Wednesday there was another and even more heated scene.
The SpectatorMr. Bonar Law repeatedly urged that only by state- ments taken on oath could things now so dark and obscure be presented in the light of truth. All that Mr. Asquith would do,...
Sir John Simon, who mentioned that his youth bad been
The Spectatorspent in the traditions of Welsh Nonconformity, declared that the Church in Wales had been a failure because its ritual bad failed to appeal to the hot and impetuous Celtic...
The long strike on the coalfields of the Standard Oil
The SpectatorCom- pany at Ludlow, Colorado, culminated on Monday in a pitched battle between the strikers and the Colorado Militia. The fighting grew out of an attack on some Militiamen by...
On Tuesday, when the debate was continued, Mr. Balfour said
The Spectatorthat Disendowment was the central question of the Bill. But on that central question it did not matter what conclusion popular passion in Wales might have arrived at. It was...
In the House of Commons on Wednesday another stream of
The Spectatorquestions was addressed to Mr. Asquith, questions which in almost every case were parried rather than answered. When the House went into Committee on the Army (Annual) Bill, the...
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On Thursday in the House of Commons Mr. Boner Law
The Spectatormade the important statement that Mr. Austen Chamberlain would move, on behalf of the Opposition, a motion demanding an impartial inquiry into the movement of troops in Ulster....
.Lord Lansdowne, in an interesting speech, admitted the existence of
The Spectatora genuine grievance, while strongly demurring to Lord Lucas's view that Mr. Lloyd George's speeches had been specially designed to elicit such proposals for its removal as Lord...
Mr. Austen Chamberlain, speaking on Wednesday at Bir- mingham, dealt
The Spectatorwith a point noticed by us elsewhere—namely, the similarity between the Marconi scandal and the story of the Government's plan for coercing Ulster :— " The Prime Minister...
In the Lords on Tuesday Lord Salisbury drew attention to
The Spectatorthe insufficiency of agricultural wages in certain parts of the country, and associated himself with the demand that the Government should grant an impartial and official...
Students of casuistry will read with interest the ingenious glosses
The Spectatorput upon Lord Derby's speech in Monday's West- minster Gazette, but plain persons will welcome its candour and good sense. Indeed, it is not too much to say of it that it puts...
The London Rifle Brigade (Territorial Force) accomplished a fine performance
The Spectatorlast Saturday night. Starting from the Duke of York's Column at 7.27 p.m., sixty-two men, averaging twenty-two years, and carrying great coat, mess-tin, pickaxe, shovel and...
Lord Derby, who spoke at Southport last Saturday, ridiculed the
The Spectatorcry "The Army against the People." If he believed that the Unionist Party had deliberately gone out of its way to make the Army disobey what be called the fundamental rule of...
At question time on Thursday by far the most interesting
The Spectatoranswer was that of Mr. Asquith as to the movements of the Third Battle Squadron. Captain Faber asked which Cabinet Minister had promised the help of the Navy against Ulster. "No...
Bank Rate, 3 per cent., changed from 4 per cent.
The SpectatorJan. 29th. Console (21) were on Friday 741—Friday week 751.
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TOPICS OF THE. DAY.
The SpectatorTHE KING'S VISIT AND Tilt ENTENTE. THE visit of the King and Queen to Paris has proved, as we were sure it would, a very great success. Englishmen are popular now in France,...
" PICKING IT OUT OF THEM."
The SpectatorT AST week we warned the Government that they had _L./ better make a clean breast of their plan for combined naval and military operations in Ulster, because, if they did not,...
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TICE NEMESIS OF THE MARCONI SCANDAL.
The SpectatorO NE of the worst features in the revelation of the Government's plan of campaign for the coercion of Ulster is the likeness to what happened in the case of the Marconi...
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THE BEST WAY WITH MEXICO.
The SpectatorP RESIDENT WILSON'S pathetic clinging to the belief that it is possible to dictate to a nation and still call it free, and to make war without breaking the peace, has reached...
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MR. WINSTON CHURCHILL.
The SpectatorMITERE was a time when Mr. Winston Churchill and I- Mr. Lloyd George were running neck-and-neck for the future leadership of the Liberal Party. No one cared to predict which of...
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FRENCH AND ENGLISH. K ING GEORGE will be henceforth as popular
The Spectatora figure with the French people as his father was before him. He will be popular for a different, but by no means a less valid, reason. King Edward was looked upon almost as a...
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MARJORY FLEMING.
The SpectatorI T was said of Marjory-Fleming, Scott's " Pet Marjorie," that she was "not so much a child genius as the genius of childhood." Mr. Lachlan Macbean, in the new book about her...
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BOTANICAL COLDS.
The SpectatorT O be assured not merely that we may, but that we undoubtedly shall, be Buffering in the course of the next few days from a malady which we do not expect—what item of the news...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorQUAKERS, PEACE, AND ULSTER. [To ram Emus or Tea "Sracwroa."1 Sra,—The letter from an "Irish Friend" in your issue of April 11th arouses some reflections in my mind, a member...
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UNITED STATES IRISH AND HOME RULE.
The Spectator(To ME EDITOR or vas .. arscrivoa."1 you permit me to assure you that the cause of Ulster is gaining sympathizers every day on this side the Atlantic, while "Home Rule " is...
THE OTHER SIDE.
The Spectator[To no: Romig OF vim "Ersorwroa."] SIR,—In recent years the Spectator has become so pronouncedly Unionist that apparently the post brings it few letters on the other side. But I...
THE PLAN FOR MILITARY AND NAVAL ACTION IN ULSTER.
The Spectator[To rat Relies OF TUN SPECTAreR...1 SIR, —In your article on the plan for military and naval action in Ulster on April 18th you take far too lenient a view of the real object of...
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THE ARNOLD CASE.
The Spectator[To TaS EDITOR Or TIM .. EPECTAT0101 HIR,—I cannot expect you to give me more room to discuss the Arnold case; but, in reply to "Official" on April 18th, I beg leave to say that...
[To rim Emma or ma .gEtrecr.roe."3 Sra,—I was so glad
The Spectatorto see that your open-minded journal showed in your issue of April 4th "another side of the blind question" that I venture to advocate very strongly your correspondent's plea...
THE BLIND: ANOTHER SIDE OF THE QUESTION. [To ma Elenos
The Spectatoror me "erscr.roa'] Sra,—May I say a few words in reply to a letter of Miss Ida Sharpe in your issue of April 11th P I perfectly agree with Miss Sharpe that the first need of the...
THE NONCONFORMIST ATTITUDE. [To Tax EDITOR OR TRR .. EDSCTAT01..1
The SpectatorSia,—Among the many factors in the present Home Rule crisis which call for explanation, not the least puzzling is the attitude which is being maintained by the Liberal Noncon-...
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GLASGOW WATERWORKS.
The Spectator[To ran Eorroa or vs. "Srecraroa."] Stn,—The beauty of Scotland is an asset which has earned many millions sterling to the country since the Wizard of the North wrote his...
THE LATE MAJOR-GENERAL SIR H. HALLAM PARR.
The Spectator[To Tax Eorros or TH. "SracrAt0e.1 Sin,—A brief record of BOMB personal traits of the late Major-General Sir Henry Hallam Parr, whose high achieve- ments and charming character...
CARDINAL ALLEN.
The Spectator[To ray Maros or TH. Brat-FASO.."] Sia,—Your references to that great man, Cardinal Allen (Spectator, April 18th), -raise interesting questions, and are undoubtedly the views of...
HOW THE MARCONI AFFAIR STRIKES AN AMERICAN.
The Spectator[To vas Enna OF THE .. HFICTATOZ.:] SIE,—Here is "ourselves as others see us," or, let as rather say, political integrity as the party concerned have interpreted it, seen by an...
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A CORRECTION.
The Spectatorum rex Herron or Tax .• Snrcuroz..] SIR,—In your issue of April 11th we note a letter from Dr. Arthur Lumsden Marshall. Apparently this gentleman is labouring under a...
FLIES.
The Spectator[To ion EDITOR Or 71U "BMTAT071.'7 Sra,—Your article upon flies (Spectator, April 18th) will without doubt excite a considerable amount of interest, which, far from being merely...
HOWLERS.
The Spectator[To TM Enives OW TIM " Snowman Sra,—I have only too good cause to differ from your assertion that "it is safe to say that 'Spoonerisms ' are inventions from beginning to end. "...
AN EVENING AT WINDSOR CASTLE IN 1852. [To run ZDI201
The Spectatoror nu “firnrraron."] SIR,—Owing to your courtesy, I have been permitted on two or three occasions to publish in the Spectator some extracts from old diaries and letters in my...
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MU SIC.
The SpectatorTHE FUTURE OF THE HUMAN VOICE. Ma. PERCY Gnattrarn, who of late years has laboured diligently to purge musical titles and musical vocabulary generally from the taint of...
POETRY.
The SpectatorOUR LUCKY GOVERNMENT. ••A i 4 rtec:al Providence watches over the Government."—Daile Chronicle, A eThe t ;rays of Providence are unsernpulous."—Mrs. M.ErflOP. WHEN rifts...
CHILDREN'S COUNTRY HOLIDAYS FUND.
The Spectator[To THE Hutton or ran "Spy:amen."] Snt,—How many of those of your readers who have been lucky enough to obtain an Easter holiday are prepared to give a thank- offering for...
BOTICE.—When "Correspondence" or Articles, are signed with the writer's name
The Spectatoror or with a pseudonym, cr ore marked " Communicated," the Editor must net necessarily to held to be in agreement with the views therein expressed or with the mode of...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorCESARE BORGIA.* IT is a commonplace that moral considerations should not lead us to a wholesale and unqualified condemnation of an historical character. To no characters of...
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A FRENCH EMIGRANT.•
The Spectator• Tho Bete of Brittany, demand de CAatoantriand, 170 - 1809. By M. E. 'rrnnelated by Mr.. Colquhoun Grant. London: Mills and Boon, [rOe id. net.] His records no more pitiful...
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TWO BOOKS ON RUSSIA.*
The SpectatorOF the two books before us, the more important is that which Mr. H. W. Williams has contributed to Sir Isaac Pitman and Sons' excellent " Countries and Peoples " Series. It does...
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A CORNER OF THE COTSWOLDS.* Mae. GBETTON has added a
The Spectatorvaluable book to the history of the English countryside. She has taken a small district and -shown ne what the conditions of life of the people who have lived in it have been...
BUREAUCRACY IN GERMANY.* Wawa the National Health Insurance Act was
The Spectatorbeing hustled through Parliament we beard vaguely of the great success of the German compulsory schemes. Dr. Ludwig Bernhard and others may have taken away some of the glamour...
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WIND, SAND, AND SNOW.*
The SpectatorMODERN science is very largely dependent on a knowledge of wave-motion. Man himself, as old Montaigne postulated, is a creature divers of ondoyant at any rate, we know that all...
A WEST SURREY SKETCH-BOOK.*
The SpectatorTHIS little book hart - local feeling - hr - the best sense, for the artist, writer, and publisher all belong to the district of which it treats. Mr. Hyde's drawings are of two...
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FICTION.
The SpectatorLISMOYLE.• Mas. CHOKER has been writing for more than thirty years, and though she has never improved on Diana Barrington and Pretty Miss Neville, she has never fallen much...
The Flying Inn. By G. K. Chesterton. (Methuen and Co.
The Spectator6e.)—" G. K. C." is our real and only romantic. He sees the world and this dull human life of ours as one great adventure; he cries "Follow, follow !" and we chase across the...
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SOME BOOKS OF THE WEEK.
The Spectator[Under this heading ins node. awls Rooks is/ M. Irak as Sum nab lies rssinnsil for inning in other forms.] The Ozyrhynchus Papyri, Part X. Edited by B. P. Grenfell and A. S....
The Parish of St. Giles-in-the-Fields, Part II. By W. E.
The SpectatorRiley and Sir Laurence Gomme. (London County Council.) —The admirable survey of London which is being carried out under the auspices of the London County Council has now reached...
A Grammar of Late Modern English. Part II., Section I,
The SpectatorA. By H. Poutama. (Groningen: P. Noordhoff. 13s. Gd. net.)— This is an amazing piece of work for a foreigner to have undertaken. The present instalment of some seven hundred...
Winchester Cathedral Close. By John Vaughan. (Sir Isaac Pitman and
The SpectatorSons. Is. not.)—Canon Vaughan has chosen a delightful subject, and has made a charming book out of the historical and literary associations of Winchester. He describes the...
The Heart of the Moor. By Beatrice Chase. (Herbert Jenkins.
The Spectator6s.)—There are some charming passages in this book, which, however, cannot by any stretch of imagination be called a noveL The nearest model which it suggests is the delightful...
Jacob Elthorne. By Darrell Figgie (J. AL Dent and Sons.
The Spectator6s.)—The life of Jacob Elthorne is one of the most detailed and complete autobiographies that we have ever found under the heading of "Fiction." Here is an account, not only of...
Chaucer and the Roman de la Bose. By Dean Spruill
The SpectatorFenster. (Humphrey Milford. 6s. 6d. net.)—This con- scientious monograph originated as a thesis in Columbia University. It discusses at length Chaucer's relative debt to...
11/SADA-TILE NOVICLII.—The Sins of Severae Bablon. By Sax Rohmer. (Cassell
The Spectatorand Co. 6s.)—A melodramatic account of the lose of a lady's jewels, and the attempts of some amateur detectives to recover them.—Molly's Fortune. By "M. E. Francis." (Sands and...
The Eastern Libyans. By Orb Bates. (Macmillan and Co. 42a.
The Spectatornet.)—The author of this important contribution to the archaeology of Northern Africa has long been engaged in collecting materials for a history of Cyreuaica. His Libyan notes...
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BOORS OF REFERENCE.—The India Office List for 1914. (Harrison and
The SpectatorSons. 10s. 6d.)—This useful work is a complete directory to our Indian Services, with statistics of the country up to date.—The City of London Year-Book, 1914. (W. H. and L....
The Truth About Ulster. By F. Frankfort Moore. (Eveleigh Nash.
The Spectator7s. 6d. net.)—After an experience of Ulster extending over some fifty years, Mr. Moore tells us that he does not remember the time when she has not been fighting. In his...
NEW Enrrions.—The Law Relating to Executors and Administrators. By A.
The SpectatorR. Ingpen. (Stevens and Sons. 25s. net.)—In this second edition of a standard work nearly five hundred additional cases have been inserted.—The Magistrate's General Practice. By...