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NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The Spectator“ J UMBO" has gone. Contrary to general expectation, he had grown accustomed to pass through the wooden box built for his transit, and on Wednesday night he entered it readily....
Lord Hartington, accepting the challenge thus made, replied to Mr.
The SpectatorRaikes in a speech of singular force, of which we have noted sufficiently the most important features elsewhere. Here we may add that he was particularly happy in showing that...
The Parnellite managers are not very good tacticians. They see
The Spectatortheir own little party, and nobody else. They published on Wednesday a solemn manifesto, telling all Home-rulers that the Closure was directed against them, that a vote for it...
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 Second of...
Monday's debate on the Closure was commenced by Mr. Raikes,
The Spectatorthe Conservative ex-Chairman of Committees. Mr. Raikes, however, instead of communicating to the House his own experience, delivered a speech full of party animosity, one which...
The House of Commons was asked on Thursday to raise
The Spectatorthe allowance of Prince Leopold to £25,000 a year, as he is about to marry a Princess of Waldeck-Pyrmont, who, if her photographs are not forgeries, will shortly be a prime...
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On Thursday the debate was resumed by Mr. Beresford-Hope, who
The Spectatorsaid that Lord Hartingtoa had treated the Closure as a mode of putting down bores, which he certainly did, so far as those bores take up time which the House greatly needs for...
The reports of the week from Egypt are all unfavourable
The Spectatorto the Control. It is stated with great positiveness, and in many quarters, that Arabi Pasha now demands the Premiership, in order that he may carry out a more decidedly...
East Cornwall has got an admirable candidate in Mr. Charles
The SpectatorAcland, son of the Member for North Devon, and the same who fought the gallant contest ip West Somersetshire two years ago. Mr. Acland is welcomed by the tenant-farmers as an...
The German Emperor celebrated his eighty-sixth birthday (that is, he
The Spectatoris eighty-five;, on the 22nd inst., and made a short speech to those who attended the usual reception. He remarked that no one could now be called safe, assassins having struck...
On Thursday, the House of Lords negatived without a division
The Spectatorthe second reading of Lord Redesdale's Bill proposing a declaration of belief in "an Almighty God" for all Members of Parliament, after a debate in which nobody supported Lord...
Mr. Gorst brought up the question of the North Borneo
The SpectatorCompany on Friday week ; but the debate, though bright and interesting, was not very instructive. There was little new to be said. The real feeling and first argument of the...
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The religious phenomena. of our day are certainly not a
The Spectatorlittle parti-coloured, but they all point to the growing popularity of various kinds of religious sensation. Last Sunday, in more than a thousand churches, there were prayers...
Even the good work which Ritualists undeniably do, and the
The Spectatorlives of self-sacrifice which they lead, are due, it is broadly hinted in Evangelical quarters, to Beelzebub. We had occasion lately to refer to the noble work and rare...
We are afraid, however, that the state of feeling in
The SpectatorFrance in relation to violent Socialistic outbreak is very much sounder and more trustworthy, than the state of feeling in Ireland in relation to that mean and sordid form of...
Esther Pay was on Wednesday committed for trial on the
The Spectatorcharge of having murdered Georgina Moore, aged seven years, on December 20th last, near Yalding, in Kent. Esther Pay is the woman supposed to have taken with her from Pimlico...
There appears to be no reason to complain just now
The Spectatorof the restrictions on liberty of speech in France. On the celebration, last Saturday, of the anniversary of the outbreak of the Com- mune in 1871, Mademoiselle Louise Michel...
Mr. Arnold on Tuesday raised the annual debate on house-
The Spectatorhold franchise in the counties, his plan being, when a uniform franchise had been conceded, to divide the country into districts -containing 50,000 souls, as nearly as might be,...
The Spanish Government is in for a grand quarrel with
The Spectatorthe Stock Exchanges. S. Camaoho, the Finance Minister, thinks that if there is to be another conversion, he may as well make Spain appear solvent. This she can never seem, with...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The Spectator"DRAWING GLADSTONE." T HE abuse, often scurrilous as well as vulgar, which the Tories are pouring upon Mr. Gladstone, will do their party harm in two ways, one of which at...
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LORD HARTINGTON ON THE CLOSURE.
The SpectatorT ORD HARTINGTON'S speech on the Closure of Debate J by a simple majority was remarkable for the straightfor- ward statement which he gave of three cardinal features of the...
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PRINCE LEOPOLD'S APPANAGE.
The SpectatorB Y far the most interesting speech upon the vote of Thursday, granting an additional annuity to Prince Leopold, was that made by Mr. Broadhurst, the workman representative of...
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PRINCE BISMARCK'S LATEST REBUFF.
The SpectatorP RINCE BISMARCK, in domestic politics, meets with no- thing but rebuffs. There are features in his present position which are, so far as we know, without a parallel in modern...
A WAY TO GET MR. GREEN OUT OF PRISON.
The SpectatorT HERE is a kind of irony about Mr. Green's imprisonment which, if it were not associated with much undeserved suffering to an innocent and well-meaning man, would make it...
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THE LORDS ON THE ATHEISTS.
The SpectatorT HE debate in the House of Lords on Lord nedesdale's Bill proposing a genuine test of Theism for Mem- bers of Parliament,—if, indeed, a declaration of belief in an Almighty...
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THE HATRED OF RELIGION IN FRANCE.
The SpectatorA LETTER which we publish in another column from the well- known Roman Catholic who wrote, in the February number of the Contemporary Review, a remarkable article on "Free...
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"CRAZES."
The SpectatorA RE not the cultivated classes a little unjust, and even foolish, in their ridicule of popular " crazes ?" Many crazes are silly, some are injurious, and a few are wicked; but...
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MORAL PURPOSE IN FICTION.
The SpectatorW E have recently brought against Literature the accusa- tion of being, in one important respect—its picture of the relative importance of Youth and Age—an unscrupulous libel ;...
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THE BISHOP OF MANCHESTER AND DR. PUSEY,
The Spectator[TOTEM EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.' . ] Sia,—The Bishop of Manchester has done me the honour, in a letter to you, to notice some words of mine,—" Through his. [Mr. Green's]...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE BISHOP OF MANCHESTER AND MR. GREEN. [TO THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR." j Sia,—In a metaphor, borrowed from the Book of the Revela- tion, the Bishop of Manchester charges...
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THE HATRED OF RELIGION IN FRANCE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] Snt, — I have received from a correspondent in France a letter which presents so graphic a picture of the hideous condition of French...
THE BAITING OF MR. GLADSTONE.
The Spectator[To TILE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR?') SIR,—Yonr rebuke of the blind and bitter hatred of Mr. Glad- stone which disfigures the political life of the present day must have been...
MR. GREEN'S IMPRISONMENT.
The Spectator(To ran EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR..1 Sra,—I have read the Bishop of Manchester's " apologia " in your last impression with much interest. Will you kindly allow me to ask his...
"March, 1882.
The Spectator"SIR, — Having read your article on 'Free Thought—French and English,' in the Contemporary Review for February, I take the liberty to write to you to tell you that, bad as what...
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VIVISECTION AND ANESTHETICS.
The Spectator[To THZ EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR:9 SIR, — In my last letter, I did state that Dr. Brunton had re- canted the opinions which Mr. Gurney had quoted (5,778) to. show my evidence...
THE AUDACITY OF LAMSON.
The SpectatorLTO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR:9 SIR, — What you have said of certain kinds of audacity strikes me as being very much to the purpose, especially in the hints you give (but...
LEGALITY NOT ALWAYS MORALITY.
The SpectatorITO TEE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR:9 SIR, — It would be an ill-return for the note you were good enough to append to my letter to write again other than in brief terms. It would,...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorDR. JOHN BROWN'S NEW VOLUME. * ONE good word, says Emerson, will serve us a great while, and, perhaps, no better illustration could be given of the truth of the saying of the...
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MR. BUCHANAN'S BALLADS.*
The SpectatorHow many of these ballads are new,—a few certainly have been published in earlier volumes of Mr. Buchanan's,—we are not able to say ; but a considerable number of those which...
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THE FRERES.*
The SpectatorMas. ALEXANDER'S novels are pre-eminently of the kind to be studied when one has nothing better to do. This is not intended in contempt of them ; on the contrary, we have often...
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MAGYARLAND.*
The SpectatorTEE Carpathian Society is, we suppose, a friendly rival of the Alpine Club. We do not know what constitutes eligibility to the honour of its Fellowships, but sex and celibacy...
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THE MILITARY HISTORY OF GENERAL GRANT.*
The Spectator[SECOND NOTICE.] THE situation early in March, 1864, when Grant took command of the Federal forces, was briefly as follows. Meade, with the Army of the Potomac, on the northern...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorSCHOOL BOOKS. The Iliad of Homer. A Literal Prose Translation. By II. Hail- stone, M.A. (Johnson, Cambridge; Cornish and Sons, London)— " He tore much hair from the roots out...
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additional interest from the comparative novelty of the place where
The Spectatorthe scene is laid. "Good society" in Australia has doubtless much the same manners as good society here, still, there are differences which, where the subject is so familiar,...
Homer's Iliad, Book I The Troades of Euripides. The CEdipus
The SpectatorColoneus of Sophocles. By F. A. Paley, M.A. Cambridge Texts, with Notes. (Whittaker.)—The list of "Cambridge Texts with Notes," shows that Mr. Paley is the favourite exponent of...
POETRY.—Legends of the Heart. By Gerard Bendall. (W. Holmes.) Mr.
The SpectatorBendall's " legends" show, on the whole, an advance both in taste and in his mastery of his art. The old story of "The Spectre Ship" is told again in "The Dutchman's Doom," with...
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Dr. Casey gives us A Sequel to the First Six
The SpectatorBooks of the Elements of Euclid (Hodges, Figgie, and Co.)—He has "endeavoured," we learn from the preface, "to select and arrange all those elementary and geometrical...