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The Russian correspondent of the Times sends terrible figures, derived
The Spectatorfrom official sources in the great Province of Nijni, whose centre is the ancient and wealthy commercial depot, Nijni-Novogorod. According to this account, the posi- tion of the...
This is the age of humanity, and of outrages on
The Spectatorhumanity on the gigantic scale. As our readers are aware, Baron Hirsch, the billionaire, is employing part of his vast wealth in an effort to found large colonies of Russian...
A monstrous story comes from Paris. Three Anarchists have been
The Spectatorarrested, against whom, it is said, there is evidence that they intended to carry out their principles by poisoning all the members of a fashionable club. Substances supposed to...
The German Emperor has got himself into a Parlia- mentary
The Spectatorfix. Although secure of a majority, through the coalition of Catholics and Conservatives in its favour, the irritation of all Liberals against his Prussian Education Bill, an...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE Behring Sea dispute with the United States is again becoming active, though the treaty referring it to arbitra- tion is settled, and it is said that the Senate of the...
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No very new fact has transpired concerning the Rainhill and
The SpectatorMelbourne murders, except that the house which Swanston,. alias Williams, alias Deeming, had taken in Perth had already had its floor cemented since he took it, which some...
Mr. James MacCalmont, M.P. for East Antrim, sends to Tuesday's
The SpectatorTimes a remarkable resolution of the Swinford Board of Guardians with reference to the recent speech of Mr. Dillon (M.P. for East Mayo) on Mr. Balfour's administra- tion of the...
The House of Commons on Wednesday was the scene of
The Spectatora really interesting debate. Usually, Wednesday's discussions are entirely infrnctuous, a thin House listening wearily to philanthropic maundering ; but on the 23rd some four...
Lord Rosebery, who succeeds Lord Granville as President of the
The SpectatorCity Liberal Club, delivered a striking and original speech there on Wednesday, partly in praise of Lord Granville, partly by way of review of the vast changes in the character...
Mr. Chamberlain made a very entertaining speech this day week,
The Spectatorin attending the annual dinner of the Birmingham Jewellers' and Silversmiths' Association, where he seconded the toast to the Houses of Parliament, reproaching the pro- poser...
The Pope has nominated Dr. Vaughan, the Bishop of Sal-
The Spectatorford, to the Archbishopric of Westminster ; and though the Bishop is very anxious to stay in his present See, it is thought that he will be induced to acquiesce in the Pope's...
On the House of Commons, also, Mr. Chamberlain spoke with
The Spectatormuch humour, though with much deeper respect. He did not think that the House of Commons is losing any of its influence with the country,—an opinion on which we differ from him,...
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We regret to record the death on March 4th, at
The Spectatorthe age of eighty, of Professor Noah Porter, of Yale, one of the most dis- tinguished and thoughtful of the ethical students and teachers in the United States, who till within...
In commenting on the great change which our Foreign policy
The Spectatorhas undergone, Lord Rosebery remarked that England is now really outside the European system, and that her Foreign policy is not now determined, like that of the other European...
The Small Holdings Bill passed its second reading on Thursday,
The Spectatorwithout a division, amid cheers from both sides. The only remarkable speech came from Mr. Gladstone, who supported the Bill, but wished for compulsion and a vast extension of...
The population of the United States is about to experience
The Spectatorthe full benefits of one of those wealth-producing Trusts on the merits of which our correspondent, Mr. Horace Smith, was recently so eloquent. The sugar-refining business of...
The Solicitor-General, Sir E. Clarke, in presiding on Wednesday night
The Spectatorat the house dinner of the City Carlton CM), expressed his hope that the crushing defeat of the Moderates in the County Council elections would at least induce them to make up...
The Indian Budget is not altogether pleasant reading. Sir D.
The SpectatorBarbour shows, indeed, a large surplus for 1890-91, namely, 3,688,000 rx.; but that is ancient history. The revised esti- mates for 1891-92, on the other hand, reveal a deficit,...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE DEFEAT OF THE EIGHT-HOURS BILL. T HE crushing vote given by the House of Commons on Wednesday against the Eight-Hours Bill for coal- miners (272 to 160, in a House of 436),...
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MR. CHAMBERLAIN ON THE HOUSE OF COMMONS.
The Spectatorit/F R CHAMBERLAIN protested warmly, in his in- teresting speech of Saturday last, against the notion that the House of Commons is in its decline. Indeed, he did not seem to...
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LORD ROSEBERY ON THE NEW FOREIGN POLICY. -F ORD ROSEBERY
The Spectatorcould hardly have regretted that taboo of the Irish Question which was a natural consequence of the large admixture of Unionists in the City Liberal Club, when he delivered his...
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THE GERMAN EMPEROR'S RETREAT. T HE recent crisis in Berlin throws
The Spectatora flood of light upon the most interesting of all German subjects, the true character of the picturesque young Emperor. That light, we fear, is not altogether favourable, the...
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THE LAW OF CONSPIRACY.
The SpectatorI T is difficult to conceive anything more thoroughly un- satisfactory than the debate raised on Mr. Robertson's motion in regard to the Law of Conspiracy. If the mover of the...
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THE REORGANISATION OF THE COUNTY COUNCIL. T HE committee of the
The SpectatorLondon County Council which is to examine into the present organisation of the Council's business and the method of conducting it, will approach the subject with the advantage...
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MONSTERS. Nv E suppose everybody has been calling, and rightly calling,
The Spectatorthe Rainhill murderer a monster, and won- dering how such a human being could exist at all. That a man should take a special satisfaction in murder, should murder his own wife...
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"ANTI-ISM."
The SpectatorT HIS is supposed, or at least we read so in many magazines, to be a time of extreme intellectual; tolerance, when everything is permitted by the wise except a belief in...
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CHURCH DANCES AT SEVILLE.
The SpectatorL IKE the other survivals of medireval life, the Carnival is rapidly dying out in Spain and Italy, and the local Press at Seville, far from lamenting the decay of the ancient...
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E. A. FREEMAN.
The SpectatorT T is right that the notices of the great historian who has just laid down the pen for the last time should be written from the point of view of the outside public ; but it...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The Spectator" WILDE, AND WHIRLING WORDS." [TO THS EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR, — The quotation in a recent Spectator of an epigrammatic observation of Mr. Oscar Wilde's, set me...
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THE POPE AND THE LAW OF GUARANTEES. [To THE EDITOR
The SpectatorOF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—I wish Mr. Haines had been more precise in naming the "two or three propositions laid down" by me, which he hesitates to accept. When he says of one...
A GRAVE DANGER TO THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND. [To THE
The SpectatorEDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR." j SIR,—From the kindly note you append to my letter of last week, I rather fear that in one respect I failed to make my meaning quite clear. My...
"TRANSLATED."
The Spectator[To THZ EDITOR OF TEE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—I venture to suggest a new interpretation of the word "translated" in A Midsummer Night's Dream, Act iii., Scene I,. where Quince,...
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ART.
The SpectatorTHE PAINTER-ETCHERS. THE Visions, to use the dialect of William Blake, which s eems here the most appropriate, have been rather angry with Mr. Strang. He has been afflicted by...
POETRY.
The SpectatorON THE THAMES EMBANKMENT. A HUNDRED paces from the human tide That fills the Strand; one crooked street, and soon Behold a silent world of waters wide, Lit by a wandering...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorMISS LAWLESS'S " GRANIA."* THIS sketch of human life on the frontiers of the Atlantic—. that "Old Sea" which has ever been in European fancy the battle-place where natural...
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THE MOORS AND THE PAMPAS.*
The SpectatorCOULD we combine the Scotch landscapes of Sir John Millais with the deer of Landseer, the hawks and game-birds of Mr. Wolf, the vignettes of Bewick, the wild-fowl of Bai Rei,...
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THE ROMANCE OF SLAVERY.*
The SpectatorUncle Tom's Cabin was one of the great books of the world,- an epoch-making if not a war-making book, which stirred the pulses of two continents from end to end, and played a...
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THE SERMONS OF ARCHBISHOP MAGEE.* THERE is a pathos in
The Spectatorthe sermons of a preacher after he has passed into the silence of death, which is greater than the pathos of any other posthumous publication. There is nothing so personal, so...
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PROFESSOR FREEMAN'S LAST BOOK.* THE news of the sad and
The Spectatorsudden death of the greatest his- torical writer of the present generation must have come with a shook of regret not merely to every student of history, but to every lover of...
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MR. DU MAUREER'S NOVEL.*
The SpectatorIT was with no little eagerness of expectation that we turned to examine Mr. du Manner's story. His Punch drawings, if we had been asked to infer from them the probable...
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Seeds and Sheaves : Thoughts for Incurables. By Lady Lovat.
The Spectator(Kogan Paul, Trench, Triibner, and Co.)—These "Thoughts for In- curables" are chiefly, though not exclusively, intended for widows and, in their more practical advice, for...
The Pulpit Commentary. Edited by the Very Rev. H. D.
The SpectatorM. Spence and the Rev. Joseph S. Ezell. (Kegan Paul, Trench, and Co.)—The volume before us contains the Book of Job, the Rev. G. Rawlinson contributing the Exposition ; the Rev....
The Australian Handbook. (Gordon and Gotch.)—The volume includes New Zealand,
The SpectatorFiji, and New Guinea, and is well furnished with maps. This is the "twenty-third year of issue."—We have also received the first yearly volume of The Economic Journal, edited by...
The New Imperial Atlas. By j. G. Bartholomew. (Nelson and
The SpectatorSons.)—This is a very convenient, very complete, and very reasonably priced atlas. It bears the title of " Imperial " on account of the special attention which has been paid by...
Natural Method of Physical Training. By Edwin Checkley. (G. P.
The SpectatorPutnam's Sons.)—" Making muscle and reducing flesh without dietary or apparatus," is the attractive promise which Mr. Checkley holds out on his title-page. How far it may be...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorMemoirs of the Prince de Talleyrand. Edited by the Duc de Broglie. Translated by Mrs. Angus Hall. Vol. IV. (Griffith, Farran, and Co.)—As we have long since given up the...
being fairly easy to them, though difficult for more mature
The Spectatorscholars ; and he has not Virgil's power of attracting the young. Schoolboys and schoolgirls do not appreciate his human insight, are rather bored by his "droppings of warm...
The Expositor. Edited by the Rev. W. Robertson Nicoll, M.A.
The SpectatorFourth Series, Vol. IV. (Hodder and Stoughton.)—We may mention as noticeable papers in this volume, Dr. A. Plummer's "Advance of Christ in IONA," "Some Fragments of a Pre-...
In "The Stott Library," we have a very neat and
The Spectatorconvenient little volume, the carrying of which would not overtask the very feeblest admirer of the poet, Lyrics and Sonnets of Wordsworth, selected and edited by Clement King...
How He Made His Fortune. By Julia A. De Witt.
The Spectator(F. Warne and Co.)—This is the story of a plucky Scotch boy who goes to work in a Pennsylvanian coal-mine, has a tough fight with the Union, and is eventually victorious,...