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NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT EEEPope has thought it wise to express publicly his dis- satisfaction with the Emperor of Germany's treatment -of him, and has chosen for the purpose a singular medium. He has...
Lord Granville was entertained last Saturday by the Liver- pool
The SpectatorReform Club, and though hinting that he might have preferred to speak on such a subject as "Is marriage a failure ?" submitted to the will of the chairman by returning to the...
Up to Friday afternoon, the Parnell Commission, which began its
The Spectatorregular sittings on Monday, had been occupied almost exclusively in listening to the Attorney-General's opening of his case for the Times. In the conversation on Wednesday...
King Milan has scandalised even Eastern Europe, a region accustomed
The Spectatorto scandals. He had applied to the Consistory of Servia to grant him a divorce from his wife, Queen Natalie, on the ground of mutual detestation; and when her reply was received...
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Lord Hartington addressed a great meeting yesterday week in the
The SpectatorUlster Hall at Belfast. He used Mr. Morley's recent attacks on him for his defensive policy as a virtual admission J:iy Mr. Morley that Lord Hartington had been quite right in...
Is M. Floquet riding for a fall ? He has
The Spectatordenied the charge with suspicious earnestness, and certainly the last proceeding of his Cabinet gives some colour to the supposition. It is a tradition of French Governments...
Mr. Morley maintained that he and his friends adhere strictly
The Spectatorto the policy of pursuing political methods by consti- tutional means. Well, if so, why does he call Mr. O'Brien and Mr. Dillon his friends ? No one can pretend for a moment...
We note this about the Presidential election in the United
The SpectatorStates. As the day for balloting approaches, the friends of Mr. Cleveland grow more anxious. They are certain of obtaining a majority on the mass vote, but are by no means so...
The Earl of Dufferin has been created Marquis of Dufferin
The Spectatorand Ava, and Earl of Ava. The Viceroy has deserved a public recognition of his great services, and we suppose the marquisate was the easiest, though we never can understand how...
As the American Election draws nigher, the fight grows hotter.
The SpectatorIt is part of the policy of Mr. Blaine, to whom Mr. Harrison, the Republican candidate, is a mere cloak, to repre- sent Mr. Cleveland as the British nominee. An Englishman in...
Mr. Morley made a spirited speech in Dumfries yesterday week,—spirited
The Spectatorbut eminently partisan. Mr. Morley is losing that detachment of mind which used specially to characterise him as a politician, and the loss of which is far from com- pensated by...
The singular rumours about the White Pasha who has been
The Spectatorseen on the White Nile are revived in a telegram of the 24th inst. from Cairo, announcing that natives who have arrived at Wady Ralf& confirm the stories of the white Christian...
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Mr. W. H. Smith, the First Lord of the Treasury,
The Spectatorspeaking at Salford on Tuesday, made a good point by remarking on Mr. Gla.dstone's condition for a successful Home-rule measure, that it must be a final measure. How many final...
The price of coal in London has gone up 4e.
The Spectatora ton since July, and is still rising, owing mainly to an impending strike of the pitmen. Thirty-five thousand men are now " out " in the Midlands, with the full sympathy of...
On Wednesday, there was a meeting of the Glasgow and
The SpectatorWest of Scotland branch of the Imperial Federation League, at which Lord Rosebery and Lord Brassey urged the im- portance of Federation to British foreign policy, Lord Brassey...
The promoters of "Trusts" are going on with their work.
The SpectatorIt is stated on good authority that the Copper Syndicate hope to fix the price of copper for the next twelve years, and to fix it at the price now beginning to be felt so...
Sir Richard Webster has crushed all other speech-makers —to the
The Spectatorinstruction, if not exactly to the relief of mankind— but Sir J. Lubbock's speech of Thursday, though too much condensed in the reporting, is well worth reading. It is full of...
Austria does not seem happy yet, though the Emperor of
The SpectatorGermany has been in Vienna, and the Prince of Wales has been hunting bears unsuccessfully in Transylvania. The Preraclenblatt, a semi-official journal, has this week expressed...
The Apple Congress of 1883 and the Pear Conference of
The Spectator1885 have been succeeded by a National Conference on Apples and Pears in 1888, which was held last week in the Royal Horticultural Society's Gardens at Chelsea. The Conference...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorLORD GRANVILLE'S CUE. L ORD GRANVILLE never attempts the earnest style of oratory. Nor does he ever attempt the severe style. He is nothing if not bland. He is one of those...
THE FINANCIAL PITFALL OF FRANCE. T HERE is one reason for
The Spectatorthe internal unrest of the French Republicans which is very serious, and is growing worse. As a rule, we question if the mass of electors in any country are much moved by coming...
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tali DECAY OF RETICENCE.
The SpectatorQuarterly Review, in an article upon "Robert Elsmere," blames Mr. Justice Stephen for under- mining by certain magazine articles those sanctions of religion to which he...
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THE SERVLIN DIVORCE. K ING MILAN will find, we fear, that
The Spectatorhe has com- mitted the error of his life. We say "we fear," not because of any sympathy with him, but because his position in Servia helps to preserve the European peace, and to...
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THE NEW TRADING.
The SpectatorT T is not quite creditable to economists that they have not explained the long depression of trade and its recent revival a little more clearly. Some of them believed in...
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THE LOVE OF SENSATION, AND ITS EFFECT ON OPINION.
The SpectatorI T must be very hard for some of the politicians whose judgment on public affairs is best worth having, to understand or estimate the enormous influence exerted over the...
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WEIRDNESS.
The SpectatorA FEW days ago, the Times described the scene in the underground vaults of the Victoria Embankment, where the police were engaged by the dim light of candles in putting a...
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LORD WESTBURY'S WIT.
The SpectatorMITE extreme dislike of intellectual insolence which is felt 1 by most educated Englishmen, has had this week a singular illustration. The reviewers, commenting on the "Life of...
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GENERALISATIONS ON WOMEN.
The Spectatorst AA T OMAN is the last thing that man will civilise," says somewhere Mr. George Meredith's aphoristic baronet. The generalisation—as generalisations go, not a bad one—is...
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CORRESPONDENCE.
The Spectator17P THE FEEDER. CONGLETON Cloud, standing out grey-blue against a clear distance of September sky, seemed to beckon us from our hills and valleys to the plains of Cheshire ;...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorELEMENTARY EDUCATION. [To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR:1 SIR,—May I ask you to insert a suggestion by way of con- tribution to the discussion going on upon all sides about...
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EDMUND KEAN.
The SpectatorI TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR, — Concerning the letter of your correspondent, "A. G.," will you kindly allow me to say I have found statements which,. I think,...
THE GUILDS AND THE HANDICRAFTS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR:1 SIR,—I was glad to see in your article on "A Technical Insti- tute," in the Spectator of October 13th, that you warmly acknowledge the...
VEGETARIANISM AND DRUNKENNESS.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Slit,—Pray allow me to correct a misapprehension about what we vegetarians maintain on the above subject. The vege- tarianism of the great...
A CORRECTION.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,—Please allow me to offer the following correction as to a matter of fact. In a review of Professor Roemer's "Origin of the English...
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GAIN.
The SpectatorSOMETHING has come : I felt it yestereve The lark on high was singing, The happy church-bells ringing ; How could I grieve ? I could not grieve. An old man weary lay; I...
AUTUMN, 1888.
The SpectatorSPRING, long awaited, blossomed but to fleet, For hardly had she from their moaning won The winds to melody, and coaxed the sun To tinge with emerald the trembling wheat, Than...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorJOHN WARD, PREACHER.* John Ward, Preacher, is a remarkable book,—the power of which seems to us, however, to consist even more in the side-sketches than in that of the...
SOMETHING is gone :
The SpectatorI know it by this pain : But yesterday I had it, To-morrow though I bade it, It would not come again. Something is gone : What shall we that thing call ? A touch, a tone, that...
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MR. STILLMA.N'S "TRACK OF ULYSSES" AND. "VENUS OF MELOS."*
The SpectatorTHE traditions of pre-historic Greece have been defined by a. very competent judge as the history of a past which never had a present. It may seem rash, therefore, to make any...
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THE PRINCIPLES OF PENAL ADMINISTRATION.* IN spite of its barbarous
The Spectatortitle, and in spite of a somewhat chaotic arrangement—there is nothing so confusing as an unsuccessful attempt at a logical system of exposition—Mr. Tallack has written a very...
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RECENT NOVELS.* IT happens that this month the first two
The Spectatorworks upon our list of recent novels are from the pens of the two feminine writers who, for a quarter of a century or more, have been most successful in appealing to the tastes...
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JACOBITE SONGS.*
The SpectatorIN his new edition of the Jacobite Songs and Ballads, Mr. Macquoid has done much more than bring before our notice a collection of stirring songs and ballads full of the spirit...
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Lyrics of the Sea. By E. H. Brodie. (George Bell
The Spectatorand Sons.)— Mr. Brodie's verses would perhaps be best described by the term "rhetorical." The two lyrics which stand first in the volume and which give to it its title are very...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorPOETRY. In Hours of Leisure. By Clifford Harrison. (Kogan Paul). Trench, and Co.)—There is much in Mr. Harrison's poems to admire. Some of the pieces composed more especially...
Sketches in Song. By George Lansing Raymond. (G. P.. Putnam's
The SpectatorSons.)—This volume consists of several short pieces; and one long poem which is dramatic in its treatment. The latter is a very thoughtful study of character. Mr. Raymond brings...
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Poems and Translations. By Edward Thring. (T. Fisher TInwin.)—No one
The Spectatorcan fail to read these poems with a great deal of pleasure. If Mr. Thring was not a poet, he had nevertheless a strong vein of poetry in his nature. His verses are not merely...
which are worthy of being clothed in a better form
The Spectatorthan Mr. Ambler has been able to give them. More than this we cannot say. "A Leaf from Marc Antony" is a short poem after the model of Lord Tennyson's " Locksley Hall." But if...
Poems. By Philipps Stewart. (Kegan Paul, Trench, and Co.) —Mr.
The SpectatorStewart's poems are for the most part of a somewhat morbid nature. His melancholy, as far as we can discover, is chiefly caused by the general shortness of human life. But as...
Platonis Crito. With Introduction, Notes, and Appendix, by J. Adam,
The SpectatorB.A. (Pitt Press.)—Mr Adam has given, us in his Crito a work which is quite equal in merit to his edition of the "Apology." The Crito is certainly the most interesting, if,...
Surely a shilling would have been more suitable to "generous."
The SpectatorCuchulain : a Dramatic Poem. By W. C. Upton. (M. H. Gill and Son.)—We are not impressed by Mr. Upton's poem. It is poor and bombastic in style, as well as generally devoid of...
Thoughts and Fancies for Sunday Evenings. By Walter C. Smith.
The Spectator(James Maclehose and Sons.)—Mr. Smith is well known to the public as a poet. His poem entitled " Hilda " has stamped him as a writer possessed of great power and thought, as...
SCHOOL BOOKS.
The Spectatorpleted his edition of the Oresteia. When we have said that his Eumenides reaches the same high standard of excellence that his Agamtermon and Chcaphoroi did, we feel that we...
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The Ladies of Plato. With Introduction and Notes by M.
The SpectatorT. Tatham, M.A. (Macmillan and Co.)—Both from its shortness and the comparative simplicity of its matter, the Lazhes is doubtless better adapted than the majority of Plato's...
Xenophon's Anabasis, Books iv. and v. With Notes and Vocabu-
The Spectatorlary. "Rivington's Greek Texts."—These two little volumes are printed in good, clear type, and are of a very convenient size. They are furnished with notes and vocabularies. We...
NEW Enrmons.—Notes on the Wimbledon Library. By L. W. Longstaff.
The SpectatorThird edition. (E. Stanford.)—Heartsease. By C. M. Yonge. Illustrated by Kate Greenaway. —Theological Essays. By R. H. Hutton. Third edition, revised.—Literary Essays. By R. H....
Selections from Xenophon's Anabasis, Book iv. With Notes and Exercises.
The SpectatorEdited by E. D. Stone, M.A. (Macmillan and Co.)— Mr. Stone has in this volume done for Greek what Mr. Wilkinson haadcme for Latinin his " Selections from Ovid." The part of the...
Lysias Epitaphios. With Introduction and Notes by F. J. Snell,
The SpectatorB.A. (Clarendon Press.)—For schoolmasters who are in want of a Greek book for the fourth or fifth forms which is not too hard, Mr. Snell's book will be very useful. The...
The Satires and Epistles of Horace. Edited, with Notes, by
The SpectatorJ. B. Greenough. (Ginn and Co.)—Mr. Greenough tells us that his work is meant for the class-room, and yet he attempts nothing in the way of commenting on the difficulties of the...
Potybius : The History of the Acheean League. With Introduction
The Spectatorand Notes by W. W. Capes, M.A. (Macmillan and Co.)—The final struggle of the Greeks to retain their national independence in the face of foreign aggression and internal...
The Odyssey of Homer, Book ix. With Introduction, Notes, and
The SpectatorAppendices. Edited by G. M. Edwards, M.A. (Cambridge University Press.)—The chief value of this book consists in its introduction and appendices. The notes are good and...
Essays of Elia. 2 vols. (G. P. Putnam's Sons.)—An extremely
The Spectatorhandy little edition, beautifully printed, and fit to be carried in the pocket, as "Ella" deserves. But why, oh ! why will not pub- lishers who take so much trouble and risk so...
P. Teresa Phormio. With Notes and Introductions by the Rev.
The SpectatorA. Sloman, M.A. (Clarendon Press.)—This edition is intended for use in the higher forms at schools. There is every reason to suppose that it will prove very useful in this...