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Mr. Gladstone, who left England on Wednesday for Bavaria, has
The Spectatorissued a pamphlet, which we have received only just before going to press, on the subject of the Irish Question. It is in part devoted to the explanation of the growth of h is...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorO N Monday, Europe was dismayed by news of a fresh revolution in the Balkan Peninsula. In the early hours of the morning of Saturday, August 21st, Prince Alexander of Bulgaria...
The debate on the Address was resumed yesterday week by
The SpectatorMr. T. P. O'Connor, who made a good slashing speech of a commonplace sort, charging the Belfast riots on Lord Randolph Churchill, treating the large Liberal vote given for...
After a coup clidat, the first thought of its authors
The Spectatoris usually to strike terror among those who may possibly resist the revolu- tion. This, however, was not the course pursued at Sofia. Instead, the conspirators tried to deceive....
Gradually the truth leaked out. The man who at Slivnitza
The Spectatorrode in front of the line amid a tempest of bullets, and whose moral courage and pertinacity enabled him to force the hand of Russia in Eastern Europe, had not, the world...
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Mr. Morley replied in a speech which was very bitter
The Spectatoragainst the Government for not proposing coercion, though it would apparently have been much more bitter if they had proposed it. He treated the declarations of the Government...
The only amusing passage in Sir William Harcourt's speech Was
The Spectatorhis comparison of the Government, in its fancy for Com- missions, to the artist of whom Canning tells us, who held that the only thing that it was worth the while of a...
On Monday, Mr. Labouchere opened the adjourned debate in a
The Spectatorspeech of the usual kind, in which there was one fair joke, the remark that if Mr. Chamberlain did not pause in his down- ward career, the next thing we should hear of him would...
On the same day, Sir Michael Hicks-Beach described the policy
The Spectatorof the Government as a sober policy, a policy intended to give Ireland a rest after the policy of constant agitation. In defending his Commissions, which were made the occasion...
After a few unimportant speeches, Lord Hartington rose and made
The Spectatora speech of great force and weight. He pointed out that the Parnellite Party could not be expected to wish for the restoration of social order in Ireland till they had gained...
Mr. Plunket, in his short reply, stated that in the
The Spectatorlast four months the number of evictions had greatly decreased; that in 1885, of 3,127 tenants legally evicted, only 600 were actually evicted, all the others being reinstated....
On Tuesday, Mr. Parnell spoke. It was a speech of
The Spectatorthe usual kind,—cold, clear, sardonic. He held that with three more weeks' time for agitation, the Government would have had a majority, instead of incurring a defeat ; but as...
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The debate of Thursday was delayed by Mr. E. Russell,
The Spectatorwho moved the adjournment of the House in order to question the Government on the appointment of Sir R. Buller to the magis- tracy in Kerry, Clare, and parts of the adjoining...
Mr. Gladstone's speech was not for him a remarkable one.
The SpectatorHe enlarged greatly on Lord Salisbury's suggestion that where the judicial rent turned out too high, the Irish landowner should be compensated, if at all, out of the British...
During the remainder of the evening, the only speeches of
The Spectatorany note were an angry one from Mr. Chaplin which did the Government no good, and a speech from one of the Sub-Com- missioners under the Land Act, Mr. Mahoney, who stated that...
The Chicago Convention closed last week, after adopting a silly
The Spectatorresolution for the boycotting of English goods, conceived in these terms :—" To hurt the enemy where he will feel it most, by refusing to purchase any article of English...
The Government of France is descending to very mean and
The Spectatorpaltry expedients indeed when it peremptorily expels an English chaplain from his French home, after a residence of upwards of six years in France, for presenting a little...
At King's Lynn, on Wednesday, the Conservative candidate, Mr. A.
The SpectatorW. Jarvis, was declared returned by a majority of 255 over his Gladstonian opponent ; for Mr. Jarvis there voted 1,423 electors, for Mr. J. H. Sanders, the Gladstonian, 1,168....
On Wednesday, there was a duel between Major Saunderson, the
The SpectatorMember for North Armagh, and Mr. Matthew Harris, the Member for East Galway. Major Saunderson having quoted a remark made by Mr. Harris to the effect that "the landlords were an...
The Times' correspondent for the Mauritius gives a very remarkable,
The Spectatorthough not a very clear account, in the letter which appeared on Wednesday, of the collision which has occurred between the Governor, Sir J. Pope Hennessy, and the Lieutenant-...
The history of the annexation of Burmah has been not
The Spectatoronly one of inadequate provision against emergencies, but one of almost unparalleled misfortunes. Tho last, and in some respects the greatest, of these is the disaster which...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE BULGARIAN COUP D'iTAT. I NDIGNATION and disgust are weak words with which to describe the feelings of Englishmen at the shameful treatment that Prince Alexander of Bulgaria...
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THE TACTICS OF THE OPPOSITION.
The SpectatorT HE tactics of the Opposition in relation to the Irish Ques- tion are at once simple and effective. They consist in a coherent and pertinacious attempt to electro-biologise...
MR. CHAMBERLAIN'S SPEECH.
The SpectatorM R. CHAMBERLAIN'S speech had two great charac- teristics which will make all the Unionists of Great Britain grateful to him. He was as firm as a rock in his Unionism ; and he...
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THE DRAMA OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS. T HE collective life
The Spectatorof the new House of Commons is hardly ten days old, and yet no one can have watched its proceedings without feeling that even with it, young as it is, speech counts much more as...
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THE CAUSES OF THE DEPRESSION OF TRADE.
The SpectatorI F the columns of the Royal Commission on the Depression of Trade have not helped us much to a positive know- ledge of the cause of that depression, they have at least shown...
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JEWISH DISABILITIES IN RUSSIA. T HE expulsion from Russia of Mr.
The SpectatorSamuel Montague, the Jewish Member of Parliament for Whitechapel, in reference to which a question was pat in the House of Commons on Monday last, will once again draw attention...
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DEMOCRATIC EMULATIONS.
The SpectatorI T looks very much as if it would be the effect of democratic institutions to increase extremely the pleasure to be derived from putting any sort of distinctive mark on...
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THE MELODY OF PROSE.
The SpectatorT O a carefully trained or to a naturally sensitive ear, there is often a beauty of rhythm in prose as powerful as the most exquisite in verse. Indeed, on some natures the...
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ROBIN HOOD'S BAY.
The SpectatorR OBIN Hood's Bay, or, as it is commonly called, Bay Town, is assuredly one of the strangest and most picturesque places on the English coast. It contains a population of...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE ENFORCEMENT OF LAW IN IRELAND. [TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR." _I SIR,—It is quite natural that upon each succeeding crisis in Irish affairs, the first thought that...
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THE IRISH MINORITY.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. ") Sra,—In your issue of August 21st there appeared a letter signed " Walter Hobhouse." It was a very good letter, containing true facts and...
THE LATE NATIONAL LEAGUE SUPPRESSION BILL.
The Spectator[To TIIE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR.'1 Sin,—I hope you will kindly allow me to explain that you mis- apprehend my position with regard to the Irish policy of this present...
PROPORTIONAL REPRESENTATION.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR.1 SIR, — Mr. Hobhonse, in his letter of August 21st, points out clearly that under the present system of single-Member seats the loyal...
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MR. CHAMBERLAIN AND THE LATE GOVERNMENT.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR, — If " Ludovicus " can persist in saying "that Mr. Chamberlain was in no way guilty of auy misrepresentation" of the late Government at...
CHRIST'S HOSPITAL.
The SpectatorTo THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR." . ] Sue,—My attention has been called to' a letter by "Emeritus " in your issue of August 14th, in which he condemns the system of sharing the...
THE OXFORD LAYMEN'S LEAGUE FOR DEFENCE OF THE NATIONAL CHURCH.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR."' SIR, — Your note of August 14th on the Oxford Laymen's League appears to me to be based on a misconception of its object. Whatever may be the...
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TWO AMBASSADORS AT ROME.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR, -- YOU have permitted Mr. Bishop to advocate the appoint- ment of an Ambassador at the Court of the Vatican ; and this step, which has...
[TO THE EDITOR OF THE SPECTATOR."
The Spectatorquite agree (as a Catholic priest) with Mr. W. H. Bishop, that the English Government should have a properly accredited representative at the Vatican. As my friend, Mr. Oxenham,...
[TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR...] SIR, In reply
The Spectatorto your editorial note on my letter of August 21st, I beg leave to state that those four lines left out in your paper on the plea of their being " grossly offensive to the...
CO-OPERATIVE ALLOTMENTS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF TEE " SrEctaron."] SIR,—The most suggestive and interesting illustration that I know of, as showing what co-operation and good management amongst working men...
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A CORRECTION.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR." j Sra,—In a letter from me you were good enough to print in the Spectator of August 21st, I am made to say "administration is not an...
FI.A X -GRO WING.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR:'] SIR, — I have read your interesting article on " Land and Labour," published in your issue of August 21st, in which you call attention to...
POETRY.
The SpectatorIDYLLS OF THE ILIAD.—XIII. ASIUS. WHEN from the windy plain of Ilium, Between the Xanthns and the seaward sands, The Greeks within the fencework and the trench By Hector's...
ART.
The SpectatorACADEMY REFORM. Ix my last week's article upon this subject, I pointed out very briefly some of the chief reasons for believing that the administration of the Academy had been,...
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BOOKS.
The Spectator"TERRE DE FRANCE."* A BOOK which has been crowned by the French Academy, and whose author has been adjudged the Prix Monthyon of 2,000 francs, ought only to need a few words of...
PROFESSOR ARMSTRONG'S " STORIES OF WICKLOW."* PROFESSOR ARMSTRONG knows Wicklow
The Spectatoras hardly any one else knows it. Every burn and torrent, every ravine and pass, every ridge and slope, is familiar to him under all its myriad aspects in sunshine or gloom ;...
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THE BRITISH CONSTITUTION AS IT IS.* SIR WILLIAM ANSON, whose
The Spectatorbook on the law of contract is well known to lawyers as an admirably concise and scientific exposition of the subject, has attempted in this book to do for the law of the...
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THREE NOVELS BY LADIES.* " WOULD you desire at this
The Spectatorday," says De Quincey, in his queer, rambling, scrambling essay on " Style," " to read our noble language in its native beauty, picturesque from idiomatic propriety, racy iu its...
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THE COUNTRY OF THE MOORS.* Tuts work contains the record
The Spectatorof three visits to Marocco, the latest having been made in 1883. Certain changes have taken place since then, notably the retirement of Sir John Drummond Hay from the post...
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POETRY AS A REPRESENTATIVE ART.*
The SpectatorWE sometimes wonder if the anomalies and awkwardnesses of modern scientific nomenclature will ever become so glaring as to give rise to a special department or association, with...
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Tales from Shakspeare. By Charles and Mary Lamb. Edited, with
The Spectatoran introduction, by Alfred Ainger. (Macmillan.)—Mr. Ainger, as our readers probably know, has already edited with great judiciousness the essays and poems of Lamb. In the same...
The Life of Henrietta Kerr, Religious of the Sacred Heart.
The SpectatorEdited by John Morris, S.J. (Roehampton.)—At the time Henrietta Kerr was born, her father, Lord Henry Kerr, was Rector of Dittisham, a village on the Dart. His wife was the...
Our War-Ships. By Sir W. Cusack-Smith, Bart. (Kegan. Paul, Trench,
The Spectatorand Co.)—Anything relating to the Navy should always find many readers among Englishmen, and this little volume is admirably calculated to diffuse accurate information on the...
Flora, the Roman Martyr. 2 vols. (Burns and Oates.)—We con.
The Spectatorfess that we opened this book with some misgivings. The lives of the Saints of the Roman Church are seldom very interesting to the general reader, and we expected little more...
The Otway's Child. By Hope Stanford. (Swan Sonnenschein and Co.)—That
The Spectatorit is quite harmless is the beat we can say of this book. The plot is difficult to follow, and when unravelled is not so original as to repay the trouble involved in discovering...
Protestants from France in their English Home. By S. W.
The SpectatorKershaw. (Sampson Low and Co.)—This is a praiseworthy record of the main facts relating to the settlement of the Huguenot refugees in England, and their relations to the Church...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorThe Heiress of Haredale. By Lady Virginia Sandars. (F. V. White and Co.) —This novel possesses considerable merit, in spite of certain blemishes in point of literary form. The...
As Yankees See Us; or, the Customs of the Cockneys.
The SpectatorBy Leander Richardson. (Griffith, Ferran, and Co.)—In a note prefixed to this book, the English editor observes that he does not suppose the author intends his countrymen to...
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The Jews, in Ancient, Mediteval, and Modern Times. By James
The SpectatorK. Roamer. (Fisher Unwin.)—To write, as Professor Hosmer has attempted to do, a history of the Jews which shall be so colour. less as to offend neither the Christian nor the...