Page 1
The almost total absence of detailed information from Con- stantinople
The Spectatorin the English papers is very noteworthy. We are told that the situation there is very serious. The grecit Pashas are fighting each other, being virtually ranged in two parties,...
The Government has sprung a new surprise upon the House
The Spectatorof Commons. At the very end of Wednesday's debate on the O'Conor Don's Irish University Bill, after the Attorney-General for Ireland had spoken against the Bill on behalf of...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The Spectator11H Powers have shown themselves more determined, and I E smail Pasha more timorous, than we expected. The Khedive refused at first to abdicate, and placed himself in the hands...
The unfinished debate of Wednesday on the O'Conor Don's Bill
The Spectatorhad, nevertheless, some remarkable features. Dr. Playfair, in a curiously candid and curiously prejudiced speech, maintained that Ireland needs more Universities; that the...
The intelligence was received in Egypt by telegraph on the
The Spectatorsame day, and Tewfik was quietly proclaimed, and received the 'Consular representatives. Ismail Pasha receives an annuity from Egypt of 250,000 a year, and from his son one of...
Page 2
On Thursday night there was a curious scene in the
The SpectatorHouse of Commons, in which nearly everybody except Lord Hartington put himself in the wrong. Mr. Lowther put himself in the wrong by the flippancy and bad tone of his answer to...
7 - M. Rouher, in his long conversata with the correspondent
The Spectatorof the Gaulois, has apparently intinik l d that Prince Jerome must now be regarded as the represent,i ve of the Napoleonic tradition, unless he himself abdicates thqeadership ;...
No further trustworthy details of the death of the Prince
The SpectatorImperial have been received, except that it is certain he was attached to General Newdigate's column, and not to General, now Sir Evelyn, Wood's. On Monday, however, the Duke of...
The Cobden Club held its annual dinner on Saturday, with
The SpectatorLord Northbrook in the chair. Lord Northbrook has been bitterly attacked for not sticking to the common-places of Free- trade, instead of venturing to indicate what Cobden, had...
French parties have been vying with each other in trying
The Spectatorto prove that the results of Prince Louis's death will eventually promote their own interests. Even the Im- perialists have ventured to maintain that the startling death of...
The detailed news from South Africa down to May 30th
The Spectatoris of little interest or importance. Lord Chelms- ford was still organising the advance on Ulundi, which was to commence on June 2nd, if he considered his trans- port and...
Major Serpa Pinto, the Portuguese traveller in Africa who recently
The Spectatorturned up at Durban, has been lecturing on his travels at Lisbon. In his address, which is translated in the Standard, he testifies distinctly to the existence of a white race...
Page 3
Mr. George M. Higginson, who says he has lived thirty-six
The Spectatoryears in Chicago, and has engaged in a great variety of businesses, sends a letter to the Times on the prosperity of Illinois, and its chief city, Chicago. The area of Illinois...
Professor Odling, in his long correspondence in the Times with
The SpectatorCanon Liddon on the new B.N.S. (Bachelor of Natural Science) Degree at Oxford, made good, we think, one of his points, though he did not succeed in proving that there should be...
Yesterday week Sir Charles Dilke, in moving for papers on
The SpectatorCyprus, made a very telling speech on the inaccuracy of the information given by the Government as to the state of Cyprus, and the faults of the island administration itself....
Lord Dunraven on Friday week made another attempt to induce
The Spectatorthe House of Lords to allow more time for its debates, and so give the younger Peers a chance of intervening. The Lords will dine at eight, and do not care to return, and he...
Mr. Henry A. Severn, of Herne Hill, has invented a
The Spectatorvery clever little instrument, called a tell-tale compass, by which the captain or master of a ship, when down in his cabin, may know whether or not the ship is sailing her...
Mr. Gladstone's letter to Principal Rainy, explaining his position in
The Spectatorrelation to the Disestablishment of the Scotch Church, is a very prudent one. No one, however ingenious, would be able to elicit from it more than has long been known concerning...
We would call attention to the remarkable account of an
The Spectatorinterview with Prince Vogorides, Governor-General of East Roumelia, which appears in our correspondence columns. We can vouch for the writer's good-faith, and the accuracy of...
Page 4
THE PROSPECTS OF FRENCH IMPERIALISM.
The SpectatorI T is always a mistake to suppose that a great historical party can be literally extinguished by a merely external blow. If the death of the young Prince Louis proves to be the...
TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorEGYPT. T HE Government has still to explain what "British in- terest" has induced it to depart from the old and well- understood policy of Great Britain in Egypt. Such an...
Page 6
THE GOVERNMENT AND THE IRISH.
The SpectatorT M, extraordinary avowal made by the Government, at so late a moment in the debate of Wednesday afternoon, that, after all, they were prepared to produce an Irish Uni- versity...
THE RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE FATE OF PRINCE NAPOLEON.
The SpectatorTT is quite natural, and rather laudable, that the English people should be annoyed, as well as grieved, at the unhappy fate of the Prince Imperial. He was in a sense the guest...
Page 7
THE POSSIBLE REVOLUTION IN AGRICULTURE.
The SpectatorW E are not generally much interested in accounts of the "marvellous growth" of western cities in America, or of northern cities in England. The new "cities" in the Union are...
Page 9
THE PRIDE OF GOSSIP.
The SpectatorW E hear a good deal, at times, of the pride of intellect ; but the pride of intellect, which is no doubt a real enough state of mental passion, is a minute element in civilised...
THE CONSTITUTIONAL DIFFICULTY IN VICTORIA.
The SpectatorT HE despatch in which the Secretary of State for the Colonies conveys to the Governor of Victoria the con- clusion at which the Home Government have arrived in regard to the...
Page 11
THE FUTURE OF SHOPKEEPING.
The SpectatorT HE public laughs at the evidence which the tradesmen are giving before the Committee of Inquiry into the Store system, and it must be owned not without some reason. There is...
Page 12
THE USE OF STIMULANTS IN THE TREATMENT OF THE SICK
The SpectatorPOOR. A N interesting and a very instructive Report has lately been presented to the Board of Guardians of St. George's Union, London, by the medical officer of the Infirmary,...
CORRESPONDENCE.
The SpectatorPRINCE VOGORIDES AND THE PORTE. maim A CORSESPONDZAT.3 Philippopolis, June- 12th, 1879. CONSIDERABLE excitement was caused the other day in Philip- popolis by news, which spread...
Page 14
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE UNIVERSITY OF ST. PATRICK. [TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sra,âIn your impression of June 21st, Mr. Bence Jones com- ments on my letter in your preceding...
Page 15
AGRARIANISM IN IRELAND.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPBOTATOR.1 SIR,âYour very instructive article of June 14th thus concludes : â" It is in peasant-proprietors, and not in dragoons, that we must seek...
LORD DALHOUSIE AND OUDH.
The Spectator(TO ma EDITOR OF THE " SPROTATOR.1 SIR,âIn a paragraph of your "Topics of the Day," as an ex- treme instance of the implicit obedience of the Viceroys of India to an order...
"LAISSER-FAIRE" FOR RELIGIOUS INDIFFERENCE. To THE EDITOR OF THE "
The SpectatorEtrEgreFoR.1 Sur,âIn your article on "Religious Indifference in East London," you ask how it is that the population in those parts never show any appetite for such a thing...
Page 16
THE IRISH EDUCATION BILL.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF TES " SPECTATOR-1 SIR,âCan nothing be done to strengthen the hands of Mr. Forster and Mr. Leatham, and to support their statesman- like and truly liberal...
POETRY.
The SpectatorMy heart in youth leaped high ; When poets sang of Love's young dream, What dreams of Love had I! 'Tis over now, the fever-heat, 'Tis past, the passion's hour; My feet have...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorAMBROSIUS STUB.* THERE is nothing more characteristic of our generation than the zeal with which it goes about to resuscitate forgotten worthies. Whether among poets or...
Page 17
A BIOGRAPHY OF BISHOP SELWYN.* IT would seem that there
The Spectatorhas been a considerable demand for this book. The fact may be taken as a proof that the public are very anxious to have a good biography of so emphatically "noble a fellow" as...
Page 18
IN TENTS EY THE TRANSVAAL.*
The SpectatorWERE it not for the sad contrast. with the present time at the seat of war in Africa which this book is continually suggesting, it would have given us unmixed pleasure. We have...
Page 20
MR. DYER'S "ENGLISH FOLK-LORE."*
The SpectatorTHAT acknowledged father of the English novel, Fielding, writing in the middle of the last century, Once glanced aside to bestow a sharp, contemptuous cut on, to quote his own...
Page 21
TRAVELS IN KHORASSAN.*
The SpectatorCOLONEL MAcGmuoa's original intention was to ride through Afghanistan to Herat and Meshed, and then to pass on to the Caspian, at Astrabad. The Government of India, however,...
Page 22
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorPOETELY.-21. Century of Emblems. By G. S. Cautley. (Macmillan and Co.) â This quiet book, with its Queen-Anne garb and its lovely little tail-pieces, is just the thing to lay...
Nortsrs.âThe House of Lys; One Book of its History. By
The SpectatorMajor. General W. G. Hawley. 2 vols. (Blackwood.)âCaptain du Lys meets a maiden of low degree, and receives an impression which, if not actually that which 18 commonly...
Page 23
Seeking for Light : Sermons. By the Rev. Alexander H.
The SpectatorCrattfurd. (C. Kegan Paul and Co.)âMr. Craufurd belongs to the liberal section of Christian thinkers, and his book is a not unwelcome addition to the theological literature of...
Fabellce Mostellario , . (Hamilton and Adams.)âHere we have some ghost storiesâ"
The SpectatorDevonshire and Wiltshire stories," as the title-page describes themâtold in halting verse (but made to halt, it would seem, with a purpose), and with just that mixture of the...
Schools for Girls, and Colleges for Women. By Charles Eyre
The SpectatorPascoe. (Hardwicke and Begue.)âMr. Pascoe gives us, we may venture to say, all the available information which is to be got on the subject of his book. We have a list of...
there preserved." He "purposes to begin at the beginning, to
The Spectatorinquire, from the record before us, into what God taught the first man,âto see, if we can, the form and extent of the earliest revela- tion Then, on and on, through the...
A Benedictine of the Sixteenth Century (Blosius). By Georges de
The SpectatorBlois. Translated by Lady Levet. (Burns and Oates.)âThis is the history of one of those saintly men, earnest and devout, yet humble and self-sacrificing, to whom the Church of...
Page 24
The Amateur Pottery and Glass-Painter. By E. Campbell Hancock. (Chapman
The Spectatorand Hall, London ; Hancock and Son, Worcester.)âSeveral works have lately been published on china-painting, but we have not seen any that will be as useful to the amateur...
Our Established Church, by the Rev. Morris Fuller, M.A. (Pickering)
The Spectator; England's Inheritance in her Church, by the Rev. William Webb, B.A. (Seeleys.)âIn these two volumes we have pretty nearly every argument that can be advanced in favour of an...
A Handy Manual of German Literature. By M. F. Reid.
The Spectator(Black- wood and Sons.) âThis book is intended, we presume, for a cram-book, and it is quite uninteresting enough to be ranked as one. In point of accuracy, however, it cannot...
The Canon of the Bible : its Formation, History, and
The SpectatorFluctuations. By Samuel Davidson, D.D. (C. Began Paul and Co.)âDr. Davidson puts into a brief and convenient form his conclusions about the Canon. The plan of the book...
contains no less than 35,000 cab-fares, and gives the body-colours
The Spectatorof the omnibuses that run on the various routes,âinformation of great value to foreigners, visitors from the country, and short-sighted persons.
Beeton's Law - Book : Everybody's Lawyer. Revised and edited by a
The SpectatorBarrister. (Ward, Lock, and Co.)âThis new edition of a useful handbook contains nearly 500 statements and explanations of the law, including new sections devoted to the...
(Murray.)âThe third volume is entitled "Historical and Speculative," the earliest
The Spectatoressay it contains being on "The Theses of Erastus and the Scottish Establishment," and the latest, "The Sixteenth Century Arraigned before the Nineteenth," reprinted from the...