28 MAY 1898

Page 1

NEWS OF THE WEEK • T HE preparations for Mr. Gladstone's

The Spectator

funeral have so far gone forward without a hitch. The body was sent by rail from Hawarden on the night of Wednesday, and lay in state in Westminster Hall on Thursday and Friday....

Page 4

THE WAR. T HE haze which had settled down upon the

The Spectator

IVL>,r has lifted a little. Unless all the accounts received this week are false—and they include, among other things, a vote of thanks to Admiral Cervera passed by the Cortes...

TOPICS OF THE DAY.

The Spectator

MR. GLADSTONE'S INFLUENCE ON ENGLISH LIFE. T HE whole country is honouring Mr. Gladstone to-day not merely as a great statesman and a great ruler and law-maker, but also as a...

Page 5

AMERICAN ARMAMENTS. T HE Continent is making a mistake as to

The Spectator

the effect which will be produced in the United States by the " slowness " of the present war. Politicians there evidently calculate that the Americans will grow weary of...

Page 6

FRANCE AND SPAIN.

The Spectator

E NGLISHMEN who do not pay special attention to foreign affairs are inclined to ask how it is that public opinion in France is so deeply moved over the Spanish war, and why the...

Page 7

M. MELINE'S DEFEAT.

The Spectator

T HE total result of the French elections, which was undetermined when we wrote a fortnight ago owing to the vexatious and illogical system of second ballots, proves to be most...

Page 8

THE LESSON OF WHITSUNTIDE.

The Spectator

T HE approach of Whitsuntide and the adjournment of Parliament for the consequent Recess bring with them the customary comparisons between the legislative work done and the...

Page 9

MR. GLADSTONE'S FUNERAL.

The Spectator

M R. GLADSTONE'S family have, we think, been in the right in submitting to the general desire that he should have a public funeral. Even if he had left explicit instructions...

Page 10

THE DISLIKE FOR ALIENS.

The Spectator

T HE brief conversation in the House of Lords on the question of foreign immigration, and the attitude taken up by Lord Salisbury, suggest the question of the general hostility...

Page 11

ANIMAL ACCLIMATISATION AT WOBURN ABBEY.

The Spectator

D URING the last four years the Duke of Bedford has carried out a scheme of animal acclimatisation in the park at Woburn Abbey on a scale never before attempted in this country....

Page 12

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.

The Spectator

A MEMORIAL TO MR. GLADSTONE. [TO THE EDITOR OF THZ SPECTATOIC.J Sin,—If it should be the desire of the English people to raise some memorial to Mr. Gladstone besides that...

Page 13

RUSSIA AND ENGLAND.

The Spectator

[TO Tug EDITOR Or THZ " SYRCIATOR.1 SIR,—You are quite right as to the folly of going to war with Russia, on every ground,—and certainly for trade. Oar trade with Russia for...

DEAN CHURCH'S VILLAGE SERMONS.

The Spectator

[To THR EDITOR 07 TIM " SPECTATOR:1 Sin.—You recommended Dean Church's sermons in the Spectator of May 14th as models for the village preacher. May I ask, not captiously,...

ANCIENT VINEYARDS IN ENGLAND.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR Or Tug " SFECTATOR." . ] Srn,—Concerning vineyards in England, .1 send you the following extract from "A Treatise of Fruit-Trees," by R. A. Austen, the third...

FLOWERS FOR FRIEDENHEIDE.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,—The appeal for "Flowers for Friedenheim " that you kindly inserted in the Spectator of April 2nd has brought so generous a response that...

WHEN WAR BREAKS OUT.

The Spectator

[TO THR EDITOR OF THR " SPECTATOR."' SIR,—In regard to your criticisms in your very kind notice, in the Spectator of May 21st, of "When War Breaks Out," may we point out certain...

Page 14

THE DEBATEABLE LAND.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR:] SIR,—My attention has been drawn to the fact that in a review of my book, "The Debateable Land," published in the Spectator of May 14th, the...

A PLEA FOR THE SHARK.

The Spectator

To TEE EDITOR Or THE "SPECTATOR."] your article in the Spectator of May 14th relative to sharks you state that sharks have never been known to jump out of the sea. Well, it may...

THE FLORIDA VELVET BEAN.

The Spectator

me THE EDITOR Or THE “ SPECTATOR:9 SIR, — A most interesting letter on this subject from Captain. E. A. Wilson appeared in the Spectator of May 14th. But this letter leaves a...

"BULLS."

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,—We also in Italy produce a fine breed of "bulls.' Here is an example. My servant was sent the other day to bespeak an early cab for the...

THE LANGUAGE OF ROMAN BRITAIN.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OF THE “ SPECTATOR:] Sin,—Your correspondent "n," in his letter on "The Stupider Race" in the Spectator of May 21st, asserts obiter that Latin prevailed in Gaul,...

THE REAL JUDGE JEFFREYS.

The Spectator

[To THE ED/TOZ OF TEM " SPECTATOR:] Sliti — Your reviewer, in the course of his very interesting remarks on the real Judge Jeffreys in the Spectator of May 21st, admits that he...

Page 15

POETRY.

The Spectator

HEREAFTER. WHAT, you saw Gladstone ? men will sometime ask ; Had he that look, as if he, straining, saw A tiger creeping on an innocent child, And none to help it; or a...

THE AID GRANT.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR 01 THE " SPECTATOR."] Stn,—The circular recently issued by the Education Depart- ment for the instruction of the Associations of Voluntary Schools is putting the...

BOOKS.

The Spectator

TWO BOOKS ON DANTE.* THERE is abundant evidence of the increasing study of Dante in England and America, a fact on which we may well congratulate English-speaking peoples, who...

Page 16

IRISH TRAITS AND CONFIDENCES.*

The Spectator

Ix is not every Irish chronicler who can truly claim to possess a knowledge of the inner life of the Irish people. Whether Miss Lawless is reanimating the dry bones of • Traits...

Page 17

FROM TONQUIN TO INDIA,

The Spectator

RECENT events give an interest to Prince Henry's book,_ which, to tell the truth, it somewhat needed. The stipula- tion made by our Government that, in return for the loan of...

Page 18

AN AMERICAN BOOK ABOUT SICILY.* Mn. PATON'S book about Sicily

The Spectator

almost overpowers us by the manysidedness of its information and the multitude of associations it touches. The writer confesses very frankly in his preface and his early...

Page 20

MR. ARNOLD-FORSTER AS HISTORIAN.*

The Spectator

IT is not surprising that Mr. Arnold-Forster should have been drawn to employ his undoubted gifts for lucid exposition and narrative in the production of a short popular History...

Page 21

RECENT NOVELS.*

The Spectator

THE dreariness of most modern dreary novels is gratuitous. Now and again, however, one encounters a book like S cider- znann's _Regina; or, The Sims of the Fathers, in which the...

Page 22

CURRENT LITERATURE.

The Spectator

Paul Kruger. By F. Reginald Statham. (T. Fisher Unwin. Is. 6d.)—This is a mere piece of book-making, probably in- tended as a counterblast to the extravagant "Appreciation of...

Page 23

Travels in British East Africa, Zanzibar, and Pemba. By W.

The Spectator

W. A. Fitzgerald. (Chapman and Hall. 28s.)—Mr. Fitzgerald here records, in a rather bulky volume, the results of two years' exploration of the British East African coast-line,...

Three Years in Savage Africa. By Lionel Decle. (Methuen and

The Spectator

Co. 21s.)—Whatever may be the value from a scientific point of view of this record of wanderings in South Africa, there can be no doubt whatever as to its popular merits. Mr....

Studies in Little - Known Subjects. By C. E. Plumptre. (Swan Sonnenschein

The Spectator

and Co.)—There is a gentle and ingenue simplicity about these essays that almost disarms criticism. But with the burden of literary overproduction now upon us, some under-...

Lines from Mit Log - Books. By Admiral the Right Hon. Sir

The Spectator

John Dalrymple Hay, Bart. (David Douglas, Edinburgh. 18s.)— The sixty years which have passed since Admiral Sir John Hay joined his first ship in 1834 have been fraught with...

Page 24

Private Bill Procedure. By Cyril Dodd, Q.C., and H. W.

The Spectator

W. Wilberforce. (Eyre and Spottiswoode. 75. 6d.)—The authors of this little work have aimed at providing for the practitioner, within the limits of a book of moderate size, such...

The Poetical Works of Jean Ingelow. With a Portrait. (Long-

The Spectator

mans and Co. 7s. 6d.)—" What think you of Jean Ingelow, the wonderful poet ?" Christina Rossetti wrote in 1863, and it was with something like wonder that her earliest "Poems,"...

Thirty Years of American Finance, 1865-1896. By Alexander Dana Noyes.

The Spectator

(G. P. Putnam's Sons )—This book is what it pro- fesses to be, a careful account, without abstract economic dis- cussion, of the series of financial events of the period chosen....

A Sketch of the Natural History (Vertebrates) of the British

The Spectator

islands. By F. G. Aflalo. (William Blackwood and Sons.)—Zoology is a progressive science, and even in the British fauna new discoveries are for ever being made and the results...

The Bible References of John Ruskin. By Mary and Ellen

The Spectator

Gibbs. (George Allen.)—" To my early knowledge of the Bible," says Ruskin, "I owe the best part of my taste in literature, and the most precious, an d, on the whole, the one...

The Free Trade Movement. By G. Armitage Smith, M.A. "

The Spectator

Vic- torian Era Series." (Blackie and Son.)—To the question whether the practice of Free-trade is destined to be a permanent feature of British policy we believe there can be...

Harry Druidale, Fisherman from Manzland to England. By Henry Cadman.

The Spectator

(Macmillan and Co. 8s. 6d. net.)—Brought up on the banks of the river Neb, in the Isle of Man, Harry Druidale became an ardent angler from his earliest youth, and of the various...

The Story of a Red Deer. By the Hon. J.

The Spectator

W. Fortescue. (Macmillan and Co.)—We opened this book with rather a. prejudice against stories in which animals are made to talk like human beings, and were most agreeably...

Page 25

Thirty-nine Tears in the Army. By Sir Charles Gordon. (

The Spectator

Swan, Sonnensehein and Co. 12s.)—Of the Indian Mutiny most readers are daily exclaiming, " Ohe, jam satis !" and even of the siege and capitulation of Paris Sir Charles Gordon...

A Middy's Recollections, 1853-1860. By Rear-Admiral the Hon. Victor A.

The Spectator

Montagu. (I. and C. Black.)—This is a well-got-up volume, and the illustrations, giving views of the picturesque warships of a day long past, are decidedly interesting. Not loss...

Sunny Memories of an Indian Winter. By Sara H. Dunn.

The Spectator

(W. Scott.)—Mrs. Dunn has collected into a book a series of articles contributed to magazines, descriptive of the impressions made upon her by Indian life and scenery. Read...

Cheques, and (Post - Office Orders 369 Strand) payable to "John Baker."

The Spectator

To ensure insertion. Advertisements should reach the Publishing Office not

The Spectator

later than the first post on Friday. [*„,* AU books reviewed have the published price attached, so far as can be ascertained by us. This applies only to books issued above 6s....

Applications for Copies of the SPECTATOR, and Communications upon matters

The Spectator

of business, should NOT be addressed to the EDITOR, but to the PUBLISHER, 1 Wellington Street, Strand, W.C.

Page 26

PUBLICATIONS OF THE WEEK.

The Spectator

Adrienne : a Romance of rreneh Life, by Rita, or 8vo (Hutchinson) 6/0 5: Bailey (L. H.). The Pruning Book, 12mo (Macmillan) 0 Bailie (W.). Rex Holum. Cr 8vo (Bell) 6/0 Hail...

Page 28

NOTICE.—The INDEX to the SPECTATOR is published half. yearly, from

The Spectator

January to June, and from July to December, on the third Saturday in January and July. Cloth Cases for the Half- yearly Volumes may be obtained through any Bookseller or...

Page 30

NOTICE. —In future thelypun to the" Sinscraroa" will be published

The Spectator

half-yearly, instead of yearly from January to JIMMI. and from July to December), on the third Saturday an January and July. Cloth Cases for I e lintf-ysarle Volumes may be...