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As soon as there was sufficient light our artillery, which
The Spectatorhas been handled magnificently throughout, opened fire and soon silenced the Boer batteries. The Dublin Fusiliers and the 60th Rifles were then ordered to assault the bill, and...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE war has begun in earnest, and we have to chronicle three distinct actions which future military historians will probably call mountain engagements, but which, in the ex-...
The second action of the war occurred at Elandslaagte on
The SpectatorSaturday. General White discovered that a force of Boers had broken the railway communication between Ladysmith and Glencoe, had seized the station at Elandslaagte, and had...
The third action was at kietfontein on Tuesday. General White
The Spectatorhad ordered General Yule, in command at Glencoe after General Symons was wounded, to join forces with him at Ladysmith, as Glencoe was not tenable by so small a body of men in...
The Continental Press is still hostile to Great Britain, but
The Spectatorits comments on the war in South Africa differ greatly in tone. The French papers, as a rule, affect still to see in the news evidence that the British will be beaten, which...
As we write, the military situation may be summed up
The Spectatoras follows. General White, with a force of about twelve thousand men of all arms, is holding a strong camp at Ladysmith. He is confronted by a large force of Boers, who may...
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The Government of Russia has not yet succeeded in extir-
The Spectatorpating the pecuniary corruption which is the dry-rot of its Services. Admiral Tyrtoff, commanding the Fleet in the Black Sea, has found it necessary to arrest and bring to trial...
We regret to record the death of Mr. Grant Allen,
The Spectatorthe well- known novelist, which occurred at his residence on Hind- head on Wednesday. He was a man about whom there will be many opinions. In our judgment, he wished through...
General de Galliffet advances rapidly to his end, the restoration
The Spectatorof discipline in the French Army. The recent decree by which he resumes control of promotion to all higher appointments, a prerogative surrendered by M. de Freycinet, restores...
The Times correspondent at Tokio endeavours to state in outline
The Spectatorthe policy of Japan towards China. She will not enter into alliance with the great but decaying Empire, but as China is her great market, and she fears States with a...
Three things strike us in this war as hopeful for
The Spectatorthe future, One is the readiness of the Reservists to respond to the call on them, a fact which will by and by enable us to keep a really considerable home army without...
Lord Curzon has issued an admirable General Order. A native
The Spectatorwoman was recently outraged by some European soldiers in Rangoon, and all efforts to obtain justice were frustrated. The officers, ashamed that such a stigma should be cast upon...
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The Mansion House Transvaal Refugees Fund had reached the sum
The Spectatorof 2145,000 on Thursday evening, while the Fund opened by the Lord Mayor for the benefit of the widows and orphans of officers and men killed or disabled in the war already...
Sir Edward Grey, in the course of a speech delivered
The Spectatoron Wednesday in support of Lord Rosebery's candidature for the Rectorship of Glasgow University, declared that as the result of careful study and earnest thought, his fixed...
Mr. Courtney, who followed Mr. Chamberlain, strongly denounced hini for
The Spectatorspeaking of President Kruger's crooked diplomacy. He declared that it was not a question of the ulti- matum, nor of the first shot, but as to whether our demands were of such a...
On Wednesday Mr. Chamberlain ended a very powerful speech with
The Spectatoran excellent criticism of Mr. Selma's letter to the Times, in which he (Mr. Mons) suggested that if we try to crush a Teutonic people we shall meet with the fate we met in...
We agree with what Sir Michael Hicks-Beach has actually done,
The Spectatorand we agree also that for a war like the present there must be no permanent increase of the Debt. If, however, this view is pressed so as to mean that we must while we are...
The Court which tried the officers in Berlin for professional
The Spectatorgambling has acquitted them, much against its will. It was proved that two hundred officers were attracted to the baccarat clnb, that 215,000 was won from them, and that a...
In the House of Commons on Monday Sir Michael Hicks-
The SpectatorBeach made his financial proposals in regard to meet- ing the 210,000,000 voted for war purposes. He calcu- lates that in the current year he will have an excess of 23,000,000...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE COURSE OF THE WAR. T HE most striking thing about the course of the war hitherto has not been so much the splendid bravery shown by our men, though that has been beyond all...
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THE WAR AND THE POWERS.
The SpectatorWU the Powers attempt to intervene in our quarrel - with the Boers ? That is a question which is being very widely asked just now. If we are to answer it shortly, our answer...
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THE NEXT CONCLAVE. T HE greatest actuaries say, we believe, that
The Spectatorthe ex- pectation of life at ninety is practically nil, or rather is an incalculable quantity. The candle so often goes out in men of that age, even when there is no breeze...
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IS AN EDUCATIONAL CONCORDAT POSSIBLE?
The SpectatorN O one who has given serious thought to the problems of elementary education in England can doubt that an immense amount of mischief results from the fact that the friends of...
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THE IRISH RHETORICIANS.
The SpectatorW E have no manner of sympathy with those who desire to take action against Irish Members and Irish Municipal Councillors on account of what they con- sider treasonable...
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THE MORALITY OF MONEYMAKING.
The SpectatorI N the collection of essays which Mr. Lecky has just given to the world under the title of "The Map of Life," essays which, if somewhat devoid of originality, are most...
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SOME TENDENCIES OF CONTEMPORARY FICTION.
The Spectator31 R. WILBUR CROSS, in his interesting volume on the evolution of English fiction (" The Development of the English Novel," Macmillan and Co., 6s.), devotes his concluding...
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WORK AND PLAY AT THE DAIRY SHOW.
The SpectatorW HEN the choice cattle of England are gathered at the Agricultural Hall, as they were last week, the.y enter for a beauty show as well as a competitive examination. There are...
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CORRESPONDENCE.
The SpectatorTHE LATE THEODORE BECK. [TO TIIE EDITOR OF TEE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—In these days when the expansion of the Empire is the theme of so much indiscriminate glorification, will you...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE PERIL OF THE ROMAN CHURCH. [TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.'] SIR, — May I comment briefly on your leading article, entitled "The Peril of the Roman Church"? The whole...
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LUCKY AND UNLUCKY MEN. [To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."]
The SpectatorSin,—You published an article in the Spectator of October 14th headed "Unlucky Men," in which the writer entirely mis- represented my meaning, and then proceeded to combat a...
THE BOER CAUSE.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF TILE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,—I see that Dr. Alexander, the eloquent Irish Primate, said at his Diocesan Synod tbat the Boer cause was "as bad a cause as ever men...
[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR:] Ste,—It all depends upon
The Spectatorbow one regards things ; luck, good or ill, is comparative. For instance, quite recently, after a few days' run of three hundred and odd miles on all manner of roads, riding up...
[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—I can vouch for
The Spectatorthe truth of the following. Two gentlemen—cousins—became members of the Art Union on the same day, and, like other members, participated in the yearly drawing, or lottery, for...
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[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.']
The SpectatorSIR,—On Wednesday, October 11th, the rainbow which Mr. B C. Durrant saw at Bushey was very well seen here by myself and many others at exactly three o'clock. The colours were...
THE SOLAR RAINBOW.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."], Sin,—It may interest some of your readers to know that th( rainbow seen by your correspondent (Spectator, October Kett on Wednesday...
STALKY AND CO.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,—I hope you may find space in your columns for a few remarks upon your review of "Stalky and Co." in the Spectator of Ostober 21st. There...
A CORRECTION.
The Spectator[TO..THE EDITOR 01' THE "SEECtATOR:] SIR, — In the Spectator of October 21st, p. 577, the following occurs :—" Has Miss \revers any authority for saying that Jeffreys watched...
MOTOR-CARS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—Your correspondent, "Pazienza," in the Spectator of October 21st is, I think, very much "off the rails" when he concludes that the...
(To THE EDITOR OF THE " qPECTATOR.")
The SpectatorSIR,—In the Spectator of October 21st is a letter signed B. C. Durrant, from Beshey, Herts, about the appear- ance of a rainbow on the 11th. On the 11th, about four o'clock, at...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorJOHN HOOKHAM FREREA FOR Mrs. Festing's admirably edited book we have but one word of reproach; it gives us a better vision of Frere's friends than of himself. Canning and Lady...
POETRY.
The SpectatorTRUMPET AND FLAG. THE last bugle's dying echoes falter down the narrow valley The doubtful battle tarried in so long : As turning from their headlong charge the scattered...
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THE LOG OF A SEA-W.A.IF.*
The Spectator• The Log of a Sea-Waif: being Recollections of the First Four Years of My Sea Life. By Frank T. Hallett, F.R.G.S. London : Smith, Elder, dc Co. [Se. ed.] WHAT would Mr. Bullen...
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JOHN MURRAY FORBES.*
The SpectatorWHEN Mr. Graham Wallas's Life of Francis Place appeared, most readers must have been astonished to find how important a part had been played by a Strand tailor, who never sat in...
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A HANDBOOK TO LIFE.* ONCE more—but, as she warns us,
The Spectatorfor the last time—Mrs. Earle takes her readers by the hand and leads them through her Surrey garden, talking to them the while of almost every- thing under the sun. It would,...
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NOVELS OF THE WEEK.*
The SpectatorTHE plot of Red Pottage, ingenious, original, and abounding in strong dramatic situations, would alone have secured for it the eager attention of critics and public alike. Hugh...
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The Apostle of the North. By Egerton R. Young. (Marshall
The SpectatorBrothers. 2s. 6d.)—This title (long ago given to other workers in the field of Christian labour) is applied to the Rev. James Evans, who laboured among the Indians in the...
The Life and Works of Charlotte Brontë and her Sisters.
The SpectatorVol. L. "Jane Eyre." (Smith, Elder, and Co. 6s.)—This is the first volume of an edition which is to be called the "Haworth Edition." With the Life, it is to consist of seven...
SOME BOOKS OF THE WEEK.
The Spectator[Under this heading we notice rush Books of the week as have not been reserved for review in other forms.] How Count Tolstoi Lives. By F. A. Sergyneeko. Translated from the...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorTHE VARTERLIES. The Edinburgh Review for the quarter is a decidedly good one, though we cannot think "Great Britain and South Africa" entirely fair. The writer underrates the...
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&Boor, AND Crass Boons.-In "Arnold's Science Series" (E. Arnold) we
The Spectatorhave Magnetism and Electricity, by J. Paley Yorke, "an Elementary Treatise for Junior Students" (3s. 6d.) - Newton's Laws of Motion, by P. G. Tait, MA. (A. and C. Black, is. 6d....
Book Prices Current, Vol. XIII. (Elliot Stock. 27s. 6d. net.)-This
The Spectatorvolume contains the sales for the season 1898.99, a season which may be described as distinctly successful from the commercial point of view. The number of lots was not so great...
▪ Tnaorkev. - The First Epistle to the Thessalonians. By the Rev.
The Spectatorw G. W. Garrod. (Macmillan and Co. 2s. 6d. net.)-Mr. Garrod begins with an account of St. Paul's proceedings at Thessalonica, his stay in the city, the success of his preaching,...
Autobiography of Dean Merivale. Edited by his Daughter, Judith Anne
The SpectatorMerivale. (E. Arnold. 16s.)-This book was printed for private circulation some eighteen months ago, and was then reviewed in the Spectator. It is needless to say more, now that...
Puerto Rico. By William Dinwiddie. (Harper and Brothers. 10s. 6d.)
The Spectator-Mr. Dinwiddie explains that he spent two months in the island after the Spanish evacuation, for the express purpose of taking stock of "our new possession." In this volume he...
A Sketch of John Winthrop the Younger, 1606 - 1676. By Thomas
The SpectatorFranklin Waters. (Historical Society, Ipswich, Mass.)-John Winthrop the Younger, eldest son of a more famous father, came out to New England in 1631. Somewhat more than a year...