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No step whatever has yet been taken towards the "
The Spectatorreform " of Asia Minor. We are told every week that Sir Austen Layard has a "scheme," and that it is approved by Safvet Pasha, who always approves everything in words, but that...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorA CCORDING to telegrams of September 26th from Calcutta, published in the Times and Telegraph, the Government of India is not about to act so rapidly as the telegrams referred...
As we expected, Shere Ali has determined to fight, rather
The Spectatorthan give up his independence. The necessity of a decision before the winter seems to have hurried Lord Lytton, and on September 21st, Sir Neville Chamberlain, with an immense...
In spite of all reports to the contrary, the Russians
The Spectatorhave steadily continued the evacuation of their positions near Con- stantinople. The lines of San Stefano have been occupied by the Turks. Much of the apparent delay was caused...
The advocates of the Government policy say that Lord Lytton
The Spectatoris quite ready. In that case, he must have intended war from the first, and has been playing a comedy, but we believe this is only an after-thought. If he had intended war, he...
The British Government has, of course, under the circum- stances
The Spectatorwhich its folly and panic dread of Russia have produced, only two alternatives. It can recall Lord Lytton, and treat the whole affair as a blunder, or it can invade Afghanistan...
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Serious disturbances are expected in Armenia. The Armenians, who hoped
The Spectatorthat Russia would conquer them, have for some weeks been flying into Russian territory ; while those who remain are organising insurrections, and making alliances with...
Lord Cairns has been created an Earl, not, it is
The Spectatorunderstood, for work as Lord Chancellor, but for services rendered to the State as a Cabinet Minister. He has been a most faithful follower of the Premier, has found legal...
Sir E. Hornby has addressed a long letter to the
The SpectatorTimes on Turkish Bonds and the means of providing for them. He thinks that Turkey will not, after the war, have more than 122,000,000 a year of revenue ;âwill she have half...
The German Ultramontanes are voting with the Liberals against the
The SpectatorSocialist Bill, and the Committee of twenty-one is whittling down its provisions, until it will only enable the authorities to sup- press Socialist meetings, to shut Socialist...
The Bosnian rebellion would seem to have collapsed. The Austrian
The SpectatorGenerals, though sorely hampered by difficulties of commissariat and locomotion, drove their enemies from the valleys, stormed Bielina, and finally occupied Zwornik, their last...
The Truro election terminated on Thursday in the return of
The Spectatorthe Tory candidate, but the result is, nevertheless, very un- pleasant to the Tories. At the last election Sir F. M. Williams was returned by 795 votes, against 565 given to the...
The Chinese conquest of Kashgar, which, though little noticed in
The SpectatorEurope, may hereafter prove of high importance to Asia by bringing China and Russia into conflict, has been of the most thorough kind. According to the Shanghai correspondent of...
The Ministry never weary of their new imperial cry. Sir
The SpectatorM. Hicks-Beach made a speech at Chipping Norton on Tuesday, and his two points were that the House of Commons talked too muchâ which may be true, but is hard on the House, as...
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The Paris correspondent of the Times repeats his statement that
The SpectatorPrince Bismarck did two months ago personally assure him that the great " scare " of 1875, when it was believed by all Europe that Germany was threatening France once more, was...
President Hayea's recent speech on finance, delivered in Minne- sota
The Spectatoron September 5th, contains some good news, both for English holders of American bonds and for all other friends of America. The President declares that in August, 1865, the Debt...
Lord Lorne, the new Viceroy of Canada, made his farewell
The Spectatorspeech to his late constituents at Inverary on Tuesday. It was not a very good one. The Marquis praised the voters for not asking him to come and address them every year or...
The Abbe Bougaud, Vicar-General of Orleans, declares, in a pamphlet
The Spectatoron the subject, that so far from France being over- supplied with priests, as M. Gambetta in his recent speech assumes, the want of priests is a great danger to the Church. The...
The daily newspapers of the country are threatened with a
The Spectatornew and serious danger. An Act was passed last Session, when Parliament was in a state of imbecility on account of foreign affairs, making it a penal offence for any journal to...
Dr. Schliemann has recently been engaged in exploring the Island
The Spectatorof Ithaca, the land of the much-travelled Ulysses. In a letter to the Times he gives the results at which he has arrived. Beginning at the northern end, he found that the valley...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE THIRD AFGHAN WAR. T HIS Afghan business is a very bad business. Lord Lytton, in the foolish feverishness of his desire for action, and Lord Beaconsfield, in his eagerness...
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THE LATEST ACCOUNTS FROM SIMLA.
The SpectatorTT is the duty of a journalist to say what he thinks, even if I he stands alone, or if inconsiderate men deem his saying unpatriotic, and we think there is serious danger of a...
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M. GAMBETTA AND THE PRIESTHOOD.
The SpectatorI T is very difficult even for Protestants to comprehend the influence which induced M. Gambetta to make his recent attack upon the Catholic priesthood of France, an attack...
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EARL CAIRNS. B ARON CAIRNS has been made an Earl, and
The Spectatorthe Times, with the singular want of tact which sometimes marks its management, thinks it necessary to justify the promotion. The Lord Chancellor, it says, defended the...
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LORD CARNARVON AT TEVERSALL. L ORD CARNARVON is a speaker who
The Spectatorstudies his own mind, and can explain the principles which have governed his conduct. On Saturday, at Teversall, he did more ; he explained to the party which he once helped to...
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THE SPIRITUALITY AND THE TEMPORALITY AT ROME. T HE interesting letter
The Spectatorfrom Rome which appeared in the Times of Tuesday is made less intelligible than it might be by a confusion in the writer's mind, or at all events, in his language, between...
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THE REMUNERATION OF JOCKEYS.
The SpectatorA N appeal has recently been made by a sporting news- paper for increased remuneration to Jockeys, on the ground that the fees to be paid to them were fixed many years ago, when...
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THE SORROWS OF THE SLOW.
The SpectatorI S there any comfort to be found for those people who are slow in all they think, say, or do, and who are painfully conscious of their own slowness? They need consolation, if...
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CALCULATING BOYS.
The SpectatorM R. GEORGE BIDDER, once well known to all the world as "the Devonshire Calculating Boy," died the other day at a ripe age. He had the good-sense, after delighting the " ground-...
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MR. SYMONDS'S ACCURACY.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,âThere is a legend in the apocryphal Gospel of Mary accord- ing to which Joseph was chosen for Mary's husband because his rod budded...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorARMENIA. [TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.") SIR,âA telegram from Constantinople, dated September 22nd, has appeared in the leading daily journals announcing that " Safvet...
PROTECTION IN CANADA.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,âIn your paper of September 21st, you say that if the Canadians "put on duties as heavy as those of the Union, they may obtain...
THE TRUE DEFENCE OF TRIAL BY JURY.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,âThere is one aspect of Trial by Jury that is left out of view in your interesting article in last week's Spectator, and that is, its...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorTHE LUSIADS OF CAMOENS.* THE author of this new translation of the Lusiadsâor as English- men prefer to say (it would seem erroneously) the Lusiadâof Camoens, is a sanguine...
MR. BROOKE LAMBERT'S RESIGNATION.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SesersroR.1 SIR,âThe argument of a " Rationalist "may be a very good argu- ment in favour of Diaestablishment ; it is hardly an argument in favour of...
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THE BREAKING OF THE STORM.'
The SpectatorTHERE is in German fiction one peculiarity which, as far as we are aware, is wholly confined to the works of that school,âwe mean a plain directness of statement and...
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MR. JOSEPH COOK'S LECTURES ON TRAN- SCENDENTALISM.* ⢠Boston Monday
The SpectatorLestures : Transcendentalism, with Preludes on Current Events. By Joseph Cook. Glasgow : Bryce and Son. 1878. THESE lectures form a part of the series delivered in Boston under...
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JOHN ORLEBAR, CLIC.*
The SpectatorEr may sound paradoxical, but we believe it to be the fact that those who hoped for much future enjoyment from the author of Culmshire Folk, (and few things are more enjoyable...
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Ills Last Stake. By Shirley Smith. 3 vols. (Hurst and
The SpectatorBlackett.) âThe principal character in this book is a man in whom virtue "was not the inherent love of good for its own sake, but simply a condition of thought and life,...
Orationes Creweiance. A Ricardo Michell, S.T.P. (Parker.)âWe are much obliged
The Spectatorto the filial piety which suggested to Mr. E. B. Michell the idea of giving to the world the Creweian orations of his father, speeches which at the time of their delivery the...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorEnglish Echoes of German Song. Edited by N. D'Anvers. (Marcus Ward and Co.)âThe simplicity of German poetry is often apt to look like homeliness, in translation, and the...
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India and her Neighbours. By W. P. Andrew. (W. H.
The SpectatorAllen and Co.)âThis volume contains as much information about India as could conveniently be put within a compass which is small rather in relation to the magnitude of the...
Mr. Hodges sends us Mr. Gladstone's paper on England's Mission
The Spectatorwhich appeared in the September number of the Nineteenth Century, and which has been reprinted, and published as the first of a series of penny pamphlets, under the title of...
Dr. John T. White has added to his very useful
The Spectatorseries of "Grammar- School Texts," The Acts of the Apostles, an edition of the Greek, with a vocabulary, which, as a matter of fact, contains much of the informa- tion which is...
The Royal Guide to the London Charities (Hardwicke and Bogue)
The Spectatorhas now reached its sixteenth annual publication. In his preface, Mr. Herbert Fry shows that "the enormous sums contributed to the numerous funds connected with the War in the...
Wood Anemone. By Mrs. Randolph. 8 vols. (Hurst and Blackett.)
The SpectatorâAny reader who likes to hear about the sayings and doings of titled personages will find full satisfaction of his likings in this volume, but we cannot encourage him to look...