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In the meeting of the proprietors of the Freeman's Journal,
The Spectatoron Thursday, the friends of Mr. Parnell received another defeat, and probably the most disastrous defeat they have yet met with. Mr. E. D. Gray proposed a vote of censure on the...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorO N Tuesday, at a banquet at Merseburg, in Saxony, the German Emperor delivered a characteristic speech. It was, however, somewhat more gloomy than his usual harangues, and even...
M. de Blowitz, telegraphing on Monday night. declared that he
The Spectatorhad received information of what passed at Cronstadt from a very trustworthy source. According to this information, Admiral Gervais carried with him a document, drawn up by...
Archbishop Walsh has addressed a letter to the National Press
The Spectatorin support of those shareholders in the Freeman's Journal who are endeavouring to snatch the paper out of the hands of Mr. Parnell's allies. He dilates on the great injury to...
The Lewisham election resulted in a heavy majority for the
The SpectatorUnionists, though not so heavy a majority as on the light poll in 1886, when Lord Lewisham beat Mr. Offor, the Glad- stonian, by 2,151,—the poll, however, being only one of...
A great battle went on between General Balmaceda's troops and
The Spectatorthose of the Congreosist party, close to Valparaiso, on the 24th, 25th, and 26th of August ; but it is not as yet easy to make out what has been the result, or whether, indeed,...
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Mr. Stansfeld made a speech at Sydenham to the electors
The Spectatorof Lewisham on Monday. Of his conception of Irish Home- rule, on which we have commented to our readers in another column, we need only say here that, while it goes a long way...
The death of General Whichcote, which took place on Wednesday,
The Spectatordeprives the country of one of the very few re- maining officers who fought at Waterloo. When the General went to Belgium, he was, however, already a veteran, for he had served...
The visit of the French fleet to Portsmouth, and the
The Spectatorreview,, proved a great success, the officers being delighted with their reception by the Queen at Osborne, and with the ball and other festivities on land, and the men with the...
The inquiry into the charges against Canadian officials is drawing
The Spectatorto a close, the past week having been occupied with the concluding speeches of counsel. We are glad to note that the Government intends to take serious action in the matter. On...
The Johannesburg Star professes to report Lord Randolph Churchill's opinion
The Spectatorthat Mr. Gladstone will win the General Election, and that Lord- Salisbury is so much of a recluse that he knows no more of the drift of British opinion than Lord Randolph...
The Postmaster-General, Mr. Raikes, died on Monday at his country
The Spectatorhouse, Llwynegrin, Flintahire, of inflammation of the brain, due to overwork. He was a very clear-headed and firm, if not a very popular, member of the Government, and our...
We trust the University of Cambridge will make an effort
The Spectatorto supply Mr. Raikes's place by a, Conservative of rather more specially academical reputation than the eminent man who is just dead. If the Universities are to justify their...
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On Wednesday, Mr. Bennett read an interesting paper to the
The SpectatorBritish Association on an Electrical Parcel Exchange. His notion is that the blocking .of City thoroughfares is becoming a more and more serious matter, and that the only way to...
The eighteenth annual provincial meeting of the Incor- porated Law
The SpectatorSociety was held at Plymouth on Tuesday, the President giving, in his opening address, the usual review of the legislation of the year. After throwing doubts on the utility of...
The Times of Tuesday gives an interesting account of what
The Spectatorhas been done to realise Mr. Blaine's dream of an inter- continental railway,—a railway intended to string the Re- publics of Northern, Central, and South America on a line of...
This is certainly the age of journalistic hysteria. In an
The Spectatorexecution at Liverpool, the drop was made somewhat too long for the purpose of merely breaking the neck, and resulted in something like a partial decapitation, and flow of blood...
Prince Bismarck has, it is said, partly written five chapters
The Spectatorof his intended book, and, it is added, has asked Professor Geffcken to write from his dictation, a remarkable instance of the lion lying down with the lamb, when we remember...
Mrs. Bishop (better known, perhaps, as Miss Isabella Bird) gave
The Spectatoran interesting account on Tuesday of her visit last year to the Bakhtiari country, in South-West Persia. Perhaps the most interesting part of her remarks was her account of the...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorMR. STANSFELD'S FORECAST OF HOME-RULE. M R. STANSFELD spoke to the electors of Lewisham at Sydenham on Monday ; and though there is no reason to suppose that he is specially in...
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THE LEWISHAM ELECTION.
The SpectatorT HE Lewisham election has resulted satisfactorily enough. When the Gladstonians say that they have reduced the majority by nearly 460 from the point it reached in 1886, they...
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TTI - F, SECRET SOCIETIES OF CHINA. T N our article of last
The Spectatorweek on the situation in China, we dwelt upon the importance of the part played by the great Secret Societies in modern Chinese politics, and alluded to the hatred entertained...
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VILLAGE COUNCILS. T HE claims of villages to self-government by means
The Spectatorof Councils elected by the parish itself, have found a powerful advocate in Mr. T. W. Fowle, who has lately stated his views on the subject in great detail, in a letter to the...
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CODDLING CRIMINALS.
The SpectatorT HE old controversy as to whether we should punish or coddle our criminals, was revived this week at the British Association by Dr. Strahan. Dr. Strahan is alto- .gether for...
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THE CHESHIRE MAGISTRATES ON LICENSING. .
The SpectatorT HE most valuable contribution to the Licensing question which we have met with for a long time is a report presented to the Cheshire Magistrates by a com- mittee of their own...
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MILLENNIAL HOPES. T HE question which must sometimes suggest itself to
The Spectatorall students of history—What is the value of those dreams of a changed condition in the organic relations of society and of the individual whereby man may be enabled to live a...
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PROFESSOR OLIVER LODGE ON TIME.
The SpectatorI F one wants popular interest,—and the British Association, we may remark, needs a good deal of that article, the learned men getting as technical as if they were addressing...
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THE LADY-ERRANT.
The SpectatorT HE British Association seems to have come to the con- clusion that it is necessary to provide some kind of light fare for the entertainment of its audiences, and more...
THE HORROR OF ASTRONOMY.
The SpectatorI F the impression produced on mankind in general by the perusal of Dr. Huggins's Presidential address to the British Association could be truthfully disclosed, we expect it...
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CORRESPONDENCE.
The Spectator-" A WOMAN'S WOMAN : " FROM HER POINT OF VIEW. [AN INTERCEPTED LETTER.] MY DEAR VI,-I have no news whatever to give you, but, upon this very showery afternoon, feel rather...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE IRISH TRAINING COLLEGES. pro THE EDITOR OF THE " EPECTATOR."1 Sin,—Mr. T. W. Russell, in his letter on the Irish Training Colleges (for National-School teachers) in the...
THE PENTATEUCHAL CONTROVERSY: THREE POINTS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " ErECTATOR." . 1 Siu,—In connection with the revival in your columns of a. Pentateuchal controversy, there is one very important point which is very...
RATIONALISTIC ANATHEMAS.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR ."f SIR, —My knowledge of Kuenen and Wellhausen, and especially of the former, leads me to affirm that no one, not even the Spectator, would...
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ANATHEMA TO BELIEVERS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR, —I am a layman, and I write as a layman. But I cannot refrain from making a few remarks on the subject of the letter of Mr. G. D....
ATTACKS ON THE LAMBETH J U GME N T.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—I did not say, as you allege, that the Lambeth Judgment " sanctioned " an abuse which none the less would be " per- fectly legal under...
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THE CHURCH CONGRESS.
The Spectatorpro THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR...1 SIR,—Will you kindly allow me to point out to your readers that the tickets (price 6s. each) for the Rhyl Church Congress, which will soon...
POETRY.
The SpectatorYES ! urban is your Muse, and owns An empire based on London stones. Yet flow'rs, as mountain violets sweet, Spring from the pavement 'neath her feet. Of wilder birth this Muse...
THE CUCKOO AND ITS FOSTER-MOTHER.
The Spectator[ro THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.1 Sra,—Seeing that natural history finds a place in the Spectator, I venture to send you the following incident in bird- life, a common...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorSAINT-MARC GIRARDIN.* How far the pendulum of literary appreciation has swung since Sainte-Beuve gave his first causerie to Saint-Marc Girardin is worth considering, now that...
MENDEZ PINTO.
The Spectator(To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.1 SIR, In a review of a new edition of Mendez Pinto's travels, in the Spectator of August 22nd, you accept Professor Yam- lAry's testimony in...
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MR. THOMAS HODGKIN ON OLD-TESTAMENT CRITICISM.* Tins seems to us
The Spectatorabout the wisest brief estimate we have yet read of the present state of Old-Testament criticism. Mr. Thomas Hodgkin is well known to all critics as one of the most careful and...
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CANON KNOX LITTLE ON MARRIA.GE.*
The SpectatorCANON KNOX LITTLE is known as an eloquent preacher who excels in appeals to the emotions ; but in this volume, though delivered in substance as a course of lectures, there is...
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MR. HOWELLS ON CRITICISM.*
The SpectatorUNDAUNTED by the failures of all previous critics and metaphysicians, Mr. Howells has attempted to construct a. philosophy of art and beauty. In his little book, he plunges and...
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RECENT NOVELS.*
The SpectatorFor God and Humanity is distinctly a novel with a purpose ; but it is a purpose which is primarily biographical, and only secondarily didactic. Mr. Haskett Smith is an ardent...
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VOICE-FIGURES.* hr his commendatory preface to Mrs. Watts Hughes's interesting
The Spectatordescription of the Voice-Figures with which her name is associated, Mr. Walter Besant says :—" I have looked anxiously for some printed account of the phenomena : I have hoped...
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Wanneta the Sioux. By Warren K. Moorehead. (Chapman and Hall.)—Wanneta
The Spectatoris a romance, yet it is a romance that faithfully portrays Indian life and customs. To say it is fascinating is hardly doing the vivid detail and vigorous characters of the...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorSongs of the South. By John Bernard O'Hara, M.A. (Ward, Lock, and Co., London, New York, and Melbourne.)—These are songs of considerable promise, being evidently the work of a...
A Chat about the Nary, by W. J. Gordon (Simpkin
The Spectatorand Marshall), contains a considerable amount of curious and in- teresting information about ships, the personnel of the Navy, regulations, &e.