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In addition to these calming influences, we may note that
The SpectatorMinisters who have their hands actually on the lever of govern- ment, and are engaged in its daily work, feel much more need that the King's Government shall be carried on than...
We have dealt very fully elsewhere with what we imagine
The SpectatorIs likely to be the course of events both as regards the Budget and the attack upon the House of Lords, and will only say here that though we recognise the many difficulties of...
Had the Tariff Reformers distinctly abandoned all idea of taxing
The Spectatorbread, meat, and cheese, and confined their demands to the taxation of manufactured articles, or generally to an enlargement of indirect taxation upon articles other than those...
Since the final figures of the Election will be known
The Spectatorso soon after these pages are in our readers' hands, we do not propose to give them in an imperfect form. It seems likely, however, that the composite majority of the Govern-...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE elections are practically over, with the general result that though the Tariff Reformers have failed to secure either a majority of seats or a majority of the votes polled,...
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On Wednesday and Friday week there was a characteristic debate
The Spectatorin the Prussian Diet on what is known as the " Katto- witz affair" in Prussian Poland. The Government recently took action against a number of petty officials, chiefly (the...
An impudent attempt has been made during the week in
The Spectatorthe Liberal Press to suggest that the Unionist Party are inclined to make an unholy alliance with the Irish, and secure their votes for Tariff Reform by granting them Home-rule....
An extraordinary "meat boycott" is taking place in the United
The SpectatorStates. It was begun in Cleveland by the Labour Unions, which declared that the dearness of beef was due less to the shortage of cattle than to the action of the Beef Trust. In...
The Times of last Saturday states that both Russia and
The SpectatorJapan have refused to accept the American proposal, made by Mr. Knox: that the Manchurian railways shou:d be neutralised. Russia is willing to consider proposals for new...
We are not going to insult Mr. Balfour and the
The Spectatorrest of the 'Unionist Party by defending them against this preposterous attempt to create prejudice and dissatisfaction. There is not the slightest risk of treachery in the...
1 propos of the belief that the Redmondite Nationalists may
The Spectatorbe safely counted upon to support the Budget through thick and thin when it is reintroduced, the Parliamentary correspondent of the Times notes a remarkable speech ma4e by Mr....
The French Government have decided to bring in a Bill
The Spectatorto purge the Army of its criminal elements. The Bill will revise the legislai ion of 1905 by which criminal "hooligans" (known: in Paris as apaches) are placed in home regiments...
The floods in France, which hare caused some loss of
The Spectatorlife, great distress to the poor, grave disturbance of traffic, and immense damage to property, have attained the pro- portions of a national disaRter. In Paris, where the level...
It is often assumed that Trusts can be kept in
The Spectatororder only by the action of the State, and for Socialists and Protectionists who cheerfully look upon the regulation of trade by the State as an advantage this is at least...
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One of the features of the Election has been the
The Spectatorgreat advance made by electors in the high art of heckling. Many of the questions, however, have been provided ready-made from headquarters, and have few terrors for a...
Lord Rosebery in Glasgow yesterday week made an amusing speech
The Spectatoron the Peers' disabilities and political posters. "The sensation with which a Peer paraded the streets at this moment recalled to his mind the melancholy position of David...
At a time when so much capital has been made
The Spectatorout of the alleged iniquities of the Unionist Peers, and their attempts to dictate to and intimidate the people, it is positively amazing to note that the most glaring instance...
There is such a confusion of assertions, denials, innuendoes, and
The Spectatorrecriminations in the three countries that it is extremely difficult for a foreign observer to get at the truth. On Wednesday the facts became further complicated by an alleged...
The dovecotes of Berlin, Vienna, and St. Petersburg have been
The Spectatorconsiderably fluttered by the account of a remarkable conversation with Count Aehrenthal which was published in the Novae Vrentya. According to the Vienna correspondent of the...
Sir Edward Grey at Hexham on Tuesday declared that whereas
The Spectatorin March the Government said they might have to give orders for putting in hand the ships necessary to be built in the course of the year in order to maintain our naval...
Mr. William O'Brien, who was returned at the head of
The Spectatorthe poll at Cork, made a violent attack on the Irish Parliamentary Party and Mr. Asquith at Fermoy yesterday week. He denounced Mr. Redmond and his following for having betrayed...
Bank Rate, 31- per cent., changed from 4 per cent.
The SpectatorJan. 20th. Consols (2i) were on Friday 821—Friday week 821.
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TOPICS OF TIIE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE COURSE OF EVENTS. ll E would be a bold man who would assert with any confidence at the present moment that he could predict the course of political events. Nevertheless, it...
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THE GOVERNMENT AND THE HOUSE OF LORDS.
The SpectatorW E have dealt above with the various possibilities connected with the passing of the Budget. Here we desire to discuss the next move on the political chessboard, and the...
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THE NEMESIS OF WORDS.
The SpectatorIBERAL opinion seems a good deal divided as to the J meaning and outcome of the elections. The Chan- cellor of the Exchequer and his special supporters in the Press are, or...
CRIME AND THE PRESS IN INDIA. T HE first Session of
The Spectatorthe reconstructed Imperial Legis- lative Council at Calcutta opened on Tuesday under the shadow of another political crime. The day before Police-Inspector Shams-ul-Alam was...
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A ROYAL COMMISSION ON THE FISCAL PROBLEM.
The SpectatorW HATE V ER may happen in the few constituencies which still remain to be polled, it is now abundantly " clear that the Liberals, if they receive the support of the Nationalists...
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CHRIST'S PENETRATION.
The SpectatorT HE influence of our Lord's miraculous knowledge of the future appears to have kept many from an inquiry into His knowledge of the world. Yet when we have excluded the...
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THE DISPARAGEMENT OF ENGLAND.
The SpectatorI F Englishmen were to believe all that has been said to their disadvantage by those who are displeased at the turn the voting has taken in the English county divisions, they...
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HOUSE-PLANNING.
The SpectatorW HAT was the origin of the proverb, " Fools build houses for wise men to live in" ? It is the proverb which is quoted by nine people out of ten to any one who decides upon...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE REVISION OF THE PRAYER-BOOK. [To THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR:] Ein,—Now that the elections to the House of Commons are nearly over, your readers may have leisure to be...
THE POSITION OF THE UNIONIST FREE-TRADERS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR ON THE "SPECTATOR' Sin,—Your advice, and that of Sir Robert Giffen, appears to me so cogent that, though I am no longer young and the weather is very inclement,...
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WHY NOT A COALITION GOVERNMENT AND A TARIFF REFORM COMMISSION
The Spectator? [To TSB Burros or me "SrscvAroa."3 Sra,—I am a Liberal of twenty years' standing. I have lived for six years in a British Colony, and remain an unrepentant Free-trader. I...
CHRISTIANITY AND POLITICS.
The Spectator[TO 1312 EDITOR Or TEE ospeersees.-3 should like to ask if any of your readers can suggest a verse in the Bible that would help to solve the following difficulty in which a...
[To ma Enrros or Tao "Brzerarom21
The SpectatorSra,—I am a Unionist Free-trader who at the last General Election voted with the Liberals, but I have this time fol- lowed your advice and voted with the Conservatives in three...
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THE BLACK BREAD CONTROVERSY.
The Spectator[To TEE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sus,—If Radical partisans have any saving sense of humour left, perhaps the following extract from Sir Walter Scott's "Old Mortality" may...
PHEASANT-REARING. [To THE EDITOR OF THE " Einar/M."1 - SIR,—I have
The Spectatorseen the letter in last Saturday's Spectator signed " Squireen." Curiously enough, my chief has restored a thirteenth-century priory entirely at his own cost, although I fail...
INDIAN OPINION AND SEDITION.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—The letter from a " Nasik Resident" in your last issue reminded me of a conversation in a Mohammedan gentleman's house where I was...
LORD MORLEY ON TAXATION.
The Spectator[TO TEE EDITOR OF TEE - " SPECTATOR."] SIR,—Tbe enclosed extract from a speech of Lord Morley's made at the People's Palace, Newcastle, in February, 1892, may be of interest in...
BRIBERY OLD AND NEW.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—In early days I lived in a constituency which was con- sidered corrupt. Both sides had bribed, till at last in self- protection they...
THE POOR AND EDUCATION. [To THE EDITOR OF THE "srzerkros.."1
The SpectatorSru,—Your article in last week's Spectator indirectly at least raises the whole question of the wisdom of educating the poorer classes of this country. The writer chides social...
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NOT LINCOLN, BUT BARNUM.
The Spectatorl'ro ma Emma OF TER "Smc-rAToa.") SIR,—In your article on "The Elections So Far" in last week's Spectator you refer to "Abraham Lincoln's great principle that though you may...
THE BRADEIBLD COLLEGE RANCH.
The Spectator[To ram EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR:I Sus,—I greatly regret that statements should have been made which imply that the Bradfield College Ranch provides " soft " conditions for the...
HERR HARDEN AND THE " ZUKUNFT."
The Spectator[To TER EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR." . 1 Srn,—One of your "News of the Week" notes in last week's Spectator contains extracts from an article of Herr Harden published in the...
[To Tat EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] SIE,—Mr. Cecil F. Parr,
The Spectatorin connexion with the above-named project, writes to the Spectator of January 8th to denounce the fatal desire of sons, and mothers even more, that ranch life should be "free...
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POETRY.
The SpectatorSAILING AT DAWN. ONE by one the pale stars die before the day now, One by one the great ships are stirring from their sleep, Cables all are rumbling, anchors all aweigh now,...
" EPISTOLAE OBSCURORUM VIROR1JM." [To TER EDITOR OF THE "
The SpectatorSPECTLTOR:1 SIR,—It may seem almost churlish in me to cavil at a mere detail of the very flattering appreciation of my version of the "Epistolae Obscurorum VirorLun ' which...
THE LATE DR. RIGG.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP TER " SPECTATOR:1 Sza,—There is one mistake in your generous notice in last week's Spectator of the Life of Dr. Rigg. The College at Westminster of which he...
MORE ANONYMOUS VOICES.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOE OF THE " SPECTATOR] Si,—In several references to the maiden who sought her lover through the streets of London by the one cry" Gilbert ! " I have seen no...
[To THE EDMOR OP THB "spec-rms."] Sin,—May I be allowed
The Spectatorto express my thanks to your several correspondents who have traced to known speakers three of the cases quoted in my article as " anonymous " ? I should like also to say that...
MU SI C.
The SpectatorSIR HUBERT PARRY ON BACH. ON a superficial and sentimental survey Bach might well be regarded as one of the most tragic figures in the annals of art. Here was a colossal...
NOTICE.—When Articles or "Correspondence" are signed with the writer's name
The Spectatoror initials, or with a pseudonym, or are marked "Communicated," the Editor must not necessarily be held to be in agreement with the views therein expressed or with the mode of...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorBRITAIN AT BAY.* PROFESSOR SPENSER WILKINSON has long caused us to admire the earnestness, the lucidity, and the erudition with which he has advocated various military reforms....
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LADY HESTER STA.NHOPE.* hies. ROUNDELL'S vivacious and judicious narrative should
The Spectatorrevive interest in a romance which had an enormous effect on the imaginations of our grandfathers. Information about Lady Hester Stanhope has till now not been very easy to come...
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MADAME DE MAINTENON.* WarsTarrit Madame de Maintenon is to be
The Spectatorregarded as an ambitious hypocrite or a sincerely disinterested saint, there can be no doubt that she was a marvellously clever woman. This new biography, though not great from...
THOUSAND AND ONE CHURCHES.* Ceci tuera cela. So Victor Hugo
The Spectatordescribed the supersession of Gothic architecture by the art of printing : the word carved in stone by the word printed on paper. But where the written word fails us, we turn...
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HOW TO STUDY THE STARS.*
The SpectatorTHE author of this book has given us an excellent work which will lead the beginner by easy steps from the place of "No Knowledge" to a good and comprehensive acquaintance with...
LONDON AT PRAYER.*
The SpectatorWrro is sufficient, one might ask, for the task which the author of this book has attempted ? An angel might come down from heaven, to see with a clearer vision than is...
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ACADEMICAL ORATIONS.*
The SpectatorIB April, 1907, the Board of Trinity College, Dublin, made arrangements for the publication of speeches delivered on the occasion of conferring honorary degrees. Professor...
Red-Hand,ed Saint. By Olive Katharine Parr. (It. and T. Washbourne.
The Spectator3s. 13d.)—This book is in effect a Roman Catholic tract which deals with the good results of rescue work by a Roman Catholic visitor among discharged Roman Catholic prisoners....
NOVELS.
The SpectatorIIIASTE$ TrrEuE is a good deal of pleasant entertainment in Mr. Shan Bullock's new story. Pturporting as it does to be the narra- tive of an Irish car-driver, Master John may...
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An interesting example of the criticism to which the New
The SpectatorTestament narrative is subjected may be found in the current number of the Expository Times (T. and T. Clark, 6d.) under the title of "The Logic; of the Baptist." The writer,...
SOME BOOKS OF TILE WEEK.
The Spectator[Under this heading vs notice such Books of the week as haus not bun resertcd for review in other forms.] Quccks, False Remedies, and the Public Health. By David Walsh, M.D....
ItEAD&DLE NOVELS.—The Nest of the Sparrowhatok. By the Baroness Orczy.
The Spectator(Greening and Co. 6s.)—This "Romance of the Seventeenth Century" brings us into familiar company and situations which the author knows how to manipulate.—Dulah the Forest Guard....
Introduction to the New Testament. By Theodor Zahn. Translated by
The SpectatorJ. M. Trout and others. Vol. II. (T. and T. Clark.)—It is needless to commend to theological students this second instalment of Professor Zahn's great work. The writer occupies...
Some Hampstead Memories. By Mary Adams. (Priory Press, Hampstead. 2s.
The Spectatorfal. net.)—Miss Adams finds no lack of memories which we are glad to have recalled, and Mr. Adcock, who illus- trates the volume, has a choice of good subjects. Every suburb of...
Fugitives from Fortune. By Ethel Turner. (Ward, Lock, and Co.
The Spectator6s.)—It would be rash to say of any plot that it is now, but Miss Turner gives us here one that is certainly not hackneyed. An American millionaire leaves his dollars behind him...
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Sertoor,Boose.—A Greek - Boy - at - Home. By W. H. D. Rouse, Litt.D. (Blackie and
The SpectatorSon. 3s. 6d. net.)—This is one of the very best school-books we have ever seen. Let us hope that it may help to stay the ebbing tide which tends to render Greek continually less...
Money's Fiscal Dictionary. By L. Chiozza. Money. (Methuen and Co.
The Spectator58. net.)—Although Mr. Money's encyclopaedia does not pretend to be exhaustive, and is even constructed upon the lines of Voltaire's "Dictionnaire Philosophique," yet it adds...
The Science Year Book, Edited by Major B. F. S.
The SpectatorBaden-Powell, (King, Sell, and Olding, 5s. net), in addition to the usual furnish- ings of a diary, such as calendar, &c., postal and other informa- tion, with, of course, the...
Longman's Historical Wall Pictures. (Longmans and (Jo. 2s. 6d. net
The Spectatoreach ; framed and glazed, 10s. net each ; set of twelve in port- folio, 35s. net.)—These twelve pictures, reproduced in colour from paintings by Mr. H. J. Ford, each measuring...
Every Man's Cyc2opaedia. Edited by Arnold Villiers. (G. Routledge and
The SpectatorSons. 3s. 6d. net.)—Here in an octavo of moderate size (eight inches by five and a half), with six hundred and forty- eight pages, we have universal biography, historical...
Ninv EDITION8.—The Patriarchate of Jerusalem. By Archdeacon Dowling. (S.P.C.K. le.
The Spectator6d.)—The Maintenance of the Parochial System. By Philip Lyttelton Gell. (II. Frowde. Is. net.)— Stephens' Book of the Perm Revised and Largely Rewritten by James Macdonald. VoL...
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P1TBLICATIONS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorAutin (A.), The Bridling of Pegasus, 8vo (Macmillan) net 7/6 Bancrott (J. H.), Games for the Playground, Home, School, and Gym- nasium, roy 16mo (Macmillan) net 6/6 Billings (R....
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SPECIAL LITERARY SUPPLEMENT
The SpectatorTO *prrtator FOR THE No. 4,257.] WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, JANUARY 29, 1910. [TRI=MITLIt..) GRATIS.
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorIMPRESSIONS OF ENGLAND.* WE do not see how Mr. Howells makes out his seven English cities; an "English city" cannot be without a Bishop. Liverpool, therefore, Manchester, York,...
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THE RAJAHS OF SARAWAK.*
The SpectatorWe doubt whether in the long and brilliant annals of British achievement in the Tropics there can be found a more romantic story than that of the two white Rajahs of Sarawak,...
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BOOKS ON NATURE AND NATURAL HISTORY.* EXIGENCIES of space, and
The Spectatorthe prolific crop which the publishing season has produced, compel us to notice very briefly a large number of books that have little in common, except that they treat of Nature...
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ENGLISH RIVERS.*
The SpectatorTHE reviewer is debarred from treating The Story of the Thames as critically as he might from the unfortunate fact that the author's death occurred before he was able to correct...
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MR. HARDY'S POEMS.* The Dynasts made it plain that in
The SpectatorMr. Hardy we had a true poet—though he lacked most of the conventional poetic attributes—by virtue of his gift of intense passion and his extraordinary imaginative scope. In...
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PAINTERS' IMPRESSIONS OF HUNGARY.t HUNGARY is a rich field for
The Spectatorthe painter not only of land- scape but of picturesque costume. Mr. and Mrs. Stokes in profiting by it have been able to give us a record of singular attractiveness. Mr. Stokes,...
MISS EDGE WORTH AND HER FRENCH FRIENDS.* THis is a
The Spectatorslight but lively and very readable book. If it contains little that is quite new, things familiar to admirers of Miss Edgeworth's character and genius are cleverly arranged,...
CHATEAITBRIAND AND HIS COURT OF WOMEN.* Ma. GRIBBLE is a
The Spectatorlively and agreeable writer, and his books are always very readable, though his style, with its blanks and breaks and unfinished sentences, its hints and suggestions of "I could...
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Gulliver's Travels. Illustrated by Arthur Rackham. (J. M. Dent and
The SpectatorSons. 7s. 6d. net.)—We like these illustrations better than the last. They are more direct and to the point ; indeed, the picture of Gulliver bombarded by the Brobdingnagian...
A NEW SCOTTISH POET.*
The Spectator"POETRY more truly Scots than that of Mr. Murray is no longer written—was not even written by Mr. Stevenson." So writes Mr. Lang in his introduction to this book, and the...
THE RETURN OF LOUIS XVIII*
The SpectatorM. STENGER has collected a mass of interesting information on the years 1813-15, and his book is exceedingly readable in English, thanks to Mrs. Rodolph Stawell's talent as a...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorILLUSTRATED BOOKS. Uncline. Adapted from the German by W. L. Courtney, and Illustrated by Arthur Rackham. (W. Heinemann. 7s. 6d. net.)— Mr. Courtney's adaptation of Fouque's...
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The Rubciiyat of Omar Khayyam. With Notes by R. A.
The SpectatorNicholson and Illustrations by Gilbert James. (A. and C. Black. 7s. 6d. not.)—Why any one should wish to have Omar illustrated, or why any artist should wish to make such...
Lamb's Tales from Shakespeare. Illustrated by Arthur Rackham. (J. M.
The SpectatorDent and Sons. 7s. 6d. net.)—The small hold the artist has on reality is very apparent in these drawings. The real characters we know—Cordelia, Lear, or Viola—demand for their...
The Deserted Village. Illustrated by W. Lee Ilankey. (A. Con-
The Spectatorstable and Co. 15s. net.)—Here we have another style of work. It might be described as founded on the coloured supplements to illustrated papers. The costume model is treated in...
Dramatis Person, and Dramatic Romances and Lyrics. By Robert Browning.
The SpectatorIllustrated by Eleanor Brickdsle. (Chatto and Windus. 6s. net.)—Browning is not an author who lends himself to illustration, and the connexion between the text and the drawings...
Omar Khayyam. Presented by Willy Poginy. (George (I. Harrap and
The SpectatorCo. 10s. 6d. net.)—These illustrations are more vague and less Oriental in style than the last. Instead of print that can be read, the poem is "presented" to us in a weird...
The Confessions of St. Augustine. Illustrated by Maxwell Armfield. (Chatto
The Spectatorand Windus. 7s. 6d. net.)—There is much that is graceful and charming in these delicately wrought drawings. The artist has wisely refrained from making his people too much like...
Selected Tales of Mystery. By Edgar Allan Poe. Illustrated by
The SpectatorByam Shaw. (Sidgwick and Jackson. 12s. 6d. net.)—These pictures seem rather half-hearted. The artist has not penetrated far below the surface. Take, for instance, the scene...
Omar Khayycim. Illustrated by Edmund Dulac. (Hodder and Stoughton. 15s.
The Spectatornet.)—Mr. Dula° has gone to Persian painting for many details and tricks of style, but he is able to use these for his own purposes. The most successful application of the...
THE SYMPOSIUM OF PLATO.
The SpectatorThe Symposium of Plato. Edited, with Introduction, Critical Notes, and Commentary, by R. G. Bury, M.A. (Heifer and Sons. 7s. net.)—It is certainly strange that the Symposium has...
A Song of the English. By Rudyard Kipling. With Illustra-
The Spectatortions by W. Heath Robinson. (Hodder and Stoughton. 15s. net.)— This poet perhaps is as difficult to illustrate as Browning. Mr. Robinson has tried hard to keep close to his...
REMINISCENCKS OF A K.C.
The SpectatorReminiscences of a K.C. By Thomas Edward Crispe. (Methuen and Co. 10s. 6d. net.)—Mr. Crispe's earlier chapters are devoted to dramatic and social recollections, experiences of...
The Merchant of Venice. With Illustrations by Sir James D.
The SpectatorLinton. (Hodder and Stoughton. 10s. 6d. net.)—After the pumped-up originality and pseudo-stylistic qualities of the illustrations in the books we have been reviewing, it is a...
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TH.PI EPISTLE OF ST. JAMES.
The SpectatorThe Epistle of Et. Ames. By the late F. J. A. Hort, D.D. (Macmillan and Co. 5s.)—It was intended that this Epistle should be part of Dr. Hart's share in the Commentary on the...
THE EPISTLES OF ST. PAUL TO THE CORINTHIANS.
The SpectatorThe Epistles of St. Paul to the Corinthians. By Gerald H. Kendall, Litt.D. (Macmillan and Co. 3s. net.)—Dr. Kendall rearranges the contents of the Epistles to the Corinthians....
HOW THE CASUAL LABOURER LIVES.
The SpectatorHow the Casual Labourer Lives. (Northern Publishing Company.) —This is the Report of a Liverpool Committee which under- took the task of investigating the conditions of the...
IN THE DAYS OF THE GEORGES.
The SpectatorIn the Days of the Georges. By W. B. Boulton. (Eveleigh Nash. 15s.)—We do not wish to be rude when we say that we could have done without this book. It is the subject that not...
SAN CELESTINO.
The SpectatorRan Celestine. By John Ayscough. (Smith, Elder, and Co. 6s. net.)—Mr. Ayscough describes his book as "an essay in reconstruction." The materials which he has to use are simple...
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THOMAS SCOTT TILE COMMENTATOR.
The SpectatorThomas Scott the Commentator. By the Rev. A. C. Downer. (C. J. Thynne. 38. net.)—This is an interesting study of life, manners, and character. Dr. Thomas Scott made an unhappy...
THE ABERDEEN DOCTORS.
The SpectatorThe Aberdeen Doctors. By D. Macmillan, D.D. (Hodder and Stoughton. 6s.)—This volume contains the first series of lectures delivered on the Ha,stie foundation. Dr. Hastie was...
COURT LIFE IN CHINA.
The SpectatorCourt Life in China. By Isaac Taylor Headland. (Fleming H. Revell Company. 65. net.)—Professor Headland explains that in writing this book he has had the assistance of Mrs....
HAPPY SCHOOLDAYS.
The SpectatorHappy Schooldays. By Margaret E. Saunders. (Hodder and Stoughton. 2s. 6d. net.)—Miss Saunders might have entitled her book "How to be Happy though at School" but for the fear of...
MEMODIS OF SCOTTISH CATHOLICS.
The SpectatorMemoirs of Scottish Catholics, 1627 - 1792. , Selected from hitherto , Unedited MSS. by William Forbes Leith, S.J. 2 vols. (Longmans and Co. 24s. net.)—Father Leith has...
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DIAMONDS.
The SpectatorDiamonds. By Sir William Crookes. (Harper and Brothers. 2s. 6d. net.)—Sir William Crookes spent a month at Kimberley in 1896, and saw all that the managers of the De Beers and...
OXFORD ENGLISH TEXTS.
The SpectatorIn the series of "Oxford English Texts" (The Clarendon Press, 188. net) we have the second and third volumes of Spenser's Poetical Works, Edited, with Critical Introduction and...
GEORGE EDWARD JELF.
The SpectatorGeorge Edward Jell. By his Wife. (Skeffington and Son. 88. 6d.)—Canon Jell represented a type of cleric which is to be found only in the Anglican Church. He was the eldest son...
"BABES IN THE WOOD."
The SpectatorThe Land of the "Babes in the Wood." By Charles Kent, M.A. (Jarrold 'and Sons. 12s. 6d.)—This "Land" is a part of the county of 'Norfolk which goes by the nanie 'Of:Brecklatid....
JOHN KEBLE.
The SpectatorJohn Keble. By the Hon. F. L. Wood, M.A. (A. R. Mowbray and Co. Sc. 6d. net.)—This is one of the "Leaders of the Church, 1800-1900," Series, appearing under the editorship of...
A LETTER TO A DISSENTER.
The SpectatorLetter to a Dissenter. By Sir George Savile. (Cambridge University Press. is. net.)—Every one will remember how when James II. published his Declaration of Indulgence in 1687 he...
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Mosquito or Man? By Sir Rubert Boyce, F.R.S. (John Murray.
The Spectator10s. 6d. net.)—A full account of the researches which have resulted in identifying the causes of malaria with the bite of an insect or insects which are sufficiently described...
MICHAEL SERVETIIS.
The SpectatorMichael Servelus. By William Osier, M.D. (H. Frowde. is. net.)—Servetus was certainly born three centuries or so too soon. A welcome is always given nowadays to bold thinkers...
Sixty Years in New Zealand. By A. Hope Black. (Hodder
The Spectatorand Stoughton. 6s.)—This is not a book of which a reviewer is anxious to make an estimate. Mr. Black has seen much of New Zealand, of the Maori and the white man. He thinks...