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BOOKS.
The SpectatorMR. LE FANU'S REMINISCENCES. 0 lv has been said that the Nationalist agitation has been the death of Irish humour; and certainly credence is indirectly lent to the assertion by...
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A SHEAF OF NOVELS.* IF all Colonies supply as rich
The Spectatormaterial for entertainment as the one depicted in Mr. Hope's clever and enjoyable novel, Ha?! a Hero, nobody will hesitate about endorsing the opinion of one of its personages...
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HERE AND THERE IN ITALY,* AMONG idle occupations there are
The Spectatorfew pleasanter than the planning of a next summer's tour with maps and guide-books ; and the charm is doubled if one can hit on some fresh place to visit, something out of the...
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THE HEREDITARY SHERIFFS OF GALLOWAY.* IN its new form, the
The Spectatorlate Sir Andrew Agnew's Hereditary Sheriffs of Galloway is at once the most interesting and most exhaustive work which has yet been published on what is, from the ethnological,...
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PICTURES FROM GREEK LIFE AND STORY.* IT is a lamentable
The Spectatorfact that the story of the greatness and de- cline of the Greek peoples has never been simply and straight- forwardly told by a modern historian. Generally it has been political...
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THE PERSIA OF TODAY.* THE sick man of Europe has
The Spectatorhis fellow in Asia, and while all Europe is concerned in the keeping alive of the one, it rests between two Powers whether the illness of the other is to end in convalescence,...
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GIFT-BOOKS.
The SpectatorAMERICAN ILLUSTRATORS.* NEW YORK, as Mr. Hopkinson Smith describes it, seems a veritable Happy Valley for American artists. We are intro- timed to the Century Club, and to other...
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Stories and Fairy-Tales of Hans Christian Andersen. A new trans-
The Spectatorlation by II. Oskar Sommer, Ph.D. Illustrated by Arthur J, Peskin. 2 vols. (George Allen.)—We are not qualified to speak of the translation as regards its fidelity to the...
Ten Tales without a Title. By Edith Carrington. (Griffith, Farran,
The Spectatorand Co.)—In some of these tales we have birds and beasts confabulating,—geese, for instance, and butterflies, and starfish, if, indeed, these can be so called. Then we have in...
The Art Journal, 1893. (Virtue and Co.) — The Art Journal, the
The Spectatoroldest of our art publications, continues to provide abundant, and on the whole satisfactory, matter for its readers. We cannot rank its full-plate illustrations exactly on a...
My Book of Bible-Stories. By M. T. Yates, LL.D. (E.
The SpectatorArnold.) —We have no fault to find with Dr. Yates, except that he tries to crowd too much into his scanty space. The two Testaments are put into the compass of one of the larger...
Tone Heron. of Sax. By Evelyn Everett-Green. (Religious Tract Society.)—This
The Spectatorhistorico-religious romance, by one of the most skilled pens of the day, has only one fault. Dealing with a special period of the eighteenth century, it is a trifle too long and...
Now for a Story. By various Authors. (Skeffington and Son.)
The Spectator—This "collection of abort original stories for children" contains eighteen contributions. Among the names of authors we find those of Mrs. Molesworth, Mr. Ascott Hope, Mrs. L....
A True Cornish Maid. By G. Norway. (Blackie and Son.)—This
The Spectatoris a story of the latter years of the eighteenth century, in which smugglers and the pressgang play a prominent part. The incident is plentiful and exciting; the characters are...
Queen of the Daffodils. By Leslie Laing. (Blackie.)—The second title
The Spectatorof this book is "A story of high-school life," and without doubt it is an accurate one. But the main feature of the story is the trouble caused by the introduction of a spirited...
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The Leisure Hour.—This year's volume of this capital periodical is
The Spectatora distinctly strong one. A series of articles continues the " Sovereigns " and " Statesmen of Europe,"—this time it is the "Peoples of Europe." Then we have an immense number of...
The Life and Work of W. Holman Hunt. By Archdeacon
The SpectatorFarrar and Mrs. Meynell. (Art Journal Office.)—This is a republication from the Art Journal (not the volume of this year). Mrs. Moynell tells the story of the artist's life as...
Raff's Ranch. By 1'. M. Holmes. (Blackie and Son.)—Tom Dacre's
The Spectatoradventures in the Wild West present a very truthful picture of cowboy life in the least settled parts of the prairie country. There is plenty of fighting, and Tom has to use...
The Sunday at Home. (Religious Tract Society.)—There are two good
The Spectatorserials in the Sunday at Home, " When the Bony-Tree Blooms," by Leslie Keith, and" The Family : some Reminiscences of a Housekeeper," by Evelyn Everett-Green, and the usual col-...
A WildSheep Chase. Translated from the French of Emile Bergerat.
The Spectator(Seeley and Co.)—We must own to having felt a certain disappointment in reading this book. It begins very well. The writer of these "notes of a little philosophic journey in...
Tales of Old English Life. By William Francis Collier, LL.D.
The Spectator(Nimmo, Hay, and Mitchell, Edinburgh.)—Dr. Collier, who ihi well known as the author of some excellent school-histories, has here given us, under the title of "Pictures of the...
Lord Stafford Aucliey. By Heath° Grey. (Religious Tract Society.)—This is
The Spectatorthe story of a spiritual struggle in a young Simon the Simple was laughed to scorn, heart,—rather more sad than we should altogether like to try a Speeding away through !lel& of...
Friendly Leaves. Edited by Henley I. Arden. (Wells Gardner, Dalton,
The Spectatorand Co.)—This is the yearly volume of the Girl's Friendly Journal, and we welcome it as a record of a very good work. The list of contributors is an encouraging proof of the...
The Icelander's Sword, by 5, Baring-Gould (Methuen), first published in
The Spectator1858, is now reissued with certain corrections, suggested, the author tells us, by a subsequent visit to Iceland. When We Two were Parted, by Sarah Doudney (Griffith, Ferran,...
Brave Bessie Westland. By Emma Leslie. (Religious Tract Society.)—This "Story
The Spectatorof Quaker Persecution" is well conceived and well written. There is a good contrast between the temperate Mistress Drayton and the fierce partisan who is the heroine of the...
Prisoner among Pirates. By David Ker. (W. and R. Chambers.)
The Spectator—The pirates of this tale are the Tunisian corsairs ; and our hero and his friends are captured by the Bey in the days of the Com- monwealth. The narrative of the voyages and...
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The verse is not of the very hest quality, but
The Spectatorit will please, we My Rook of History-Tales. (Edward Arnold.)—Some forty odd fancy. The chief fault that we find in it is an eccasional touch incidents in English history are...
vigorous and pleasing picture does the madcap make in the
The Spectatorfirst prickly, repellent form, does not suggest the dainty creatures part of the book ; and we can quite imagine ourselves going to which Miss Burnside's imagination, aided by...
But where are the toys of Christmas lost ? alphabet.
The Spectator"A," for instance, is exemplified by Amor (a boy Cupid), Ape (studying an album), Adam (eating an apple)—bring- ing in an emphatic contrast between man and his reputed pro-...
BALLADE OF DEAD STORM:13, in a decayed old Kentish town,
The Spectatormuch addicted to smuggling. (So at least sayeth my ancient Gran), The date is the beginning of the century. Slight and short, it Little Boy Blue was blowing his horn, hardly...
eontented Dolls" is really good. The illustrations are of various
The SpectatorBlack, White, and Grey. By Amy Walton. (W. and R. merit. That on p. 0 is really too grotesque ; it might have been Chambers.)—The history of three kittens—black, white and meant...
the faith," and a very fine character of the man
The Spectatoris given us by A Day with the Sea-Urchins. By Helen M. Burnside. With
the misfortune in his youth to be both well-bred and
The Spectatorgood- " THE SWALLOW AND THE ROHM looking ; in his old age, he becomes decidedly prolix. Half the ' Come follow, come follow,' number of pages would have sufficed, even for his...
The Cottager and Artisan (Religious Tract Society) is an ex-
The Spectatorthat was a little hard. eellent periodical for the public for which it is intended.
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The Making of a Newspaper. Edited by Melville Philips. (G.
The SpectatorP. Putnam's Sons.)—Here we have, the title-page informs us, "ex- periences of certain representative American journalists, related by themselves." Very entertaining, for the...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorI f lomance of Low Life among Plants. By M. C. Cooke. (S.P.C.K.)— The life-history of Ferns, Alga), and Fungi is made very interesting to the student by Mr. Cooke, without any...
Animal Sketches. By C. Morgan Lloyd. (Edward A rnold.)— These
The Spectatorsketches of Mr. Morgan Lloyd are instinct with life and observation ; and the bony skeleton is only revealed to us when it becomes necessary to elucidate some particular...
The Siege of Platwa. By John M. Sing. (Rivington, Percival,
The Spectatorand Co.)—Mr. Sing has made an excellent little school-book out of the narrative of the surprise of Platosa, its siege, the escape of part of the garrison, and the doom of the...
NEW EDITIONS AND REPRINTS.—The Countess of Penibroke's Arcadia. By Sir
The SpectatorPhilip Sidney. (Sampson, Low, and Coo -- Sterne's Sentimental Journey. (Routledge and Sons.)—An elegant miniature edition.—Sermons on the Prayer-Book and the Lord's Prayer. By...
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LONDON: Printed by WYMAN and Spare (Limited) at 18 Exeter
The SpectatorStreet, Strand and Published by JOHN CAMPBELL, of No. 1 Wellington Street, in the Preaiet n Of the Savoy, Strand , in the County of Middlesex, at the " SPBCTATOR" Moe, No. 1...
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•
The SpectatorNEWS OF THE WEEK T HE Dupuy Ministry has fallen unexpectedly, and in a rather odd way. The true reason is the want of agree- ment among its members, especially as regards...
An attempt has apparently been made this week to murder
The Spectatorthe German Emperor and his Chancellor. A box was received on Sunday by the latter, apparently sent from Orleans, and said to contain radish-seed of a new kind. His aide-de-camp,...
Lord Salisbury has made three speeches in South Wales this
The Spectatorweek. The first was at Cardiff on Tuesday, when he remarked on the absolute necessity of reinforcing our Navy at a time when other nations are so greatly increasing theirs, and...
The Italian Ministry has also fallen, the Chamber having intimated
The Spectatordissatisfaction with the Report on the affairs of the Ba.ncit Romans_ It is not alleged that the Ministers took money, but some of them used their official influence with the...
The Times published on Tuesday an almost official announce- ment
The Spectatorof the betrothal of the Cesarewitch to the Princess Henne of Orleans ; but it was denied next day by the Comte de Paris himself. The story was primei facie most improbable, as a...
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The New Zealand - elections favour the Radicals. There, at least, the
The Spectatorwomen's vote has not trimmed the balance in favour of the Conservatives, as Lord Salisbury and Mr. Balfour fondly, and we believe vainly, hope that it would do in England....
The Spanish Government seems to have been paralysed by an
The Spectatorexplosion of national feeling. There was not the least neces- sity for treating the rising of the Riff tribes as more than a barbarian insurrection, and this was, it was...
The news from Ireland suggests that under Mr. Morley's Government
The Spectatorthe secret societies are renewing their nativity. There have of late been one or two attempts to employ explosives in blowing-up barracks ; and on Monday a man street of Dublin....
On Wednesday, Lord Salisbury made a second speech at a
The Spectatorlunch in the Cardiff Mill-Hall, given him by the Cardiff Con- servative Association. On this occasion he devoted himself chiefly to the subject of the division of classes,...
Lord Salisbury, too, was very amusing in his remarks on
The SpectatorMr. Justin ilirCarthy's and Mr. John Morley's anticipations of the prospect of bringing force to boar on the House of Lords. Mr. Justin KCarthy had informed us last January that...
At Newport, on the same day (Wednesday), Lord Salisbury touched
The Spectatoron another theme, the survival of the irritable temper which former grievances have excited, long after those grievances have been removed. "Bear in mind that if you find great...
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Mr. Archibald Colquhoun, formerly Administrator of Mashonaland, on Tuesday delivered
The Spectatora remarkable lecture on South Africa at the Royal Colonial Institute. He stated that the Protectorate of the British South Africa Company extended over 750,000 square miles, and...
A machine for separating the soot from the smoke which
The Spectatorthe fires of our manufactories yield, has been invented at Birmingham by Mr. Elliott, and used successfully for some months in the Mint there. The correspondent of the Pall Mall...
Mr. Asquith has modified his attitude towards Anarchists, and now
The Spectatordraws distinctions. He informed the House of Commons on Tuesday that he had been asked to allow the Commonweal Society to hold a meeting in Trafalgar Square, but had found on...
The Local Government (or, as it is sometimes called, the
The SpectatorParish Councils) Bill has advanced during the week from Clause 2 to Meuse 9, and will probably go on a little faster, rather than slower, in future ; but still there is enough...
A bust and memorial window to James Russell Lowell, the
The Spectatorauthor of the Biglow Papers, of various beautiful poems in a much more ideal and pathetic vein, and of a great number of remarkable criticisms, was unveiled in the Chapter House...
The Employers' Liability Bill was read a second time in
The Spectatorthe House of Lords on Thursday without a division, the rather languid debate turning chiefly upon the subject of the clause forbidding all " contracting-out " of the pro-...
There must be strange views of the future life among
The Spectatorsome of our people. The master of a small vessel was sentenced to death on Wednesday, at Grimsby, for the deliberate murder of his sweetheart. When asked if he had anything to...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE FALL OF M. DUPUY. 0 "prediction of last week about the French Ministry has been fulfilled with a rapidity we did not expect. We ventured then to doubt whether M. Dupuy,...
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MR. W. H. SMITH'S EQUANIMITY. T HE most distinctive feature of
The Spectatorthe late Mr. W. H. Smith was his remarkable, his almost distinguished, equanimity. The evenness of his mind amounted to more than a talent,—a kind of moral genius. In him,...
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THE DEPUTATION TO LORD SALISBURY. rr HERE could be no
The Spectatorbetter illustration of the remark- '. able change which has passed over the face of English politics than was aftorded by the deputation of working men which, at the end of last...
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THE ATTEMPT ON COUNT CAPRIVI.
The SpectatorW E are by no means sure, if the world has to declare war on Anarchists, Nihilists, Itivincibles, and the other varieties of the genus dynamitard, that the best way, as well as...
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LORD SALISBURY ON TRUE CONSERVATISM.
The SpectatorORD SALISBURY could hardly have better defined true Conservatism than in the second of his two principal speeches at Cardiff, when he said "If you would ask me the difference...
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of being a Parish Councillor. , The majority can only
The Spectatorelect, It seems to us that a great many people, Tories as well and they have a much more important vote already—the as Radicals, sensible folks as well as faddists, are wander-...
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IMAGINATION AND FAITH.
The SpectatorJ N an interesting little volume, carefully illustrated as a gift-book, which Messrs. Isbister and Co. have published, called " In the Footsteps of the Poets,"—of which some...
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A FEATURE OF EVENING PAPERS.
The SpectatorT HE Pall Mall Gazette of Tuesday—a journul and a number chosen by pure accident, because this article was written on that day—offers a perfect example of a new evil which, in...
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POPULAR WEATHER-LORE.
The SpectatorJ UDGED by results, the whole body of popular wisdom on the subject of weather would not have availed to predic the gale which recently filled a closely printed column of the...
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CORRESPONDENCE.
The SpectatorA LETTER FROM GIBRALTAR. November 15th. " Gin,"—what is the general idea suggested by that mono- syllable to the home-keeping Englishman ? Something, perhaps, of this sort,—an...
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THE VIOLENT LANGUAGE OF POLITICIANS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR:1 Sin, — On my return to this country after a long absence, I am a good deal struck by the bitterness of political controversy, and the...
AN APOLOGY.
The Spectator[To THR EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] you kindly allow me the space to apologise to " Scrutator " and also to yourself for having rashly and with. out reference to tiles of...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The Spectator" SCRUTATOR " AND THE DUKE OF ARGYLL. [To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—I do not at all doubt that your correspondent" Sorutator" wrote what he bond fide believed about...
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PARISH COUNCILS.
The Spectator[To TRIO EDITOR OF THE " BPROTATOR."] gather from a letter, signed "Rector," in the Spectator of November 25th, that the writer is under the impression the Parish Councils Bill...
[To TRIC EDITOR OF THE " SPBODATOR."] Sru.,—In the autobiography
The Spectatorof the late Mr. W. Bell Scott (Vol. U. p. 276-77) there is an interesting reference to this phrase. Mr. Scott believed that he had discovered its Hebrew orIgin. At the funeral...
" REQUIESCAT IN PACE."
The Spectator[To TIM EDITOR OF THE " SFICITATOR.1 Sin,—" J. E. K." seems to me to have failed completely in his attempt to refute the reasoning of your thoughtful article on prayers for the...
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WHAT IS UNWOMANLY P !To THE EDITOR Ow THE "
The SpectatorSPECTATOR:1 .81E,—Please kindly permit me to exculpate myself from the imputation that the little essay, "What is Unwomanly P" which I recently sent to W oman," was written for...
THE ALLEGED DUBLIN SUICIDE.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR or THE EIPECTATO11."] Sin,--With reference to the supposed suicide in Dublin, I wish to say that your correspondent, who writes from the University Club here, is...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorA FRIEND OF MARIE ANTOINETTE,* A Friend of the Queen. Translated by Mrs. Cashel Ilooy from the Franca of Paul Gaulot. Lonoon : W. Heinemann. 1894. To say that a book is...
POETRY.
The SpectatorWithin his beams heaven's lesser beauties fade ; And many of the marvels God has made Would be for ever shrouded from our sight If the sun never set. But with the night New...
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TRAVELS IN KASHMIR AND1TIBET.* Ma. KNIGHT has given us a
The Spectatordelightful book of travels, and something more. In the course of his journey in the East he met with some exceptional opportunities, and;knew how to make use of them, with the...
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SIR THOMAS BROWNE'S URN-BURIAL,* THERE is a conversation recorded by
The SpectatorHazlitt in which he and Charles Lamb and Leigh Hunt and others of that familiar coterie took part, the subject being "Persons one would wish to have seen." Lamb seems to have...
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"THE BOOK OF DOGS."*
The Spectator"WHILE this collection was being made," writes Mr. Leonard in his introduction, "a well-known author and critic took occasion to gently ridicule anthologies and anthologists. He...
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MISS TWINING'S REMINISCENCES.*
The SpectatorTHILIVA can be few people better qualified than Miss Louisa Twining to pass in review the losses and gains of civilisation during the last half-century. On the one hand she...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorThe History of South Australia. By Edwin Hodder. 2 vols. (Sampson, Low, and Co.)—This seems to be very impartially written, and though there is little in the way of humour or...
Verses. By Christina Rossetti. (S.P.C.K.)—These verses are reprinted from certain
The Spectatorvolumes of devotional poetry which Miss Rossetti has published, viz.," Called to be Saints," "Time Flies," and "The Face of the Deep." They are arranged under various heads. The...
Passion's Aftermath. By J. Mark Foster. (Digby, Long, and Co.)
The Spectator—The plot of this story is about as bizarre, and, we may add, as repulsive, as anything that has ever come within our experience. Mona Aveling is an artist, and his sister...
The Merry Month, and other Pieces. By H. B. %Mon.
The Spectator(Fisher Unwin.)—These short articles are reprinted from the Scottish Leader, and include a variety of topics, from a "Defence of the Dog" to the Ober-Ammergau Passion-Play. Much...
My Musical Life and Recollections, By Jules Riinre. (Samp- son
The SpectatorLow, Marston, and Co.)—M Riviere's autobiography is not the least entertaining of the many volumes of reminiscences with which the public has of late been favoured. He was in...
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Chelvey Court. Mabel E. Fowler. (Arrowsmith, Bristol ; Simpkin, Marshall,
The Spectatorand Co., London.)—In this little story the loves and misfortunes of succeeding generations are skilfully blended. Miss Mabel Fowler has made use of familiar themes ; we...
In the Dryburgh Edition of The Pirate (Black), there are
The Spectatorten spirited illustrations drawn by W. H. Overend and engraved on wood by J. D. Cooper. In two or three cases, where the same subjects are selected in both editions, the...
Pleasant Memories of a Busy Life. By David Pryde, LL.D.
The Spectator(Blackwood and Sons.)—Dr. Pryde's "memories" are of Scottish things and persons, collected chiefly in Edinburgh. He was born in Kinghorn, in Fife, made his way more Scotia),...
ley.)—The interest in Lord Byr on's personality is so greatly
The Spectatordiminished of late years that it is, we think, doubtful whether the republication of a Journal which has no raison d'aire save as a record of the poet's egotism, will attract...
Three Churchmen. By the Rev. William Walker, LL.D. (Grant and
The SpectatorSon, Edinburgh.)—Dr. Walker has adopted Dean Burgon's ad- mirable plan of putting sundry short biographies into one volume. There are many men whose lives are worth telling,...