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General Kanlbars, the agent selected to represent the Russian Government
The Spectatorin Bulgaria, has succeeded in fixing the attention of Europe. Before be entered Sofia, he delivered a bitter speech against the Government ; and after his entry, lost no time in...
In this extraordinary placard, General Kaulbars affirms that he has
The Spectatortwelve points to make :-1. The Czar has in view only the welfare of Bulgaria, and hopes that Bulgarians will turn with full confidence to him. 2. The time for words is, however,...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE dreary Session, the second Session of 1886, dribbled to an end on Saturday. There were the usual number of futile questions, Mr. Lawson being in particular anxious that the...
The newspapers of Berlin and Vienna are fighting furiously. The
The SpectatorViennese complaint is that Germany wishes to gain all from the alliance and give nothing in return, and the Berlin retort is that Austrian and Hungarian journalists are...
A fall of a half per cent. on all the
The SpectatorEuropean Bourses was produced on Thursday by the leceipt of Herr Tisza's speech to the Hungarian Parliament. For once the Bourses were pro- bably right, the speech, though...
NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS.
The SpectatorIt is our intention occasionally to issue gratis with the " SPECTATOR" SPECIAL LITERARY SUPPLEMENTS, the outside pages of which will be devoted to Advertisements. The Eighteenth...
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The week has been full of rumours about Egypt, the
The Spectatorgeneral drift of which is this. The Sultan is being pressed by Russia and France to demand from England the evacuation of Egypt. Each Power is, in addition, worrying in Cairo,...
It is said to be understood in Paris that a
The Spectatorsecond and con- siderable expedition will be despatched to Madagascar. When the Treaty was signed at Tamatave, the French Plenipotentiary agreed to an appendix which explained...
The mission of Sir Redvers Buller to the South of
The SpectatorIreland is already producing fruit. He has found the organisation of the police, both for preventive and detective purposes, extremely defective, and has rearranged it. This, in...
On foreign and colonial policy, M. de Freycinet took a
The Spectatorlofty tone. " France desires peace ; she is resolutely and frankly debsrmined to have it ; but she will only have a peace which mete no loss of her dignity, and which entails no...
M. Tisza denied that any noteworthy change hadoccurred in the
The Spectatoralliance-relations of the Austrian Empire, more especially with Germany, adding," For this very reason we have no doubt that, having regard to the mutual conditions necessary...
M. de Freycinet on Tuesday delivered a speech at Toulouse
The Spectatorconsidered to have a certain importance. It was, though vague, both able and eloquent, and was received with extreme applause. As regards internal affairs, the Premier admitted...
Mr. Parnell has issued an appeal to Irish-Americans for funds
The Spectatorwith which to resist " the social war " which, he says, the rich Government of England has declared against the people of Ireland. The appeal is marked by an arti- ficial...
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We have always said that the success of the Salvation
The SpectatorArmy organisation, so far as it has been a success, was due to the implicit obedience which "General " Booth demands from all his followers. Discipline is always effective, and...
It is a specialty of sanitary reformers, who are among
The Spectatorthe most useful of the many intellectual nuisances in the world, to be deficient in the quality of humour. One of them, some years ago, recommended that a man's dead relatives...
One would have thought it impossible that there should be
The Spectatoran unprecedented accident; but it is said that the catastrophe on Loch Fyne, by which seven persons lost their lives on Saturday, had never occurred before. It has been the...
Mr. Henniker Heaton, M.P., has addressed to the Postmaster- General
The Spectatora letter in favour of an ocean penny postage between England and her Colonies, which seems to us unanswerable. He shows that the average cost of transmitting a letter as freight...
Lord Rosebery, who has been very silent of late, delivered
The Spectatora speech on Friday, September 24th, at Linlithgow, on the main thesis of which we have said enough elsewhere. Like some ancient economists, he looks upon London as a kind of...
Next to the withdrawal of small gold from European coinage,
The Spectatorthe best suggestion we have seen for saving gold and increasing the utility of silver is to tax the import of gold into India. Its principal use there is for hoarding, gold not...
The dislike of capitalists must extend far in Paris. Three
The SpectatorSocialists were tried there on Monday for using incendiary language at a public meeting on June 3rd. They were accused of telling the audience that capitalists must be shot, and...
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THE BLACK SPOT IN EASTERN EUROPE.
The SpectatorA REPORT is spreading, diligently fostered by the Russian Government, that there is to be no war for some time. On the one side, the Russian Staff is not ready, there is a Tory...
TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE LIBERAL DANGER. T HERE is danger, as we believe serious danger, that the Gladstonian Liberals, in their new and strange temper, may inflict a heavy blow upon the permanent...
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LORD RANDOLPH CHURCHILL AS LEADER.
The SpectatorI N reviewing the results of the Session that has just closed, the Liberal Unionists have good cause to feel at ease about the durability and success of their alliance with the...
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MR. PARNELL'S TEACHING.
The SpectatorA NY one who is interested in Irish politics, but doubts the urgency, the overpowering urgency, of the agrarian question, has only to read the letter addressed by Mr.. Parnell...
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LORD ROSEBERY ON LONDON.
The SpectatorW E do not wonder that the citizens of Linlithgow were on Friday week delighted with Lord Rosebery. Nothing tickles an audience like a clever apology for the secret grudges of...
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TREASON AND LENITY.
The SpectatorT HE telegrams from Madrid show that already public opinion in Spain is declaring in favour of an amnesty for the men who planned and carried out the revolt of September 19th....
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THE ROYAL COMMISSION ON ELEMENTARY EDUCATION.
The SpectatorB LUE-BOOKS, like divine philosophy, are not always harsh and crabbed, as dull people suppose, but often contain a great deal of amusement as well as interest. This is eminently...
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DR. WORDSWORTH ON EQUALITY.
The SpectatorA CONDENSED report of a s ermon is usually a bad report, worse even than the condensed report of a political speech. The reporter is seldom equally trained for his work ; he...
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EDUCATION AND WAGES.
The SpectatorN OTHING is more natural or more common than to see sympathy asked for and bestowed upon the clerk who works hard with his pen for forty years, and yet never earns more than a...
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A NEGRO REVIVAL.
The SpectatorRugby, Tennessee, September 11th, 1886. I CAN scarcely remember the time when I was not curious to know more about, and of course, if the chance ever offered, to be present at,...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorSUBMARINE BOATS. [To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTLIOR."1 think the writer of your article on "Two Electric- Boats," which appeared in your issue of September 18th, has done...
THE RIPON MILLENARY.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "13PECTATOR."J must get out of this Ripon business as soon as I can, and the Dean's letter in itself calls for no answer. It is im- portant only in this...
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[TO TRH EDITOR OF THE " SPECT•TOR."]
The SpectatorSIR,—Professor Freeman asks Canon McColl when and how Ripon became a "city." Is not the answer this P — At the date of, and by means of, the establishment of the Bishopric. I...
[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "]
The SpectatorSIR,—Whatever charter may have been granted to the burgesses of Ripon in 886 (if any), it would not be a charter of municipal incorporation. No charter of municipal...
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"HOUSED BEGGARS."
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,-The assailant of my pamphlet incorrectly represents me as saying without qualification that the condition of the tabourer has grown...
THE BRITISH ASSOCIATION AND "FOSSIL MAN." [To THE EDITOR OP
The SpectatorTHE " SPECTATOR. " ] Sia,-Most geologists will agree with your strictures on Sir J. W. Dawson's reconciliation hypothesis in your article on ." Fossil Man ;" but many of them...
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IS THE SEA-GULL EDIBLE P
The Spectator[To ?RR EDITOR OP TEE " SPECTATOR.") S1E, — If the sea-gull is skinned before it is cooked, it is by no means bad eating. The fishy taste appears to be confined to the layer of...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorTHE LIFE OF THE DUKE OF NEWCASTLE.* LOVERS of English literature will thank Mr. Nimmo for this fine reprint in one volume of two celebrated books. Yet these books are more...
THE KYRLE SOCIETY.
The Spectator[To TILE EDITOR 01 TEE "SPECTATOR." J Slit,-0 wing to your kindness in inserting the appeal on behalf of the Literature Distribution Branch of the Kyrle Society, we have been in...
POETRY.
The SpectatorTHE SECRET OF THE SEA.—SONNET. WHAT is your woe, or who hath done you wrong, Sorrowful surges wailing up the shore ? "No hope !" ye cry, " Too late ! 0, nevermore !"- A chill...
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MR. NORRIS'S NEW NOVEL.*
The SpectatorMs.. NORRIS is an exceedingly clever writer, and My Friend Jim is an exceptionally clever book, even for him. But the first duty of criticism iu respect of it is to give a word...
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THE " PARADIS•E " OF DANTE.• As Mr. Butler's ambition
The Spectatordoes not soar higher than the produc- tion of a good " crib " to Dante, we may dispense with any minute criticisms on his excellent prose version of the Paradiso. His task was...
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LECHLER'S "APOSTOLIC AND POST-APOSTOLIC TIMES."
The SpectatorIT is not often the privilege of an author to rewrite a book after an interval of nearly forty years, nor to consider his results anew after a time of prolonged investigation by...
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A SEA-PAINTER'S LOG.* No happily-constituted person, gifted with the capacity
The Spectatorfor real dawdling that is so rare, combined with the faculty of observa- tion, need desire a better companion for a leisurely holiday than Mr. Leslie's delightfully desultory,...
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SIR HERBERT EDWARDES. 0 Tux important services, political and military, rendered
The Spectatorto his country by this distinguished officer are well worthy of per- manent record, connected as they were with a very eventful period of the history of our Indian Empire ; and...
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"THE KING CAN DO NO WRONG."'
The SpectatorTHE heroine of this touching and clever story is one of the class of human beings of whom we say they have had "no chance." We all know people who belong to that class, and we...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorPOETRY.—.41il i±!s : a Dimmatic Poem. By J. C. Heywood. (Megan Paul, Trench, and Co.)—Mr. Heywood, who has already found a subject in " Herodias," gives us here what may be...
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We have received another volume of the Gentleman's Magazine Library,
The Spectatoredited by George Laurence Gomme (Elliot Stock). This volume is the second and concluding part of the subject " Archae- ology," containing, we may remind our readers, a...
The Industrial Situation and the Question of Wages : a
The SpectatorStudy in Social Physiology. By J. Schoenhof. (G. P. Putnam's Sons, London and New York.)—This book, one of the " Questions of the Day" series, is mainly concerned with American...
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Fresh-Water Fishes of Europe. By H. G. Seeley. (Cassell and
The SpectatorCo.) —Messrs. Cassell make in this volume an interesting and valuable addition to the series of works on natural history published by them. British fishes are pretty well known...
An interesting little volume, showing how much good work is
The Spectatorbeing done in an unpretending way, is The Directory of Girls' Societies, Clubs, and Unions. By S. F. A. Caulfield. (Griffiths, Ferran, and Co.)—One may smile at " Early-Rising"...
The seventeenth volume of the Proceedings of the Royal Colonial
The SpectatorInstitute (Sampson Low and Co.) contains, as usual, interesting papers and discussions ; among them, Sir George F. Bowen on " The Federation of the British Empire," Mr. F. B....