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BOOKS.
The SpectatorMR. CHURTON COLLINS ON TENNYSON.* Ws cannot accept all Mr. Churton Collins's criticisms on Tennyson, but we willingly acknowledge their general sanity and acuteness. The...
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A SAILOR'S NOTEBOOK.* IT is easy to understand the perennial
The Spectatorfascination which books of travel, notably books of sea-travel, possess for the large multitude who do not habitually go down to the sea in ships. Partly it is the "undying...
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SOME VOLUMES OF VERSE.* IT is not for the first
The Spectatortime that we have complained of the task which recurs from time to time of critically estimating the minor verse of the day. The stream flows on with a fairly equal current;...
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THE YANGTSE VALLEY.*
The SpectatorALTHOUGH We hear of violent changes at Pekin, the more remote provinces of China move slowly. Reaction has set in at the capital before the antecedent reforms have really begun...
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CURRENT LITERAT URE.
The SpectatorART-BOOKS. 2s.)-1n this work M. Michel has done for Rubens what he has done for Rembrandt already. He has produced a work full of research into details, but written in such a...
A History of Gothic Art in England. By E. S.
The SpectatorPrior. (G. Bell and Sons. 31s. Cd.)—The author contends strongly for the acknowledgment of the independence of English Gothic, and controverts the theories of its French origin....
Dante Gabriel Rossetti : an Illustrated Memorial of his Art
The Spectatorand Life. By H. C. Marillier. (G. Bell and Sons. £5 5s.)—So much has been written of late about the Pre-Raphaelites generally, and Rossetti in particular, that there is nothing...
The Phil May Album. Collected by A. M. Moore. (Methuen
The Spectatorand Co. 6s.)—It is needless to praise the character drawing and humour of Mr. May's work, for they are plain to all ; but it takes close examination to appreciate the subtle...
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The Renaissance in Italian Art. By Selwyn Brinton. Part III.,
The Spectator" Milan, Perugia, and Rome." (Simpkin, Marshall, and Co. 5s.) —This is an excellent handbook for the traveller in Italy. The information is copious and gives a summary of the...
Donatello. By Hope Rea. "Great Masters Series." (G. Bell and
The SpectatorSons. 5s.)—The author points out truly that Donatello was much more than a mere forerunner of the Renaissance. He was indeed a master who sought to give deep expressiveness by...
ENGLAND AND AMERICA AFTER INDEPENDENCE.
The SpectatorEngland and America after Independence. By Edward Smith. (A. Constable and Co. 14s.)—This work is intended to give an examination of the international intercourse of the United...
THE EGYPTIAN CAMPAIGNS.
The SpectatorThe Egyptian Campaigns, 1882 to 1899. By Charles Boyle. (Hurst and Blackett. 12s. net.) —Mr. Boyle, who is a Judge of the Egyptian Court of Appeal, published his his- tory of...
The English Pre-Raphaelite Painters. By Percy H. Bate. (G. Bell
The Spectatorand Sons. 42s. net.)—The chief interest of this book is that it gives us accounts of the lesser-known members of this great movement, and good reproductions of their works....
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner. By S. T. Coleridge.
The SpectatorIllus- trated by Herbert Cole. (Gay and Bird. 5s.)—The images evoked by this poem are so vivid that it is hardly in want of illustration. The pictures in this book are well...
The Life and Death of Mr. Badman. With Decorations by
The Spectatorthe Brothers Rhead. (W. Heinemann. 15s.)—This book is beauti- fully printed with clear black type well proportioned to the ample page. The full-page illustrations are well in...
The Midsummer of Italian Art. By F. P. Stearns. Revised
The SpectatorEdition. (G. P. Putnam's Sons. 9s.)—A certain enthusiasm with which this book is written gives it interest, though it cannot be trusted as a safe guide when it comes to critical...
Renaissance and Modern Art. By W. H. Goodyear. (Macmillan and
The SpectatorCo. 6s.)—This book, which comes from the pen of an American, is an excellent introduction to the study of art. As it covers a wide field, there is not much space for details,...
Little Journeys to the Homes of Eminent Painters. By Elbert
The SpectatorHubbard. (G. P. Putnam's Sons. 6s.)—These sketches are charm- ingly written and full of vivacity. Perhaps the best is the account of Fortuny, who as a child helped his...
Giotto and his Works at Padua. By J. Ruskin. (George
The SpectatorAllen. 78. 6d.)—This edition is illustrated with good process reproduc- tions of the frescoes, which together with Mr. Ruskin's notes make an excellent handbook to the Arena...
Correggio. By Selwyn Minton. " Great Masters Series." (G. Bell
The Spectatorand Sons. 5s.) —The author gives us a careful and well- ordered account of the work of Correggio, but he does not attempt to solve or even go deeply into the problem of why...
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VILLAGE LIFE IN CHINA.
The SpectatorVillage Life in China. By Arthur H. Smith, D.D. (Oliphant, Anderson, and Ferrier, Edinburgh. 7s. 6d.)—Few more interest- ing and readable books on China have been written than...
A HISTORY OF ABERDEEN AND BANFF.
The SpectatorA History of Aberdeen and Banff. By William Watt. (W. Blackwood and Sons. 7s. 6d.)—This is one of the best—perhaps it is the most solid and informing—of the admirable series of...
MILITARY GEOGRAPHY.
The SpectatorMilitary Geography. By T. Miller Maguire. (Cambridge University Press. 10s. 6d.)—There are many words of wisdom in Mr. Maguire's text-book, and they will interest all. It is...
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GENERAL NATHAN B. FORREST.
The SpectatorThe Life of General Nathan Bedford Forrest. By John Allan Wyeth, M.D. (Harper and Brothers. $4.)—In this Life of one of the most remarkable cavalry leaders on the Confederate...
MARIE ANTOINETTE.
The SpectatorMaris Antoinette and the Diamond Necklace. By F. de Albini. (Swan Sonnenschein and Co. 6s.)—Dante would have assigned a separate pit in his Malebolge to the rascals of the...
IN MOORISH CAPTIVITY.
The SpectatorIn Moorish Captivity : an Account of the 'Tourmaline' Expedi- tion in Sus. By H. AL Grey. (Edward Arnold. 16s.)—We need only recall to our readers the name of Major Spilsbury...
HOW TO DEAL WITH YOUR BANKER.
The SpectatorHow to Deal with Your Banker. By Henry Warren. (Grant Richards. 3s. 6d.)—This little handbook to the external sides of banking business is a mine of knowledge in regard to the...
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A YEAR-BOOK OF THEATRICAL CRITICISM.
The SpectatorStudy and Stage. By William Archer. (Grant Richards. 6s.) —Mr. Archer is undoubtedly one of the most capable of living theatrical critics ; his writing is always readable and...
ST. PAUL, THE MASTER-BUILDER
The SpectatorThe Warden of Keble's small book on St. Paul, the Master- Builder . (Methuen and Co., 38. 6d.), the notice of which should not have been so long delayed, is an interesting...
ARISTOTLE'S ETHICS.
The SpectatorChapters from Aristotle's Ethics. By Professor J. H. Muirhead. (John Murray. 7s. 6d.)—In this piece of critical interpretation which Professor Mairhead has given us we welcome a...
John Nixon, Pioneer of the Steam-Coal Trade in South Wales
The Spectator: a • Memoir. By James Edmund Vincent. (John Murray. 10a. 6d.) — The subject of this memoir from very small beginnings became in time one of the foremost coalowners of the...
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THE UNCHANGING EAST.
The SpectatorThe Unchanging East. By Robert Barr. (Chatto and Windus. 6s.)—Mr. Barr is at once a genial humourist and a keen observer, and if he does not tell us anything that is positively...
WHAT IS THOUGHT?
The SpectatorWhat is Thought? or, The Problem of Philosophy by Way of a General Conclusion so Far. By James Hutchison Stirling. LL.D. (T. and T. Clark. 10s. 6d.)—It is easier to point out...
THE FLOWING TIDE.
The SpectatorThe Flowing Tide. By Madame Belloc. (Sands and Co. 6s.) —This book is written to prove that Catholicism is increasing in England, reviving on the Continent, and spreading all...
LUTHER. AND THE GERMAN REFORMATION.
The SpectatorLuther and the German. Reformation. By Thomas M. Lindsay, D.D., Professor of Church History, Free Church College, Glasgow. (T. and T. Clark. 3s.)—We need perpetual moral...
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Innermost Asia : Travel and Sport in the Pamirs. By
The SpectatorR. P. Cobbold. With Illustrations. (W. Heinemann. 21s.)—As the Indian Government can only be persuaded with the greatest difficulty to allow Englishmen to explore even in their...
Romances of Roguery : an Episode in the History of
The Spectatorthe Novel. By Frank Wadleigh Chandler. In 2 parts. Part I., "The Picaresque Novel in Spain." (Macmillan and Co. Ss. 6d.)—Mr. Chandler's work is essentially academic, being an...
JOHN RUSKIN.
The SpectatorJohn. Ruskin. By Mrs. Meynell. (W. Blackwood and Sons. 2s. 6d.)—This, the latest of the series on "Modern English Writers," is not a biography of John Ruskin, but is intended by...
THE AUGUSTAN AGES.
The SpectatorThe Augustan Ages. By Oliver Elton. (W. Blackwood and Sons. 5s.)—This volume of the "Periods of European Literature," which deals with the rise of the "classical" spirit in the...
A. Book of Bachelors. By A. W. Fox, M.A. (Constable
The Spectatorand Co. 16s.)—This is a somewhat whimsical idea of Mr. Fox's, to give sketches of some notable bachelors in various professions. Bishop Andrewes, the physician Boorde,...
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A Winter in Berlin. By Marie von Bunsen. (Edward Arnold.
The Spectator5s.)—This is rather a sad story of a widow who brings her children to Berlin and gives them the best opportunities, she herself being noble, only to find their way of thinking...
The History of the Blessed Virgin Mary, and The History
The Spectatorof the Likeness of Christ. The Syriac Texts. Edited, with English Translations, by E. A. Wallis Budge, M.A. (Luzac and Co. 103. 6d.)—We have here, in the fifth volume of the...
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London; Printed by LOVE & WYMAN (Limited) at Nos. 74-76
The SpectatorGreat Queen Street, W.C. ; and Published by JOHN BASER for the "SPECTATOR " (Limited), at their Office, No. 1 Wellington Street, in the Precinct of the Savoy, Strand, in the...
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In the south-east General Rundle has been moving east- ward
The Spectatoragainst the Boer position on the Tafelberg, ten miles east of Senekal, near which two or three minor actions have been fought, while in the north-east the country is re- ported...
It is quite evident that the unity of the Powers
The Spectatorin China, which it is most important to preserve, will depend in the end upon the harmony or jealousy between Great Britain and Russia. Russia is pouring troops into China who...
On the other hand, part of the news is very
The Spectatorserious. It is evident that the Chinese Government is accumulating troops, and that many of these troops, as the attack on Admiral Seymour showed, can fight fairly well. He was...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE tension in China has this week been greatly relieved, though the general aspect of affairs is still most serious. The Chinese troops, under the command, as is rumoured...
The news from South Africa during the week has been
The Spectatorfragmentary and not altogether satisfactory, but we have little doubt that Lord Roberts's apparent inactivity, as on former occasions, indicates the necessary preparations for...
No. 3,757.]
The SpectatorFOR THE WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 1900. rP IGLSTER ED AS I PRIOR SD. NEWSPAPER. BY POST...GiD. CP,TAGE ABROAD
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The Khedive arrived in England on Friday week, but was
The Spectatorfound to be suffering from sore throat, with symptoms which suggested possible diphtheria. He remained, therefore, on board the Royal yacht till Wednesday, when, having com-...
The Morning Post of Wednesday contains some interesting details of
The Spectatorthe defence of Mafeking furnished in conversation with Mr. Winston Churchill by General Baden-Powell. He had not been allowed by the Cape Government to fortify Mafeking before...
Mr. Ritchie in moving the second reading of the Com-
The Spectatorpanies Bill in the House of Commons on Tuesday laid stress on the need for great caution in amending the law relating to public companies. Legislation that drove away the best...
The Archduke Francis Ferdinand, the heir to the Austrian Monarchy,
The Spectatorwill on Sunday be married, morganatically, but with the Emperor's consent, to the Countess Chotek, and on Thursday a rather singular preliminary ceremony was per- formed. The...
The Times correspondent in Paris apprehends that a new danger
The Spectatoris in store for the Waldeck-Ronsseau Ministry. The support of the Socialists is necessary, as was proved by the inclusion of M. Millerand in the Cabinet, and there is a grave...
The Duke of Devonshire presented the Secondary Education Bill in
The Spectatorthe Lords on Tuesday. After explaining the changes effected under the Board of Education Bill—which had for its main object the uniting in one office of the two educational...
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The Chancellor of the Exchequer was the principal speaker at
The Spectatorthe Mansion House dinner to bankers and merchants of the City on Wednesday. After the usual conventionally facetious references to his thankless position—s g., he de- scribed...
We are happy to record that the famine in India
The Spectatorapproaches its termination. The monsoon, though late, has brought copious rain throughout India, and in a few weeks cultiva- tion will be possible, and the moneylenders, secure...
The new tubular underground Central London Railway, which connects Shepherd's
The SpectatorBush with the Bank, was formally opened by the Prince of Wales on Wednesday afternoon. The time occupied in the transit from the Bank to the depot at Shepherd's Bush was just...
The stars in their courses seem to fight against us
The Spectatorin Ashanti. The forces despatched to relieve Coomasaie have been delayed by torrents of rain, which have made the rivers impassable, and it is greatly feared that they will be...
The evidence given before the Coroner as to the cause
The Spectatorof the railway accident at Slough strongly confirms the view we expressed when the Mohegan ' was lost, that experts, especially of a certain age, were as liable as other men,...
A very serious discussion has been raised in Parliament by
The Spectatora letter from Mr. Burdett-Contts, fully analysed elsewhere. He says that while the sur gical arrangements in South Africa were excellent, the arrangemen ts for the sick were...
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THE INCREASED VALUE OF DIPLOMATISTS.
The SpectatorFr HE death of Count Mouravieff, as all French poli- ticians have instantly perceived, must prove a most important event. Whatever his precise relation to Great Britain—and we...
TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE STRENGTH OP CHINA. T IENTSIN has been "relieved," whatever that much- employed word may mean, and Admiral Seymour has been rescued with his force, but nevertheless if we...
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THE POLITICS OF ROMAN CATHOLICISM. T HE Tinzes of Tuesday published
The Spectatora letter from its correspondent at Rome which points from the recent General Election a moral whose application is more than Italian. The Papal non, expedit which commanded...
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OBSTRUCTION ON THE CONTINENT.
The SpectatorT HE more extreme parties and the smaller political factions throughout Europe, whatever may be their intentions, are preparing the way for some form of abso- lute government....
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MR. BURDETT-COUTTS'S INDICTMENT.
The SpectatorJ T is no exaggeration - to say that the most terrible piece of news that has yet been received from South Africa appeared in the Times of Wednesday. We say this, of course, on...
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ASIATIC COURAGE. A MONG the many ideas which mislead Europeans in
The Spectatordealing with Asiatics, few are nore inveterate than the belief that they are generally wanting in courage. They are not exactly considered cowards, that would be too absurd, but...
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THE GUTENBERG ANNIVERSARY.
The SpectatorW E have no intention of discussing the question as to who wds the real inventor of the art of printing. It is quite possible that the Chinese, who made so many inven- tions and...
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PINES AND POOLS OF SURREY.
The SpectatorW HAT grows on the top in any English county generally depends on what there is at the bottom. In the South, wherever the pine woods flourish the chances are that below them...
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CORRESPONDENCE.
The SpectatorIMPRESSIONS OF AN AMERICAN STUDENT AT CAMBRIDGE. [TO THE EDITOR OF TEE "SPECTATOR:) SIE,—" Gods of a cloudy Olympus" ; " antiquarians " of the kind pilloried by Milton as...
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THE LANGUAGE QUESTION IN SOUTH AFRICA. (To TRH EDITOR OF
The SpectatorTHE "SPECTATOR.") 8111,—I think it a great pity that Mr. Lionel Phillips in his paper read at the Royal Colonial Institute on "The Outlook in South Africa" should have gone out...
MR. RHODES AND THE NATIVE QUESTION.
The Spectator(To TUB EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.") Sr,—Discussing the South African native question in the Spectator of June 23rd, you clearly state, in two places, your opinion that the...
LETTERS TO - TEE EDITOR:
The SpectatorCOUNT MOURAVIEFF AND ENGLAND. (To THR EDITOR OP THR "SPRCTA,TOR.") Sra,—In your notice of Count Mouravieff's death in the Spectator of June 23rd you say that "during the time...
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SOCIAL LIFE IN THE BRITISH ARMY. [To VIE EDITOR OF
The SpectatorTIIE "SPECTATOR:1 Sra,—" A Soldier ' s Son " has pointed out in the Spectator of June 16th that many young men who would make fine soldiers are lost to the Army because they are...
RIFLE CLUBS.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR."] Stn,—You will be glad to know that a rifle club has been inaugurated at West Hartlepool.with the greatest prospect of success. Last week it...
RICHMOND OLD DEER PARK.
The Spectator(To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,--The objections to the scheme of building in the Old Deer Park are numerous and insuperable. Firstly, there are legal difficulties to...
[To THE EDITOR. OF THE "SPECTATOR:]
The Spectatorreading the interesting correspondence as regards rifle-shooting in your columns, there is one suggestion that, so far, I have not seen, and I therefore hasten to make it....
A RESERVE OF HORSES FOR THE ARMY. [To TUE EDITOR
The SpectatorOF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR, — Referring to your remarks in the Spectator of June 9th regarding the advisability of supplying farmers with horses on condition of their joining the...
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[To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR.')
The SpectatorSin,—It is possible that the following facts may interest the bird-loving readers of the Spectator. Last year, at my country place—Wileote, in Oxfordshire—a pair of swallows...
BIRD-STORIES.
The Spectator[TO THE EDI,TOR OF THE "SPEC CATOR.1 STE,—A blackbird of Upton Village, Berkshire, has given evidence of a quality supposed to belong only to the caged and trained one,—the...
LOUIS IRVING SEYMOUR.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sus,—Every Englishman who ever came within reach of his vivid personality, or even blew about him by report, must deplore the death of Major...
BIRMINGHAM (KING EDWARD VI.) SCHOOLS BILL. [To TILE EDITOR OF
The SpectatorTHE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,—On the occasion of the third reading of this Bill, which was carried by a majority of 68, Mr. Chamberlain said that he did not remember a private Bill...
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POETRY.
The SpectatorTWO IRISH LOVE SONGS. SHE IS MY LOVE. (In the measure of the original Irish Gaelic Love Song.) Sun is my love beyond all thought, Though she bath wrought my deepest dole; Yet...
SINCE WE SHOULD PART.
The Spectator(Founded upon an old Gaelic Love Song, and to an air in the Petrie Collection.) SINCE we should part, since we should part, The weariness and lonesome smart Are going greatly...
ART.
The SpectatorTHE WALLACE COLLECTION AT HERTFORD HOUSE. On Monday Hertford House was opened to the public, and the royal gift which was made to the nation by the late Lady Wallace became...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorBOSNIA., HERZEGOVINA, AND DALXiTIA.* Tars is the best accotm . t of the trans-Adriatic provinces of Austria since the publication of Professor Asb6th's Work on Bosnia some...
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THE RISE OF RUSSIA.*
The SpectatorPEW subjects are more• fascinating to the student of history than the origin and adolescence of great nations, though some minds, like that of Gibbon, prefer to dwell on their...
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PIONEERING ON THE CONGO.* Tiers book is a history of
The Spectatorthe good work done by emissaries of the Baptist Missionary Society on the Congo River during the last twenty years of the nineteenth century. Mr. Bentley and his...
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TWO BOOKS OF HOMILIES.*
The SpectatorTHE wide variety there may be in the homiletic treatment of the Bible is forcibly illustrated by the contrast between two little books that have recently appeared by two...
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NOVELS OF THE WEEK.* IT would be hazardous to predict
The Spectatorfor The Knights of the Cross the same degree of popularity achieved by Quo Vadis? Many readers will doubtless be repelled by the hugeness of the canvas, the outlandish theme,...
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CURRENT LITER AT LIRE.
The SpectatorTHE PATHOLOGY OF EMOTIONS. The Pathology of Emotions. By Ch. Fere. Translated by R. Park, M.D. (The University Press.)—The increasing com- plexity of life, the pace at which we...
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Some Social and Political Pioneers of the Nineteenth Century. By
The SpectatorRamsden Balmforth. (Swan Sonnenschein and Co. 2s. 6d.) —Mr. Balmforth has reprinted this series of articles from the Co - operative Review with the modest hope that they will be...
()Iloilo, Old and New. By C. Sellers. With Illustrations. (H.
The SpectatorE. Harper. .el ls.)—The title given above really resolves itself into a history of the port wine trade and the various merchants who have made, and been made by, port. A...
Historic Parallels to L'21ffaire Dreyfus. By Edgar Sanderson, M.A. (Hutchinson
The Spectatorand Co. 6s.)—The publication of these historic parallels to the now historic farce of Rennes is a very timely reminder to us that we cannot throw stones at our neigh - hours. A...
Reminiscences, 1819 - 1899. By Julia Ward Howe. (Gay and Bird. 10s.
The Spectatornet.)—The writer of this autobiography is an American, and as she is eighty years of age her recollections stretch over the greater part of the century. The book begins with a...
On the Eve of the War. By Evelyn Cecil, M.P.
The Spectator(John Murray. 3s. 6d.)—The "ordinary reader" will soon be so sur- feited with books dealing with the events of the war in South Africa, that a volume dealing with incidents that...
The Syriac Chronicle of Zachariah of Mitylene. Translated into English
The Spectatorby F. J. Hamilton, D.D., and E. W. Brooks, M.A. (Methuen and Co. 12s. 6d.)—This is the third volume of Pro• fessor Bury's valuable series of Byzantine texts. The author was a...
The Diary of a Dreamer. By Alice Dew-Smith. (T. Fisher
The SpectatorUnwin. es.)—This book contains forty-five very short and very slight essays or articles of the type of which we see sufficient in the evening papers. Some of them are amusing,...
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The New Battle of Dorking, By * * • *
The Spectator* * (Grant Richards. 1s.)—The author of this pamphlet wishes to put his readers on their guard against a possible invasion by the French. There are, he says, "three months in...
The Dual Land. (Elliot Stock. 10s. 6d.)—It is as well
The Spectatorto quote, by way of explanation of a not quite obvious phrase, the compiler's sub-title,—" A Collection of Verses from Many Sources for the Great Family of Those who have been,...
Hawaii and its People. By Alexander S. Twombly. (Silver, Burdett,
The Spectatorand Co., Boston, U.S. 5s.)—Mr. Tvrombly tells the story of Hawaii in three parts. First, there is "Ancient Hawaii," where we have an earlier period of folk-lore and myth and a...
SOME BOOKS OF THE WEEK.
The Spectator(Under this heading we notice such Boas of the week as have not been reserved for review in other forms.) The Frogs of Aristophanes. Translated by E. W. Hantingford, M.A....
nineteenth century from the standpoint of the politician. Mr. Sears
The Spectatordeals in his first book with (1) the Latin nations, (2) South- Eastern Europe and Russia, (3) the Teutonic nations ; in his second with Great Britain and her Colonies ; in his...
A war-book of no little interest is My Diocese during
The Spectatorthe War, by the Bishop of Natal (G. Bell and Sons, 6s.) The Bishop explains that it has been his habit since leaving England seven years ago to write down, day by day, rough...
The Ascent of Mount Si. Mies. By Filippo de Filippi.
The SpectatorTrans- kted by Signora Linda Villari. (1. Constable and Co. 31s. ed. net.)—H.R.H. the Duke of the Abruzzi cherished the ambition of ascending some unconquered peak. His first...
Hector Macdonald; or, The Private who Became a General. By
The SpectatorThomas F. G. Coates. (S. W. Partridge. is. 6d.)—Privates who become Generals, ploughboys who become statesmen, and log cabins which are exchanged for White Houses have a curious...
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A History of Surrey. By Henry Elliot Malden. (Elliot Stock.
The Spectator7s. 6d.)—This is a peculiarly interesting volume. It is a good subject, and Mr. Malden has done it full justice. He is not a " Dryasdust," it must be understood. He has the...
TELEOLOGT.—A. Faith for To - Day. By R. J. Campbell, B.A. (James
The SpectatorClarke and Co. 69.)—It is not easy to define the theo- logical standpoint of the writer of these "Suggestions towards a System of Christian Belief." His view of the dogma of...
Some Notable Hamlets. By Clement Scott. (Greening and Co. 2s.
The Spectator6d.)—Mr. L. A. Greening contributes by way of preface an "appreciation" of Mr. Clement Scott, an essay which, saving our standing objection to "appreciations," or writing of any...
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MISCELLANEOUS.—Of books of the holiday season, now within measurable distance,
The Spectatorwe have Seaside Watering Places (L. Upcott Gill, 2s. 6d.), "a description of holiday resorts on the coasts of England and Wales, the Channel Islands, and the Isle of Man," and...
NEW EnrrioNs.—In the "Larger Temple Shakespeare," edited by Israel Gollancz
The Spectator(J. M. Dent and Co., 4s. 6d. net), Vol. XL. containing Othello, Antony and Cleopatra, and Pericles, Prince of Tyre. — In the "Works of Tobias Smollelt " (A. Constable and Co.)...