Page 1
The Picquart affair may prove worse than the Dreyfus business.
The SpectatorThe Army chiefs, with General Zurlinden, now Governor of Paris, at their head, are evidently determined to -crush him, nominally for forgery, really for, as they think,...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE revolt of the Mad Moollah, and his incursion upon the route to Chitral, reported this week from India, may prove of no more importance than a riot, and may also prove a...
We have elsewhere stated our belief that the contest be-
The Spectatortween the military and civil powers is reaching an acute stage. General Zurlinden showed that he thought so when he snatched Colonel Picquart away from the civil Court which...
The Triple Alliance received on Tuesday, November 29th, what may
The Spectatorprove a very serious wound. The large emigration into Silesia and Saxony of Austrian Slays in search of labour has alarmed the German authorities, who fear a workmen's movement...
There is no indication as yet that the civil and
The Spectatormilitary powers have arrived at a modus vivendi, or that General Zurlinden proposes to resign, or that the Court-Martial will hesitate to bring in a verdict of " Guilty "...
Page 2
Though the announcement that the United States had secured a
The Spectatorsite for a coaling - station on the Chiriqui Lagoon—a great inlet from the Caribbean Sea close to the projected entrance to the Nicaragua Canal—appears to be without foundation,...
On Wednesday Sir Michael Hicks-Beach made a spirited and effective
The Spectatorplea for free speech in regard to foreign affairs, and asked : " Why were foreigners to say what they liked of us, as they did very freely, without provoking us, and why was a...
All sailors have a spice of humour in them, and
The Spectatorthe Admirals have been showing it in Crete. The Sultan has begged that his flag should fly somewhere in his lost dominion, and the Czar has granted his request; but the...
The celebration of the Austrian Emperor's Jubilee com- menced on
The Spectatorthe last day of November, and is marked. throughout his dominions, among Slays as well as Germans, by a tone of heartiness rarely found in such " august " ceremonials. Even...
On Friday, November 25th, Lord Selborne made a most sett.
The SpectatorBible and statesmanlike speech in regard to the West Indies, in which he pointed out how the islands could produce articles of which the world was always demanding more,—chief...
At Bristol on Tuesday Mr. Balfour delivered a speech of
The Spectatorsingular force and interest. He took credit for the way in which the Cretan problem had at last been solved owing to akenthited)sction of France, Russia, Italy, and Great...
On Friday, November 25th, Lord Rosebery delivered his inaugural address
The Spectatoras President of the Edinburgh Philo- sophical Society, his subject being " Literary Statesmen." He began by an amusing account of how Lord Brougham or Mr. Gladstone, if they had...
The Peace Commissioners have virtually finished their work. The Americans
The Spectatorare to pay Spain £4,000,000, and the whole of the Philippine Archipelago is to be abandoned by Spain and unconditionally banded over to the United States. The exact future of...
Page 3
Lord Kitchener acts quickly. On September 2nd he con. quered
The Spectatorat Omdurman, and this week, in a correspondence with Lord Salisbury and a speech at Edinburgh, he brings forward a proposal to found a Gordon College at Khartoum. He asks the...
Mr. Balfour closed his speech with a passage in regard
The Spectatorto the crisis in the Church which so exactly represents our feeling on the subject that we shall make no apology for quoting it in full. The Bishops, he declared, would know how...
Captain Mahan's second letter in Thursday's Times shows that he
The Spectatoris no believer in huge ships, but lays down the principle that in the battleship great speed is distinctly secondary to offensive power and coal endurance. Mobile power, says...
Mr. Asquith, presiding at the Lowestoft Liberal Club on Thursday
The Spectatorlast, made an attempt to sketch the policy of the Liberal party. Popular control of a real kind must be carried out from the top to the bottom of our educational system. The...
The Daily Mail of Monday reports, with a graphic illustra-
The Spectatortion, the strange experience that befell H.M.S. Arrogant' while proceeding from Vigo to Gibraltar. " She was going ahead at full-speed in a calm sea about fifteen miles south of...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorIS REVOLUTION COMING IN FRANCE ? W E must just say what we have to say, and if any one accuses us of sensation-mongering, must put up with it until the event proves or...
Page 5
AMERICA'S NEW EMPIRE.
The SpectatorS PAIN has at last yielded to the demands of the United States, and that great tropical Dominion, the Philippine Archipelago, has, in addition to Porto Rico and Hawaii, and...
Page 6
A ROMAN CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY FOR IRELAND.
The SpectatorE are extremely glad to see that the Conference of Conservative Associations at Bristol in effect refused to vote a resolution condemning the establish- ment of a University in...
Page 7
THE CZAR. T HE article in the Main of Tuesday, the
The Spectatorsubstance of which appeared in the Times of the same day, gives a remarkably vivid and interesting picture of Nicholas II. To those Englishmen who thought, when the idea of a,...
Page 8
LORD KITCHENER'S PROJECT.
The SpectatorT HERE is something in Lord Kitchener's proposal to found a great College in Khartoum by subscriptio n in Great Britain which will, we think, deeply touch the national...
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MORALITY IN PUBLIC AFFAIRS.
The SpectatorW E do not believe that the problem which the Times debates on Tuesday, and which has in truth been discussed for centuries, that of the apparent conflict between morality in...
Page 10
THE POETRY OF LONDON.
The SpectatorGRANT RICHARDS has just published a book called " London in Song," the first feature of which is that there is very little about London in it. It is rather a thick book,...
Page 11
STATESMANSHIP AND LITERATURE.
The SpectatorL ORD ROSEBERY as a speaker is generally interesting, and, in our opinion, he is apt to be more interesting on literary than on political subjects. In the latter case he has to...
Page 12
AT the Birmingham Dog Show, held last week, it was
The Spectatorwas painted by Landseer. The Prince Consort's taste did not noted that the old English kinds, especially the highly make the greyhound fashionable as a house dog, though...
Page 13
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorUNIVERSITY EDUCATION IN IRELAND. [To TIER EDITOR OF THIN " SPICTATOR."] SIR, — The letter of " Catholicus " on this subject, which appeared in the Spectator of November 19th,...
[To TIER EDITOR. or TR. EPRCTALTOR."1 SIR,—I have just read
The Spectatorthe letter signed " Catholicus " in the Spectator of November 19th, and my emphatic comment upon it is that which you yourself make in a few pregnant remarks. "Our only fear,"...
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SQUIRRELS FEEDING SHEEP.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—Wandering many years ago in the then Lord Skelmers- dale's park near Ormskirk, my attention was drawn to the eccentric movements of...
THE SENSE OF DIRECTION IN ANIMALS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. " ] SIR,—A friend of mine told , me some years ago that he had had some Scotch cattle conveyed direct by rail from Scotland to the south of the...
MR. GLADSTONE ON SHAKESPEARE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR, —Some years since I had the great pleasure of meeting Mr. Gladstone at dinner. One of the other guests asked him whether it was true...
A "BULL" INDEED.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF TILE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR, —Here is a complication of " bulls."—A witness in the Courts here the other day was asked : " Was Michael Flaherty your grandfather F"...
THE LIFE OF SHAKESPEARE.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR."] SIE,—I quote below a passage from Saint-Evremond in which he describes a state of feeling parallel to that to which expres- sion is given in...
MR. GLADSTONE AND MR. BROWNING.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR.'] SIR,—In a letter to the Spectator of November 26th, Canon MacColl has impugned my statement that Mr. Gladstone applied the words, "I call...
A CAT AND DOG STORY.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR 07 THE " SPECTATOR."] Sin,—In reference to your interesting article on "Benevo- lence in Animals " in the Spectator of October 15th, the following incident may...
Page 15
BOOKS.
The SpectatorTHE FRENCH ARMY.* M. ITRBAIN GORIER'S attack upon the Army of his father- land is remarkable, not only for itself, but for its effect. Alone of all the defamatory pamphlets...
BACK FROM THE WAR IN CUBA.
The SpectatorWHEN I come back from Cuba They laid me up a spell, A convalescing from a piece Of a busted Spanish shell; And while I laid in hospital, Requiring all my grit, Some ladies come...
A NEW ZEALAND "BULL."
The Spectator[To TIM EDITOR. OP as " Brisorarea.."] SIR,—It may interest your readers to learn that our popular Governor, with a view, doubtless, of acclimatising the Irish "bull" at the...
Trim neighbours to young Janie said,
The Spectator" 0 where may your Willie be ? " ." And where is your jolly lover gone That flaunted o'er the sea ? " An old crone said it to herself, Slow-chuckling at the door ; A young...
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TWO OPEN-AIR POETS.*
The SpectatorWHEN Milton in one of his inspired parentheses said that poetry was "simple, sensuous, and passionate," he gave us in three words an admirable summary of its essential...
Page 17
WILLIAM II. AT WORK AND PLAY..
The SpectatorSOME time since a loyal Prussian published an encyclopaedic analysis of the intimate aspects of Kaiser Wilhelm's daily life amidst his domestic, palatial, military, and...
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SPECIAL LITERARY SUPPLEMENT
The SpectatorTO Tht *potriator FOR THE No. 3,675.] WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1898. [ i .,1= 7 ,Z, D1 GRATis.
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorSOME CLERICAL REMINISCENCES.* WHEN Dean Pigou conceived the purpose of writing this book he had it in his mind, we do not doubt, firstly, to give a wider usefulness to various...
Page 22
THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF SIR GEORGE SAVILE.*
The SpectatorMINUTE students of Parliamentary history will be grateful to Miss Foxcroft for her laborious work. The book is largely based upon documents hitherto unpublished, which are cited...
Page 23
STONEWALL JACKSON.*
The SpectatorTHE book before us must take rank not only as an excellent biography of Stonewall Jackson, but as a standard history of that portion of the American Civil War in which Jackson...
Page 24
THE HISTORY OF GAMBLING.*
The SpectatorTHE subject of this book is one on which an attractive work ought certainly to be made. Mr. Ashton is quite right in reminding us that man is a gambling animal, and that the...
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GIFT-BOOKS.
The SpectatorFACT AND FICTION BY MR. FRANK STOCKTON.* Ox the whole, we prefer Mr. Stockton's fiction to his fact. It is true that the best characteristics of his style, its directness,...
SOME STORIES BY MR. ANSTEY.*
The SpectatorTHE seven stories contained in this volume are not now pub- lished for the first time, but they are welcome in this form. The generations of readers for whom they are intended...
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Good Words. Edited by the Very Rev. Donald Macleod, D.D,
The Spectator(Isbister and Co.)—The serial that runs through the issue of the year is Mr. Gilbert Parker's "Battle of the Strong." This has been noticed elsewhere. A short tale, " The...
Nothing but Nonsense. By Mary Kernahan. (J. Bowden.)—A book which
The Spectatorfulfils its promise better than most. This is a real compliment, for, as we have often said, good nonsense is very good. Miss Kernahan's rhymes jingle musically, and Mr. Tony...
The Girls of St. Wode's. By Mrs. L. T. Meade.
The Spectator(W. and F. Chambers.)—Mrs. Meade shows her readers, most of them, it is to be presumed, likely to be girls, one aspect of the new order of things, the career open to women. The...
The Boy's Own Annual. (56 Paternoster Row.)—This annual volume needs
The Spectatorlittle more than the welcome which we are always glad to accord to it. All tastes are consulted, some among them being probably uncommon, as that which Mr. C. E. Bateman...
Marvels of Ant Life. By W. F. Kirby. (S. W.
The SpectatorPartridge and Co.)—It would not be easy to find a more fruitful subject than the habits of ants. The catalogue of their achievements sounds almost like a joke. They build...
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A Fighter in Green. By Herbert Hayens. (T. Nelson and
The SpectatorSons.) —This " Tale of Algeria " comes, we may say, opportunely. It is as well sometimes, and particularly now, to hear about the gallant deeds of other nations than our own....
The Lady Isobel. By Eliza F. Pollard. (Blackie and Son.)—
The SpectatorThis is a story, true in its main facts, as the writer assures us, of the days of the Covenant in Scotland. The heroine, rightly so called, is a real person, and the tale of her...
Klondike Nuggets. By E. S. Ellis. (Cassell and Co.)—Jeff Graham
The Spectatorand his two young companions certainly fared better than the majority of gold-seekers who have made their way to that dreary region to make their fortunes. Jeff, a " forty-niner...
A Roman Household. By G. Norway. (National Society.)— This is
The Spectatora fairly good story of life at Rome during the days of Nero, with a special reference to the sufferings of the Christians at that time. There are, perhaps, too many figures on...
The Cry from the Sea and the Answer from the
The SpectatorShore. By the Rev. T. Stanley Treanor. (R.T.S.)—We have no wish to depre- ciate the merit of imaginative pictures of heroism and self- sacrifice. Still, if any one desires to...
Under the Dome of St. Paul's. By Emma Marshall. (Seeley
The Spectatorand Co.)—Mrs. Marshall has made a distinct success with this " Story of Sir Christopher Wren's Days." Sir Christopher is a very interesting, and even noble, figure, and Mrs....
Poetry for Children. By Charles and Mary Lamb. (J. M.
The SpectatorDent and Co.)—These poems are, perhaps, better known by reputation than in fact. How many of our readers, we wonder, could tell the purport of " The Boy and the Skylark " ?...
A Mystery of the Pacific. By Oliphant Smeaton. (Blackie and
The SpectatorSon.)—Mr. Smeaton certainly gives his readers a novelty. The captain of a Queensland " Labour Schooner " finds in a seaman's chest—the man has been killed in a mutiny—a paper...
Herbert Clutterbuck. By Arthur Canon. (S. P. C. IC.) —Herbert
The SpectatorClutterbuck is left an orphan by his father's early death, and has to go out into the world from the pleasant home where, as it is well put, "there was never lack of anything,...
Clutterbuck's Treasure. By Fred Whishaw. (Griffith, Farran, and Co.)—Miser Clutterbuck
The Spectatorleft a large amount of money --£100,000—to become the property of any one of the five heirs he named in his will. One of these, Godfrey Hewetson, who had saved him from being...
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Face to Face with Napoleon. By 0. V. Caine. (J.
The SpectatorNisbet and Co.)—This is a really excellent story, well furnished both with well-drawn characters and striking incident. Such, indeed, is the abundance of material that the...
The King's Reeve. By the Rev. E. Gilliat. (Seeley and
The SpectatorCo.)— Mr. Gilliat makes good use of certain traditions about the "greatest of the Plantagenets." There is a ballad of "John the Reeve " in Bishop Percy's collection. The...
The Bonded Three. By Bessie Marchant. (Blackie and Son.) —Those
The Spectatorboys and girls who delight in tales of adventure will indeed be hard to please if they do not enjoy this story, which relates the experiences of three English children during a...
Comical Coons. By Kemble. (Regan Paul, Trench, and Co,) —This
The Spectatoris an importation from the other side of the Atlantic. The draughtsman makes fun, of a somewhat extravagant kind, out of his subjects, which are, for the most part, humours of...
A Dreadful Mistake. By Geraldine Mockler. (Blackie and Son.)—There is
The Spectatorsomething farcical about this story. A gentle- man who telegraphs to a relative the question whether she will receive his children, and is satisfied with the answer that she...
The Boys of Fairmead. By Mary C. Rowsell. (F. Warne
The Spectatorand Co.)—The "boys " are Jack Trustwood, the son of the ferryman, and Arthur Thistleton, son of the Squire. The " Little Squire," as he was commonly called, was rescued from...
Draw Swords ! By G. Manville Fenn. (W. and R.
The SpectatorChambers.) —This, the story of an officer in the Horse Artillery during the rule of " John Company " in India, is as good as any of the tales which have earned for Mr. Manville...
The Girls of St. Bede's. By Geraldine Mockler. (Jarrold and
The SpectatorSons.)—" Stories for girls" are, as a rule, the one kind of books which girls refuse to read ; but we think this will prove an excep- tion, for it is decidedly superior to most...
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Paving the Way. By Simpson Newland. (Gay and Bird.)—A popular
The Spectatoredition of this interesting tale of Australian life has been published. In spite of its length, sixty-seven chapters, and small print, this book will be read with interest by...
The Treasure Cave of the Blue Mountains. By Oliphant Smeaton.
The Spectator(Oliphant, Anderson, and Ferrier.)—There is no lack of the mar- vellous here ; to the familiar properties of the treasure-story, the party of seekers who ought to have it, and...
Dash and Daring. (W. and R. Chambers.)—Here are some twenty
The Spectatorstories told by Messrs. Henty, G. Manville Fenn, and others. They are not new, we suppose ; at least we see Mr. W. H. G. Kingston's name among the authors. We wish that...
Among the Torches of the Andes. By Bessie Marchant. (W.
The SpectatorP. Nimmo, Hay, and Mitchell.) —A tale of gold-hunting among the South American volcanoes. There is plenty of incident and adventure enough to satisfy the most exacting of...
At Sea under Drake. By Charles H. Eden. (Skeffington and
The SpectatorSon.)—This story has two parts, entitled respectively " England " and "The Spanish Main." The first reminds us that the history of Drake is connected with the religious troubles...
The Reign of the Princess Naska. By Amelia H. Stirling,
The SpectatorM.A. (Blackie and Son.)—This is somewhat too doleful a story for us. The Princess Naska rules Tsarkovia, and is, bylthe law of the principality, actual Sovereign, though of...
Esther's Charge. By E. Everett-Green. (T. Nelson and Sons.) —Here
The Spectatorwe have the old subject, troublesome boys or girls suddenly imported into a quiet family, and more than justifying all the apprehensions that have been felt for the future. It...
The Forty Thieves. (John Lane.)—The old story is told in
The Spectatora series of seven pictures, well drawn and brilliantly coloured, with appropriate letterpress. Few of the picture-books of the season are more gay and effective.
With Fife and Drum. Edited by Alfred H. Miles. (Hutchinson
The Spectatorand Co.)—These "true stories of military life and adventure" are, for the most part, well told, and recall some of the most stirring passages in our annals. They gain an...
Leaves from the Golden Legend. Chosen by H. D. Madge,
The SpectatorLLD!. (A. Constable.)—Here we have some twenty stories trans- lated from the " Legenda Aurea." The familiar tales of St. Chris- topher, St. Brandon, St. Margaret of Antioch and...
The Golden Picture - Book. (T. Nelson and Sons )—This is a
The Spectatorpretty children's book, some of the stories being of the fairy-tale kind, some parables, some true. Now and then we meet an old friend, as that of the miller and his son with...
The Little General. (Wells Gardner, Darton, and Co.)—A story of
The Spectatorthe wars of Frederick the Great. The adventures of George Brann, who rises from the post of drummer-boy to that of General, are told with great spirit. Boys will appreciate the...
Stolen or Strayed ? By Harold Avery. (T. Nelson and
The SpectatorSons.) —The moral of this tale of school life may be summed up in the old proverb concerning evil communications, since all the troubles of the hero are owing to bad...
The Fortunes of the Charlton Family. (Wells Gardner, Darton, and
The SpectatorCo.)—The "Charlton Family" was a very fortunate one, not so much in worldly matters as in the moral development of its members. A vain and foolish daughter becomes quite...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorIn a volume entitled Problems of Modern Industry (Long-mans and Co., is. 6d.), Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Webb have brought together a number of essays and studies which were, so to...
Mr. Hutchinson had made up his mind beforehand as to
The Spectatorthe dialect in which ho meant to tell it. When, on one page, we find the hero ejaculating, "haze me for a malindgering sodger," while on another he talks of " an acoustic...
The White North. By M. Douglas. (T. Nelson and Sons.)—
The SpectatorMiss Douglas has taken much pains in acquainting herself with Arctic travel and exploration. She now brings her subject up to date (Peary's last book, of course, is more recent)...
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In his Suggestions for a Scheme of Old-Age Pensions (Edward
The SpectatorArnold), Mr. Lionel Holland, M.P., has brought out in a conveni- ent form the proposals which he submitted for the consideration of the Departmental Committee whom the...
Annals of a Publishing House. Vol. III., John Blackwood. By
The Spectatorhis Daughter, Mrs. Gerald Porter. (W. Blackwood and Sons. 21s.)—There is a strong contrast between the early, turbulent days of " Maga," under Wilson and Lockhait, and the...
Godfrida : a Play in Four Acts. By John Davidson.
The Spectator(John Lane.)—This seems to us a piece of work quite unworthy of Mr. Davidson's talent. It is written for the stage, and it seems to us of the stage stagey. Not a single person...
I was in Prison. By F. Brocklehurst. (T. Fisher Unwin.)—
The SpectatorCouncillor Frederick Brocklehurst, of Manchester, who writes this volume containing his experiences as a short-time prisoner, regards himself as a " martyr." Having been...
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James Hain Friswell : a Memoir. By his Daughter. (George
The SpectatorRedway. 15s.)—The author of " The Gentle Life " was not a great thinker, a great novelist, or a great critic. But he was most industrious ; his life—he was born in 1825 and died...
Mistress Nancy Molesworth. By Joseph Hocking. (James Bowden.)—This story, which
The Spectatorwhile it was running through one of the magazines bore the name of " Trevanion," from its adventurer-hero, recalls, perhaps rather too readily, Mr. Black- more's romance of...
The Vagaries of To - Day. By Mark Mundy. (The Leadenhall Press.)—Mr.
The SpectatorMundy would, if he could, be a latter-day Juvenal, but he contrives, with his best endeavours, to be only a prolix laudator temporis acti. He has, of course, something to say,...
Africa in the Nineteenth Century. By Edgar Sanderson, M.A. (Seeley
The Spectatorand Co.)—This is really a valuable little book, which sum- marises lucidly and in a readable style the action of European Powers in Africa since our first invasion of Egypt and...
Verses. By Maud Holland (Maud Walpole). (Edward Arnold.) —Mrs. Holland
The Spectatoris one of the many people who write verse smoothly and prettily, with a pleasant feeling for the beauty of sea and sky; Lbut occasionally she rises above this level of...
Recollections of Grant's Last Campaign. By Frank Wilkeson. (George Redway.)—The
The Spectatorauthor of this book, who describes himself as a private soldier, devotes a considerable amount more of his book to grumbling at the treatment the soldiers received in the last...
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Poems. By Eva Gore Booth. (Lon g mans and Co.)—Miss Gore Booth
The Spectatorhas attained to the technical finish of verse which is nowadays so common. At every pa g e of her book one finds g raceful combina- tions of words, and even attractive rhythm on...
The Stevenson Reader. (Chatto and Windus.)—This volume is interestin g as
The Spectatorevidence, if not of the fact that Stevenson is already a classic, of the very stron g belief on the part of a g reat number of his admirers that he has attained this position....
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LONDON I Printed by Love A WYMAN (Limited) at Nos.
The Spectator7446 Great Queen Street, W.O. ; and Published by Joas BAKER for the Cl Simonsen" (Licilled) at their Office, No. 1 Wellington Street, in the Preeinct of the Savoy, Strand, in...
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BISHOP WILSON'S MAXIMS.*
The SpectatorWE think it very likely that the majority of readers who know anything of Bishop Wilson have been introduced to Wm through Matthew Arnold, whose constant references to Wilson...
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NOVELS OF THE WEEK.*
The SpectatorWE have had to wait some years for a successor to The Lost Stradivarius—that excellent ghost-story, finely imagined and told with rare distinction of style—but Moonjleet is such...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorThs /Zeros, par M. F. de Pressense (Stock, Paris), will be read with intense interest by all who have followed the Dreyfus case pretty closely. Colonel Picquart is the hero of...
Submarine Telegraphs. By Charles Bright, F.R.S.E. (Crosby - Lockwood and Son.
The Spectator63s.)—Mr. Bright has a good right to deal with this subject. The business of submarine telegraphy is hereditary in his family. His father, Sir Charles Bright, was engineer to...
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A book of reference the utility of which is beyond
The Spectatorall question, Haydn's Dic tionary of Dates, edited by Benjamin Vincent (Ward, Lock, and Co.), appears in a twenty-second edition. This book dates from 1841; since 1857 it has...
Selections from the Poets: Coleridge. By Andrew Lang. Illus- trated
The Spectatorby Patten Wilson. (Longmans and Co.)—Mr. Lang prefaces the poems by a sketch of Coleridge's life, based " mainly on the patient researches of Mr. James Dykes Campbell." Possibly...
indeed deserves to find, considerable favour from country readers, or
The Spectatorrather from readers who love the country. And, indeed, country: delights Sad their most ardent devotees among the dwellers in towns. Some of the subjects here discussed are for...
The Dome. No. 1, Vol. I., Ootober, 1898. (The Unicorn
The SpectatorPress.)—The first number of the new series of this little maga- zine keeps up its readable character. The short paper on the Japanese painter Utamaro is interesting, and the two...
Fantasies from Dreamland. By E. Gilliat Smith. Illustrated by Flori
The Spectatorvan Acker. (Elkin Mathews.)—This is a poetical version of St. Dunstan's dream, while waiting for King Edgar's appearance to say Mass. The book is well got up, and the illus-...
Sir Gatoain and the Green Knight : a Middle English
The SpectatorArthurian Romance retold in Modern Prose. By Jessie L. Weston. With Designs by M. M. Crawford. (David Nutt.)—The original Sir Gawain was a very different person from the one...
The Windmill : an Illustrated Quarterly. No. 1, VoL I.,
The SpectatorOctober, 189S. (Simpkin, Marshall, and Co.)—This is another magazine of what we may call the " attenuated Yellow Book" species. The design on the cover is fairly good, but even...
A Books of Sundry Draughts. (The Leadenhall Press.)—This is a
The Spectatorfacsimile of a text-book published in 1615, which is described in the title-page as " principally serving for glasiers ; and not impertinent for plasterers, and gardiners,...
Ben Jonson Ms Volpone ; or, The Fore. (Leonard Smitbers
The Spectatorand Co.)—It was intended in this edition to decorate Volpone with twenty-four illustrations by Mr. Aubrey Beardsley, but the artist died without completing more than designs for...