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by the sudden discovery that a portly old gentleman of
The SpectatorPickwickian appearance, by whose side they have taken a seat on a bench, is not one of themselves, but a replica in wax of a famous personage of the later Georgian era. The...
Page 4
Mn. HUGH PLATT in this diverting and learned little book,
The Spectatorwith modest irony, warns the reader, in the words of Seneca, that he brings for wares " alia, quae erant dediscenda, si scires." The truth really is that these cilia are some of...
Page 5
Bowls of recollections commonly require a great supply of capital
The Spectator"I's,"—one work of this kind is said to have exhausted the fount of type in one of the University presses.. Professor Knight's volume (to be succeeded, we are glad to see, by...
Page 7
STORIES FROM INDIA.* traditions, and tales which Miss Festing has
The Spectatorcollected in this volume with those which other writers have gathered from Homer, Hesiod, and Herodotus. There is sufficient resem- blance to justify the comparison, nor are...
IT is a curious instance of the altered conditions in
The Spectatorwhich we live that we have here a story of events of which not very long ago only a general report would have reached the Far West. And an excellent story it is, such as one...
Page 8
Will of the Dales. By R. Stead. (Blackie and Son.
The Spectator2s, 6d.)— Will Craven, son of a "statesman" of the Yorkshire Dales, and ultimately Lord Mayor of London, is not wholly a creature of fiction ; only the details of his career...
Hurrah for the Spanish Main! By Robert Leighton. (A. Melrose.
The Spectator6s.) — "A Tale of the Third Voyage of Drake to Darien" is the sub-title of Mr. Leighton's book, and it may be well to remind the reader that this "third voyage" was the...
The White Standard, by E. F. Pollard (Blackie and Son,
The Spectator2s. 6d.), is a story of the days of Joan of Arc. The hero is a young Scots- man who goes over to France in the train of the Princess Margaret, daughter of James I. ; the heroine...
The Pirate's Hoard. By A. Alexander. (T. Nelson and Sons.
The Spectator2s. 6d.)—This "Story of Hidden Treasure" is of the old- fashioned sort. The scene is laid in the days of Queen Elizabeth. The "hoard" consists mainly of jewels which have been...
State; its characteristics are, we fancy, common. There is a
The SpectatorLiberal party and a Clerical. And when Leonard Thurston arrives there is a Liberal President in power, and the Clericals are plotting to overthrow him. We cannot follow the...
Page 9
A School Champion. By Raymond Jacberns. (W. and R. Chambers.
The Spectator3s. 6d.)—Tekla Marsden and her sister and shadow Freda go to school, and find their romantic ideas of being and doing good failing under the practical tests of obedience and...
New Treasure Seekers. By E. Nesbit. (T. Fisher Unwin. 6s.)
The Spectator— New Treasure Seekers is a continuation of a book bearing the same title that has already won considerable and well-deserved favour. The " Seekers " have nothing to do with...
With Pizarro the Conquistador. By A. L. Haydon. (A. Melrose.
The Spectator6s.)—The story opens with a scene in a Spanish fishing village. Felipe, supposed to be the nephew of Miguel Esteban, is really an English lad, both of whose parents are dead. In...
The Princess of Balkh. By Michael Macmillan. (Blackie and Son.
The Spectator2s. 6d.)—Here the adventurous young Scot is seen to the best advantage. Ronald Macalpine, having fought in vain for Montrose, goes out to India, where he will find, as a...
Doctor Luke, By Norman Duncan. (Hodder and Stoughton. 6s.)—Labrador is
The Spectatorthe scene of Mr. Duncan's new story, and Labrador is interesting for various reasons, one among . them being that it lies in almost the same latitude as Great Britain. A wild...
The Sunday Magazine. (Isbister and Co. 7s. 6d.)—The miscel- laneous
The Spectatorarticles well preserve the character of the Sunday Magazine for instruction, the serials and short stories furnishing by no means the most interesting pages. "The People of the...
The Quiver. (Cassell and Co. 7s. 6d.)—The Quiver continues to
The Spectatorjustify its place among the best of the serious and instructive magazines. The editor takes, we see, the course of inviting eminent representatives of important causes to state...
Heroes of the Storm. By William D. O'Connor. (Houghton, Mifflin,
The Spectatorand Co. 6s.)—Mr. O'Connor, the writer of these stories, was officially connected with the United States Life- Saving Service. They practically represent the most striking of his...
Page 10
The Book of Clever Beasts. By Myrtle Reed. (G. P.
The SpectatorPutnam's Sons. 6s.)—We admire the work of Messrs. John Burroughs, William J. Long, and Charles G. D. Roberts too much to like this attempt to turn it into ridicule. Quite...
True Grit. By Harold Bindloss. (S. W. Partridge and Co.
The Spectator2s. 6d.)—The story opens with a pathetic scene, described with uncommon force, on the northern frontier of India. It is the death of "Sahib Benson," father of the lad whose...
With the Dyaks of Borneo. By Captain F. S. Brereton.
The Spectator(Blackie and Son. 62.)—Captain Brereton tells his story, which is full of incident and excitement, with much spirit, but his personages seem to speak a little formally. Heroes...
The Boyhood of Great Inventors. By A. Fraser Robertson. (J.
The SpectatorF. Shaw and Co. ls.)—We do not think that we can serve the interests of this little book better than by giving the names of the " inventors " about whom it tells us. There are...
Waily Wanderoon and his Story - telling Machine. By Joel Chandler Harris.
The Spectator(Grant Richards. 6s.)—Mr. Harris's readers will doubtless remember "Sweetest Susan" and "Billy Buster," grandchildren of Mr. Abercrombie, ex-planter somewhere in the Southern...
But Mr. Marriott Watson's manner is excellent. One great merit
The Spectatorof the story is its absolute clearness. We realise without difficulty the action from beginning to end. And then there is the vivid personality of the actors. Holgate is a...
Old Hendrik's Tales. By Captain A. 0. Vaughan. (Longmans and
The SpectatorCo. 6s.)—If the reader can imagine " Brer Rabbit" and " Brer Fox" transported from the North American Continent to South Africa, he will have a good idea of this book. "Old...
Prom School to Castle. By Charlotte Murray. (S. W. Partridge
The Spectatorand Co. 2s. 6d.)—The strongest appetite for surprises and changes of fortune should be satisfied with the adventures which lead 1delvil from the " school " to the "castle." The...
His Little Daughter. By Amy Le Feuvre. (R.T.S. 18. 6d.)—
The SpectatorThis is a well-told little tale, of the kind which we are accus- tomed to associate with the author's name, of a change of character wrought in a turbulent child, combined with...
The Biography of a Prairie Girl. By Eleanor Gates. (G.
The SpectatorP. Putnam's Sons. 6s.)—No little entertainment will be found in this volume, though here and there the story seems a little drawn out, as, for instance, in the second chapter,...
Tales of the Canterbury Pilgrims. Retold from Chaucer and Others
The Spectatorby E. J. Harvey Darton. With Introduction by F. J. Furnivall. (Wells Gardner, Darton, and Co. 68.)—Dr. Furnivall's introduction is all that could be desired. He wields his...
Page 11
The Other Fellow. By Robert Leighton. (A. Melrose. 6s.)— This
The Spectatoris a tale of the "claimant" kind, a less common variety now than it was in the time of the Tichborne case and for some years afterwards. The subject is not an easy one to...
continued the work down to the beginning of the Russo-Japanese
The SpectatorWar. Among the valuable additions we may notice the work of the Hague Conference of 1899, and the Anglo-French Agreement of this year, the full text of which is published in an...
We are to have a series of "Animal Autobiographies" (A.
The Spectatorand C. Black, 68.), of which the first volume is now before us, The Autobiography of a Eat, by G. M. A. Hewett. It is an amusing book. The rat is not ashamed of himself. He even...
Literary Geography. By William Sharp. (Pall Mall Publications. 10s. 6d.
The Spectatornet.)—A single volume of literary geography must naturally appear to be somewhat arbitrarily composed, as Mr. Sharp hints ; and as these chapters are republished from a...
vast size of London, on the contrary, makes it impossible
The Spectatorto deal with in any volume of reasonable dimensions, just as it forbids the growth of a local patriotism. Mr. Smeaton devotes his first eleven chapters to the history of the...
Curly. By Roger Pocock. (Gay and Bird. 6s.)—This "tale of
The Spectatorthe Arizona Desert"—Arizona is described in vigorous language which makes one content never to have seen it—is a piece of very spirited work, quite worthy of the author of "The...
Through Flood and Flame. By Henry Charles Moore. (R.T.S. 2s.)—Mr.
The SpectatorMoore's subject is the "Adventures and Perils of Pro- testant Heroes." He finds his themes in many of the countries of Europe. He takes us to France, where he tells stories of...
Page 12
Adventures of King James II. By the Author of "A
The SpectatorLife of Sir Kenelm Digby." (Longmaus and Co. 13s. 6d.)—This is a vigorous and entertaining attempt to demonstrate that the life of James II. was remarkable for the number and...
Life and Letters of Edward Byies Cowell. By George Cowell.
The Spectator(Macmillan and Co. 12s. 6c1.. net.)—E. B. Cowell's career was one of remarkable interest. While he was at school (at Ipswich), and not more than fifteen, he began to read Sir...
Edward and Pamela Fitzgerald, By Gerald Campbell. (Edward Arnold. 12s.
The Spectator6d. net.)—It is a charming picture of the Fitzgerald family which these very intimate letters give WI. Whether it is altogether advisable to make so much fuss about the jealousy...
Essays on Home Subjects. By John, Third Marquess of Bute.
The Spectator(A. Gardner, Paisley. Is. 6d.)—The varied learning possessed by the late Marquess of Bute, which it is impossible to regret was not more systematically used, is curiously...
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Morocco. Painted by A. S. Forrest, and Described by S.
The SpectatorL. Bensusan. (A. and C. Black. 20s. net.)—This is an excellent book of its kind, and eminently modest ; neither traveller nor artist offends with aggressive garishness. Mr....
A Leader of Society at Napoleon's Court. By Catherine M.
The SpectatorBearne. (T. Fisher Unwin. 10s. 6d.)—Mrs. Bearne has con- structed her new book chiefly out of the well-known Memoirs of Laura Permon, Duchesse d'Abrantes, truly a rich mine of...
From the Monarchy to the Republic in Prance (1788 - 1792). By
The SpectatorSophia H. MacLehose. (J. MacLehose and Sons. 6s. net.)—Miss MacLehose modestly describes her story of the revival of the States-General, and its transition to the National...
Emile Zola, Novelist and Reformer : an Account of his
The SpectatorLife and Work. By Ernest Alfred Vizetelly. Illustrated. (John Lane. 21s. net.)—By an intimate knowledge and cordial admiration of his subject Mr. Vizetelly is well equipped for...
imperia2 Vienna. By A. S. Levetus. (John Lane. 18s. net.)—
The SpectatorThis book is unique in its way, for the author assures us that "not even in German has any one book been written which deals with Vienna throughout her different stages of...
The Log of the Griffin : a Cruise from the
The SpectatorAlps to the Thames. By Donald Maxwell. (John Lane. 10s. 6d. net.)—This is a lively book, written in a pleasant, leisurely fashion, and giving details of a most remarkable...
Page 14
Tibet : the Country and its Inhabitants. By F. Grenard.
The SpectatorTrans- lated by A. Teixeira do Mattos. (Hutchinson and Co. 10s. 6d. net.) —M. Grenard was the chosen companion of the ill-fated Dutreuil de Rhins in his scientific expedition to...
Page 16
Page 17
T HE only news of importance from the seat of war
The Spectatorcon- cerns Port Arthur, where during the past week the most persistent attempts have been made to carry the fortress by assault. These attempts have been marked by a heroism,...
Article IV. lays down that the two contracting parties shall
The Spectatorput all the evidence at their disposal before the Commis- sion. Article VI. stipulates that the Report of the Com- mission shall be signed by all its members, and Article VII....
when follow the eight articles, the first prescribing that the
The SpectatorIlpmmission shall consist of four officers of high rank in the 'fish, Russian, French, and American Navies, the fifth to chosen by the Emperor Francis Joseph if the other four o...
The Times of Tuesday contains a striking account of the
The Spectatorexperiences of Mr. T. W. Kydd, a Canadian gentleman who was on his way to Shanghai on board the Calcha,s ' when she was held up by the Vladivostok Squadron off the northern...
applying the clauses of the protectorate France was "not inspired
The Spectatorby Christian ideas," but "acted in obedience to the maxims of a more humane, a loftier, and a more liberal philosophy." He had not proposed to withdraw the ea- ventions to the...
FOR THE
The SpectatorWEEK ENDING SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1904. [ REGISTERED AS A PR/CE 6b. NEWSPAPER. BY POST...6tD. POSTAGE ABROAD The Unemployed "*Flegulars and Irregulars The Size of Perch...
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policy; during the second every Finance Minister approached more and
The Spectatormore nearly to the ideal of absolute Free-trade. He pointed out how under the Protectionist regime—which inspired Byron's scornful lines on the county patriots, "born to hunt,...
Mr. Balfour was the principal speaker at a Primrose League
The Spectatorbanquet held at the Hotel Cecil on Monday. Referring to his leadership of the House of Commons, Mr. Balfour said that the task—to which he had often found himself unequal, but...
The Times of Tuesday published the contents of the new
The SpectatorGerman Army Bill, which is designed to increase gradually the strength of the Army on a peace footing until it reaches the number of 505,839 men during the financial year 1909....
The Income-Tax Bill which M. Rouvier proposed to intro- duce
The Spectatorinto the French Chamber met with the usual fate of such a fiscal reform in France. It has been a hobby of many Finance Ministers, from M. Doumer to M. Rouvier, and has been...
for a free Press, for freedom of speech and belief,
The Spectatorand the right of public meeting. Political equality must be given to every citizen, and village, life purged of the last traces of serfdom, and placed ifnclCr the protection of...
The ecclesiastical difficulty in Scotland is beginning to show signs
The Spectatorof a settlement. The Secretary for Scotland, Mr. Graham- Murray, recently met the leaders of the two Churches, and as a result he has proposed that both sides should consent to...
Mr. Balfour's only criticism on his party's methods of controversy
The Spectatorwas that they were apt to adopt defensive rather than offensive tactics. In view of their unparalleled achievements, it was surely out of place to adopt an apologetic tone. "Do...
Page 19
It is impossible for us to keep pace with the
The Spectatorflood of oratory on Fiscal and other topics which deluged Thursday's papers. We can only allude in passing to Lord Rosebery's amusing speech, delivered at the St. Andrew's Day...
The anniversary dinner of the Royal Society was held on
The SpectatorWednesday night at the Whitehall Rooms. Mr. Arnold- Forster, in proposing the toast of the evening, alluded very happily to the infinite opportunities for the work of scientifi-...
Wednesday week's papers contained the details of the new School
The Spectatorof Imperial History which Mr. Alfred Beit proposes to equip at Oxford for seven years, on the understanding that if . the University authorities at the end of that period are...
On Thursday the inaugural meeting of the Unionist Free. Trade
The SpectatorClub was held at Devonshire House. As, however, the meeting was called for the transaction of business only, the speeches were of a formal character. We have dealt with the...
We regret to record that at Oxford on Tuesday Congrega-
The Spectatortion refused to agree to the proposed statute exempting candidates for honours in mathematics and natural science from compulsory Greek in Responsions. The President of...
Page 20
THE MEETING AT DEVONSHIRE HOUSE.
The SpectatorIt marks the formation, we will not say of a new political party, but at any rate of a new political connection. The fixed intention of the Unionist Free-traders is to remain...
Page 21
T HE resolutions adopted by the Conference of the Russian Zemstvos
The Spectatorare of a very encouraging character. They might have been—had they followed the tradition of similar assemblies they would have been —a mere demand for certain favourite...
Page 22
restatement and exposition of some point or other of international
The Spectatorlaw in which they usually result. They may begin with ambitions towards a new heaven and a new earth, but they end, as a rule, with some modest contri- bution to the question of...
Page 23
T HE Committee of Inquiry appointed by the Home Secretary to
The Spectatorinvestigate the circumstances of Mr. Beck's conviction have, as we stated briefly last week, issued a Report which every one must read with a certain satisfaction. It is a very...
Page 24
A YEAR or two ago, in writing on the need for
The Spectatorstopping the exodus from the country into the towns by the provision of more cottages, we expressed. the hope that some day we might see an Exhibition of cheap cottages. That...
Page 25
" W E sometimes fancy we hate flattery, when in truth
The Spectatorit is the manner of it we dislike," said La Rochefou- cauld. Stripped of its cynicism, the saying comes to this : that while praise is eternally pleasant, there are fashions in...
Page 26
T WO years ago, when Mr. Charles Turley introduced, "Godfrey Marten:
The SpectatorSchoolboy" to a wider circle of friends than that which the original—for presumably there , was an original, or something like an original, of Godfrey Marten—can have possessed,...
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specimens, in indifferent health, the herd having been bred hi
The Spectatorand in till its members fell victims to tuberculosis. His letter should be read carefully; but the practical outcome is, first, that the survivors are to be sold on December 8th...
Page 28
Si,—Mr. R. W. Schumacher at the recent meeting of the
The SpectatorGlen Deep, Limited, in his speech from the chair is reported to have said :—" But some unscrupulous people, anxious, no doubt, to improve their miserable election chances, will...
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vention you say :—" In our most pessimistic moments we
The Spectatornever imagined that the country could lose as much as 28,000,000 sterling a year." You have possibly forgotten that there was at any rate one person in England who fully foresaw...
SIR,-With regard to your interesting article under the above heading
The Spectatorin the Spectator of November 26th, I should like to direct your readers' attention to a few points. Mr. George Martineau, who is the Government's expert adviser, in a letter to...
SIB,—In your issue of November 26th, in the course of
The Spectatorcom- ments on my article in the Daily Mail on the effect of the abolition of the sugar-bounties on the confectionery trade— what time the tax on sugar remained—you point out...
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" It is well known that the policy of protection
The Spectatorhas enhanced the plane of living in this country ; it is well known that owing to it, it costs more to build a ship in this country than it does abroad ; it is well known that...
There has been no "corner" in the sugar market. In
The Spectatorconsequence of the dry summer on the Continent, there has been a shortage of the beet crop estimated at over a million tons, and it is to this that the recent rise in the price...
SIE, — In the event of a contested Parliamentary election in which
The Spectatoron one side there was a declared Home-rule Free-trader, and on the other a declared Unionist Protectionist, it would, I think, be of much interest to many of your readers to...
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more sanguine outlook into the future ?
The SpectatorTwo great obstacles have hitherto stood in the way of the Trusts. The first is that over 80 per cent. of existing licenses are " tied" to brewers. The second lies in the custom...
Sin, — The letters of Mr. David MacIver, M.P., and Mr. Livingstone
The SpectatorHolmes in last week ' s Spectator do not appear to detract in any degree from the value of Mr. Austin Taylor ' s letter relative to the effect of Protection upon American...
Sin, — Mr. Livingstone Holmes, writing in your issue of Novem- ber
The Spectator26th, makes two astounding statements : — (1) That the vessels of other nations (France and America excepted) get cheaper insurance than English vessels. Will he kindly furnish...
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[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR:1
The Spectatorwas glad to see that in your article on "National Education on the Physical Side" which appeared in the Spectator of November 19th you strongly advocate the mili- tary training...
go THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.1 SIR,—The average plain Englishman
The Spectatorfinds some amusement in a manifesto almost Pontifical in its tone of infallibility signed by fourteen gentlemen, admittedly men of mark, but whose names will not impress the...
Page 33
Srn,—I have read with very much interest your article in
The Spectatorthe Spectator of November 19th dealing with "National Educa- tion on the Physical Side," and I heartily approve of your suggestion to extend the scope of the Bishop of...
SIR,—In your article on "Shakespearian Studies" in the Spectator of
The SpectatorNovember 5th you quote with approval the words of Mr. Churton Collins about the "minute and undeviating accuracy" of the poet's references to legal matters. There is, however,...
Srn,—Major Baines in the Spectator of November 19th has stated
The Spectatorcorrectly that the Confederate cavalry was fit for the field after four months' training. But it is a dangerous example to cite without qualification. If ever there existed a...
SIE,—As a member of the Committee to whose Report you
The Spectatorrefer in your admirable article upon this subject in last week's Spectator, I shall be obliged if you will allow me to point out what appear to me to be the conditions essential...
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[TO THE EDITOR Or THE " SPHOTATOR.1
The SpectatorSin,—On August 27th you were good enough to publish a letter from me challenging a statement which had appeared in your columns as to perch never attaining any size beyond 3 lb....
[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR, — In the admirable article
The Spectatorin your issue of November 19th on the question of compulsory Greek you allude incidentally to the teaching of history in our schools. You rightly lament the very inadequate...
THE FIRE 0' LOGS.
The SpectatorThey found small stint and little dearth : Tale two from out their goodly ways The wide-span walls and open hearth. The hearth where all Mid gather round Set square wr shining...
[To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR'] have received a letter
The Spectatorfrom the Board of Trade to say that the order for the Snowdon and Bettws-y-Coed Light Railway, about which I wrote to you in April last, has been confirmed. I shall be glad if...
the article in last week's issue on the above subject
The Spectatoryou speak of the number of " friends " brought into being by Thackeray, George Eliot, and other novelists. The last volume of the biographical edition of Thackeray's works, "The...
Sin,—Would you allow me to correct an error in your
The Spectatorlast issue P You say in your article on "The Increase of Lawless- ness in the United States," by way of contrast to the 31,395 murders and homicides in three years in that...
Page 35
Mn. SIDNEY Low has written a very fresh and interesting
The Spectatorbook on a subject which is as a rule neither fresh nor interesting. Borrowing the title of Sir John Forteseue's fifteenth-century work, he has aimed at giving an analysis of the...
Page 36
HENRY GREVILLE had neither the talent nor the opportunity of
The Spectatorhis brother. Though he lived always in the great world, he was not so closely in touch with the statesmen of the day, and his Diary can never possess the historical value which...
Page 37
THNIZE is undoubted justice in the view of the Frenchman
The Spectatoror the German that England is not a military nation. Lord Lans- downe is not the first of our Foreign Secretaries who has re- garded war as "the most futile and ferocious of...
Page 38
THE subject of this novel—the conflict of Roman and Goth
The Spectatorin the sixth century—will come as something of a surprise to those who regarded Mr. Gissing as the relentless delineator of the submerged middle class of to-day or yesterday....
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The Affair at the Inn. By Kate Douglas Wiggle, Mary
The SpectatorFindlater, Jane Findlater, and Allan M'Aulay. (Gay and Bird. 36. 6d..)— The reader on studying the above imposing list of authors may perhaps conclude that The Affair at the Inn...
The Celestial Surgeon. By F. F. Montr&or. (Edward Arnold. 6s.)—Miss
The SpectatorMontresor gives us a good deal of very pleasant writing in the new novel which she calls, after Stevenson's poem, The Celestial Surgeon. Her character-drawing is like life, in....
be increased if they could be made to understand the
The Spectatorstandpoint of the layman. . The method in which this knowledge is forced upon the Reverend John Smith is described at length in the beginning of the story, and is too amusing to...
The Truants. By A. E. W. Mason. (Smith, Elder, and
The SpectatorCo. 6s.)—Mr. Mason's new book confirms us in our opinion as to the real sphere for his talents. It is a story of a man who feels the romance of his marriage vanishing, and...
The Bridge of Life. By Dorothea Gerard. (Methuen and Co.
The Spectator6s.)—Miss Gerard's new novel depends for its credibility on one. of those convenient poisons, fortunately more common in fiction than in life, which leave no possible trace in...
Page 40
A Book of Ghosts. By S. Baring-Gould. (Methuen and Co.
The Spectator6s.)—Many of the ghosts evoked by Mr. Baring-Gould are "easy, familiar, and therefore disgusting," and none of them are either very alarming or very dignified spirits. Mr....
Bonnie &attain& Painted by Sutton Palmer. Described by A. R.
The SpectatorHope Moncrieff. (A. and C. Black. 205. net.)—This is a charming book, good to look at, good to read. We are glad to see that it is to be folloared up by a second volume, which...
Introspective Essays. By Grace A., Murray. (Elliot Stock. 3s. 6d.)—We
The Spectatorwish to speak with all respect of these essays, but we must own to finding them somewhat trite. Miss Murray takes some vast subject—" Truth," for instance, is the theme of her...
Uganda's Katikiro in England. By hit Secretary, Ham Muka.sa. Translated
The Spectatorand Edited by the Rev. Ernest Millar. (Hutchinson and Co. 108. 641. net.)—Apolo Kagwa, Katikirb—i.e., Prime Minister—of Uganda, a full-blood negro, was first a page and...
[Under this heading we notice such Books of the meek
The Spectatoras have not been nursed for revisit) in other form.] The Life and Work of E. X. Peck among the Eskimos. By the Rev. Arthur Lewis. (Hodder and Stoughton. 6s.)—Edmund James Peck...
The History of Bread. By John Ashton. (R.T.S. is. 64.
The Spectatornet.) —Mr. Ashton wonders, and not without reason,.that the history of so important a thing as bread has never been written. Never- theless, when the subject comes to be...
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Bible Flowers. By Rosemary A. Cotes. (Methuen and Co. 2s.
The Spectator6d. net.)-Miss Cotes tells us a pretty little story of how in her childhood. she set up a garden of "Bible flowers," to which, at a brother's suggestion, she added a plot of...
We May mention together three little volumes belonging to an
The Spectatorexcellent series with the title of "The Freedom of Faith" (James -Clarke and Co., is. 6d. per vol.) These are Prayer, by William Watson, MA.; A Reasonable View of Life, by J. M....
Who's Who, 1905. (A. and C. Black. 7s. 6d. net.)-The
The Spectatorvolume still grows in size, as it is bound to do. The pages now number seventeen hundred and ninety-six, and must include about ten times as many names as on its first...
& Beowulf" and other pieces in " Vitellius, Ch. XV."
The Spectatorof the Cotton Collection. Professor Cook's edition of the poem is already well known in the United States, and we are glad to see it reproduced here in this very convenient and...