Page 1
The decision of the Court of Cessation on the Dreyfus
The Spectatorcase will not be given till Saturday, or even Monday ; but it is as certain as anything can be in France just now that the Court will order that Dreyfus shall be retried, not by...
Major Marchand arrived at Toulon on -Tuesday, and received a
The Spectatorgreeting which in enthusiasm outdid even the famous reception .of the Russian fleet. His first speech, that in answer to the Toulon deputations, was the least discreet, and has...
The trial of M. Deroulede began in Paris on.Monday, and
The Spectator'ended on Wednesday in a verdict of "Not guilty," the jury spending twenty minutes in deliberating on the case. If France were : England, we should certainly regard this as a...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE week in France has been one of intense excitement, owing to the fact that it will have witnessed before it closes the arrival of Major Marchand ; the public hearing of, and...
The reception of the Major in Paris on Thursday was,
The Spectatorif possible, even more enthusiastic, but his speeches there were much more guarded and more formal. He bore himself, how- ever, with great dignity, and as he drove through the...
Page 2
The House reassembled on Wednesday (the Derby Day) to discuss
The SpectatorMr. Robson's Half-Timers Bill in Committee. This very important measure, which raises the age at which children can be partially exempted from school attendance from eleven to...
We note with intense satisfaction the statement made in Thursday's
The SpectatorTimes that Lord Londonderry has promised to preside at a meeting (to be held in one of the Committee- rooms of the House of Commons) next week to consider what steps shall be...
The Times of Tuesday quotes from the Johannesburg Star the
The Spectatortext of a despatch by Mr. Chamberlain, and the answer by Mr. Reitz, the Transvaal State Secretary,—the subject in dis- pute being the dynamite monopoly. Mr. Chamberlain asserts...
The Peace Conference has shown a great deal of activity
The Spectatorduring the week. We deal elsewhere with the various pro- posals for arbitration and mediation that are being discussed, and will only say here that they were received and...
An abstract of the Report to be presented at the
The Spectatorannual meeting of the Suez Canal Company appeared in Monday's Times. From this it appears that the receipts for 1898— 87,906,000 francs—have exceeded those of any previous year,...
On Tuesday Sir Alfred Milner and President Kruger arrived at
The SpectatorBloemfontein, and on Wednesdaythe first meeting of the Conference took place for settlement of preliminaries. The proceedings are to be strictly private. Mr. Fischer, a Free...
Page 3
The by-election at Southport has resulted in the return of
The Spectatorthe Liberal candidate, Sir George Pilkington, by a majority of 583 votes over Mr. C. B. Balfour. The votes polled, 5,635 and 5,052, show an increase of 535 and 224 on the...
An amazing story, illustrative of the fatuous methods of the
The SpectatorFrench General Staff, is narrated with the utmost circum- stantiality of detail by a correspondent of the Daily Chronicle in Wednesday's issue. Of late years the notorious...
During the past week the breakdown in the negotiations between
The Spectatorthis country and Canada and the United States in regard to the Alaskan boundary and other outstanding ques- tions has been causing a great deal of public comment. It is very...
We noticed last week the speech in which Mr. Chamberlain
The Spectatordeclared that personally he would vote for no scheme of old- age pensions which did not separate the deserving from the undeserving poor, and insisted that the best test for...
On Tuesday Sir William Harcourt addressed a meeting of his
The Spectatorconstituents in the Hermon Baptist Chapel, Nantyglo, and spent a great part of his time in doing what Mr. Morley only last week declared to be "contending for the shadow of the...
That is a.great political truth exceedingly well put, and we
The Spectatorcongratulate Sir William Harcourt on its enunciation. It must be remembered, however, that it is exactly the policy which Lord Salisbury has most consistently and most success-...
Page 4
TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE SITUATION IN FRANCE. I T has been a wonderful week in France, for into it have been crowded a whole series of stirring events, —the final sittings of the Court of...
Page 5
BOUNTIES AND THE POLICY OF A FREE AND OPEN MARKET.
The SpectatorMHE controversy that is raging in the columns of the I • Times in regard to Free-trade and bounties is curious and interesting from many points of view. In the first place, it...
Page 6
MEDIATION v. ARBITRATION. T HE discussion of arbitration projects at the
The SpectatorHague Conference has assumed an unexpected importance. The most sceptical critic of the Czar's intentions, and of the probability that the Conference will give effect to them,...
Page 7
ADVANCE, AUSTRALIA !
The SpectatorW ITHIN the next few weeks a popular vote will be taken that may affect very materially the outlook with which the Australian Colonies will enter the twentieth century. We...
EMILIO CASTE LAIL THERE is probably no man who ever
The Spectatorlived who, how- 1 ever far he may have risen above the general standard of his nation, does not in some degree partake of its qualities. Philosophers are, doubtless, the least...
Page 8
THE CONFUSION OF GUILT.
The SpectatorI S conscious guilt confused ? That is the question that is constantly asked by the officers of justice, and constantly answered with levity which deepens the well of truth. "To...
Page 9
A HUNDRED MILES AN HOUR.
The SpectatorW E are evidently on the eve of a revolution in' railway travel almost as remarkable as was the initiation of that travel itself seventy years ago. It is true that the new...
Page 10
IN THE JAWS OF THE LION. T HE Somalis, who make
The Spectatorit their business to accompany sportsmen from Berbera inland, have a lively recollection of all the places where accidents have recently occurred. They take peculiar pride in...
Page 11
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorROYAL NAVAL ENGINEERS. [To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR:'] Sra,—A very grave danger to our naval supremacy is existing unknown to the general public. The professional...
Page 12
ON THE VALUE OF SCIENCE IN EDUCATION.
The Spectator[TO THE 4DITOB OF THE " SP , ECTATOR.1 SIR,—I humbly venture to suspect that having led an epigram for the fun of it, you have not sufficient small truths to estab- lish your...
Page 13
MR. CHARLES BOOTH AND OLD-AGE PENSIONS.
The Spectator. (TO THE EDITOR Os' THE "SPECTATOR"] e Sin,—The name of Mr. Charles Booth commands respect, and his scheme, as you justly observe, is entitled to special atten- tion as a...
THE SPY SYSTEM IN FRANCE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sur,—The "Twenty Years' Resident" who refers in the Spectator of May 20th to the punctuation an French coins after the words...
Page 14
THE NAPLES SOCIETY FOR THE PROTECTION OF ANIMALS.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—I venture to ask you again to kindly insert in the Spectator an appeal on behalf of the Naples Society for the Protection of Animals....
THE LAPIDARY STYLE.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] Sin,—Would you perhaps think well to add the following lines, so eloquent in their concise pathos, to your instances of the lapidary style?...
THE WRECK OF THE STELLA' AND TEE LAPIDARY STYLE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR:'] SIR, — The inscription which Mrs. Marston sent to you written by Miss Frances Power Cobbe, is one that is contemplated and under...
[To THE EDITOR OP TEE "SPECTATOR."] S111, — Will you allow me
The Spectatorto endorse the criticism of Mr. C. R• Haines on the advantages of Latin over English for memorial S - - inscriptions I think an even more striking instance than the epitaph on...
[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR-1 SIR,—Adverting to your reference
The Spectatorto the memorial tablet to the heroic stewardess .of the `Stella,' and to your remarks upon it, how striking are these lines of Alfred Tennyson's, conveying the same idea:— " No...
THE INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS ON TUBERC ITLOSIS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIE, — In your note in the Spectator of May 27th on the Inter- national Congress on Tuberculosis now being held in Berlin, you comment on the...
Page 15
CHURCH PARTIES AND THE WORLD.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OP TEE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—I think your correspondent "W. G. S. M." will find the best explanation of the "attitude maintained towards the world by Catholics" in...
rro THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—In reply to the
The Spectatorquestion raised by your correspondent "W. G. S. M.," may I submit to your readers a theory which seems to me to account for the peculiarity which he describes The mediaeval...
[To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR.")
The SpectatorSIR, — In every department of life exceptions are to be found which prove the rule. The conclusions at which your corre- spondent "W. G. S. M.," in the Spectator of May 27th,...
Page 16
POETRY.
The SpectatorTHOUGHTS IN A MEADOW. O WHY in this breathing field, this meadow of Maytime, . A-flurry with silverous gusts ; Why, 0 my soul, must thou still with a sadness behold it :...
M. DE STAAL'S SPEECH. [To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "]
The SpectatorSra,—With reference to various comments in the Spectator of May 27th on the sentence in M. de Staal's opening speech, "Sans rien sacrifier de nos esperances ulterieures," allow...
THE QUEEN'S .EQUANIMITY.
The Spectator[To THE EISITOR OP THE 'SPECTATOR.1 Szu,—In your article in the Spectator of May 27th on "The Queen's Equanimity," you allude to an often repeated story of a saying of John...
"LE STYLE C'EST L'HOMME.*
The Spectator(TO THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR.") Slit,—The above still continues to be so invariably quoted as the correct form of a celebrated sentence of Buffon's, that I am moved to beg...
THE - POOR AND TREIte rtINERALS. • MO THE EDITOR OP
The Spectatorwrit "Stiorston."] Sin,—To illustrate the horror entertained of pauper btrial by the poorer classes, I should like to cite the case of a widow personally known to me, who has...
DICTIONARIES.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "STIBTETOR.1 SIR,—In the interesting article on the subject of dictionaries in the Spectator of May 27th, occur the words :—"Heedless of the hackneyed...
Page 17
BOOKS.
The SpectatorMR. SHELDON'S " SERMON-STORIES."* MR. SHELDON, the minister of a Congregational church in Kansas, has presented the public with a literary puzzle. He has written a number of...
HENRY GEORGE LIDDELL.* IT is not saying too much, though
The Spectatorit would be difficult to say more, when it is claimed that Dean Liddell was a worthy suc- cessor of Dean Gaisford. Both held a sort of primacy among the heads of houses of their...
Page 18
THE CUCHULLIN SAGA.* WHATEVER may be thought of the merits
The Spectatorof Celtic literature or the virtues of the Celtic races, there can be no doubt as to the influence, the somewhat mysterious and unaccountable influence, which both have...
Page 19
THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION.* IN these two well-printed and well-illustrateu vGiunicq,
The SpectatorMr. Lodge has told the story of the Revolution by which the thirteen colonies in which originated the United States of America politically separated themselves from England. It...
Page 20
NOVELS OF THE WEEK.* IT is interesting to note the
The Spectatorswing of the pendulum in regard to the delineation of low life in fiction. Dickens, who was practically the first to popularise this genre, though he gave us Fagin, Bill Sikes,...
Page 22
THE MAGAZINES.
The SpectatorTHE June number of the Nineteenth Century is a good one. The padding interests us rather less than usual, but there are at least five articles from which the reader may derive...
Page 24
Modern England from the Reform Bill to the Present Time.
The SpectatorBy Justin McCarthy, M.P. ('I'. Fisher Unwin. 5s.)—Readers who are acquainted with Mr. Justin McCarthy's " History of Our Own Tifues " do not need to be told what kind of a book...
CURRENT LITERAT URE.
The SpectatorSOME BOOKS OF THE WEEK. [Under this heading,we notice such Books of the week as hav e.not been reserved for review in other forms.] A Thousand Days in the Arctic. By Frederic...
Page 25
First Steps in International Law. By Sir Sheraton Baker, Bart.
The Spectator(Began Paul, Trench, and Co. 12s.)—Sir Sheraton Baker delivered a little more than a year ago a lecture on the Rights of Belligerents and Neutrals," and suggested various...
An American Cruiser in the East. By John D. Ford.
The Spectator(H. R. Allenson. 124.)—Mr. John D. Ford, who describes himself as "Fleet Engineer of the Pacific Station," left San Francisco for the Behring Sea in a United States cruiser. The...
History Up to Date, by William A. Johnston (H. R.
The SpectatorAllenson. 6s.), is a " Concise Account of the War of 1898 between the United States and Spain," a war which, according to the author, "found the United States of America a...
The Prophecies of the Brahan Seer. By Alexander Mackenzie. (Eneas
The SpectatorMackay, Stirling, N.B.)—The curious in the matter of prophecy and second-sight may read this book to advantage. The "Brahan Seer " was a certain " Coinneach Odhar " of Uig in...
The Hereford Earthquake of December 17th, 1896. By Charles Davison,
The SpectatorSc.D. (Cornish Bros., Birmingham. 10s. 6d.)—The " Here- ford Earthquake" took place at 5.30 a.m. on the day mentioned above. Mr. Davison, with an industry which is beyond all...
IA:genie, Empress of the French. By Clara Tschudi. Authorised Translation
The Spectatorfrom the French by E. M. Cope. (Swan Sonnenschein and Co. 6s.)—We can honestly praise this book, but with the reserve that its appearance should have been postponed. . The very...
True Tales of Trarel and Adventure. By Harry de Windt.
The Spectator(Ghetto and Windus. Ss. 6d.)—Mr. de Windt knows how to tell a story. This is the only criticism which it is necessary to make on this volume, for of true stories—and the author...
Memories of Half - a - Century. By Richard W. Hiley, D.D. (Long- mans
The Spectatorand Co. 15s.)—Dr. Hiley has written a volume of auto- biography. Probably there are at least a thousand clergymen who might have done the same, and with equal success This...
Page 26
Translations from Poushkin. By Charles Edward Turner. (Sampson Low, Marston,
The Spectatorand Co. 8s. 6d.)—These translations do not, it must be said. possess any very distinct literary charm of their own. Yet they will be welcome. The author has done his best to...
The Scottish Kings, 1005-1625, by Sir Archibald H. Dunbar (D.
The SpectatorDouglas, Edinburgh, 12s. 6d.), is a " Revised Chronology of Scottish History," with an abridged chronicle of events and persons, pedigrees, tables of marriages, calendars, and a...
MISCELLANEOUS. — The Dog : its External and Internal Organisation,
The Spectatoredited by Alexander C. Piesse (George Philip and Son, 3s. 6d. net), contains a description of the dog generically and of the principal varieties, sporting and non-sporting, with...