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Mr. Morley spoke in Edinburgh on Thursday, and after ex-
The Spectatorplaining that he had no objection at all to Lord Randolph Churchill's political menu, but that all the same he should refuse to say grace till the dish-covers were removed, and...
Mr. Morley spoke at Hawick on Monday to a large
The Spectatormeeting in the Corn Exchange, and his address was perhaps more remarkable for what he did not say than for what he did. He made no allusion to the victory over his former...
NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS.
The SpectatorIt is our intention occasionally to issue gratis with the " SPECT ATOR" SPECIAL LITERARY SUPPLEMENTS, the outside pages of which will be devoted-to Advertisements. The Twentieth...
"A Sligo Landlord" sends to Tuesday's Times a very curious
The Spectatoraccount of the effect of this (somewhat tardy) interference of the Government in his own ease, in a letter headed "Cause and Effect." On the previous Friday, he says, his agent...
Of course Mr. Morley found it very easy to show
The Spectatorup Lord Randolph Churchill's inconsistency in first promising "simul- taneous" reforms in local government for England, Scotland, and Ireland, and then declaring that, as...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorY E S TE RD A Y week, the Government served a notice on Mr. Dillon at Ballaghadereen, in the County of Sligo, requiring him to find sufficient sureties to be of good behaviour...
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In the latter part of his speech, Mr. Morley argued
The Spectatorat some length for the position that to give Ireland a separate Legis- lature, and yet not to give her a separate Executive dependent on that Legislature, would be to mock her...
The Pall Mall has interviewed the Archbishop of Dublin (Dr.
The SpectatorWalsh) on the new plan of campaign, and, if we may trust the accuracy of the report in Wednesday's Pall Mall of the inter- view,âwhich we hope that his Grace will...
It is affirmed with some confidence that General Kaulbara will
The Spectatornot be allowed to rejoin his appointment as Russian Mili- tary Attaché at Vienna. It will be remembered that Count Kalnoky spoke of his " mission " with quite unusual...
To all appearance, the withdrawal of Russian agents from Bulgaria
The Spectatorhas left the Principality a free and orderly country. The want of a Prince, though probably felt in the Army, does not weaken the Administration, which is quietly, and to all...
Count Robilant, Italian Minister for Foreign Affairs, on the day
The Spectatorafter made a widely different speech. He announced that the Government had seen with regret the deposition of Prince Alexander, "a Prince worthy of a better fate," and that it...
M. de Freyeinet, in moving the Foreign Office Estimate on
The SpectatorSaturday, in the French Chamber, explained his foreign policy. France, he said, needs peace in order to complete the transition from a Monarchical to a Republican state of...
⢠Assuming, then, the accuracy of the report, the Archbishop's
The Spectatorconception of the obligations of tenants in Ireland at the, present time is this,âthat the law of 1881 broke up finally the landlord's sole right of ownership in the land;...
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The news from Burmah grows more satisfactory. The stronger guerilla
The Spectatorbands are being rapidly hunted down, and as they turn and fight, their leaders are generally killed. These once discouraged, General Roberts, who prefers civil administration to...
We have elsewhere animadverted on the place which sensa- tional
The Spectatortrials are beginning to fill in our social system. This week, London has been flooded with suggestive reports of the divorce snit instituted by Lord Colin Campbell against his...
A large, but rather irregularly elected deputation from many vestries
The Spectatorof London, waited on the Home Secretary on Thursday to press on him the creation of a central Municipality for the whole Metropolis. Mr. Matthews, after quizzing them rather...
Lord Charles Beresford on Saturday tested a submarine boat in
The Spectatorthe Victoria Docks. The boat, invented by Mr. A. Campbell, and built by Messrs. Fletcher, Son, and Fearnall, of Limehouse, is of steel, cigar-shaped, 60 ft. long, 8 ft. broad,...
The party of action among the Fenians of New Yorkâthat
The Spectatoris, the employers of dynamiteâhave, it is said, dismissed O'Donovan Rossa from his leadership, and promoted Dr. Hamilton Williams thereto. The latter is said to be an able...
The decision of the Beaumont Trustees not to close the
The SpectatorEast- End Palace during the Sundays, except at certain hours, was a very wise, and even necessary one. Hal they decided otherwise, half the sympathy which the wish to brighten...
A "Monster Winter-Assize Juror" writes to yesterday's Times, to give
The Spectatorspecimens of the ominous threats launched by the Press against the Munster jurors who are to try the Kerry moonlighters apprehended by General Redvers Buller, and asks very...
The meeting at Dorchester on Thursday resolved to erect a
The Spectatorstatue to the Dorset poet, the Rev. W. Barnes, and to devote the residue of the fund raised for this purpose to the establishment of a Barnes Exhibition, tenable at the...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorM. DE FREYCINET UPON EGYPT. W E distrust M. de Freycinet. He talks civilly enough in the Chamber, but there is every reason to believe that he talks in order to conceal part of...
THE GOVERNMENT AND OPPOSITION ON IRELAND.
The SpectatorM R. JOHN MORLEY, in his speech at Hawick, expresses himself as very anxious to combine with any reasonable party to improve the condition of Ireland. But he avoids, both at...
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LORD SELBORNE ON DISESTABLISHMENT.
The SpectatorI - 4 0RD SELBORNE'S new book, and the letter to Mr. Gladstone which accompanies it, will no doubt exert a very considerable influence on the discussions which are pretty sure...
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HOME-RULE AS A FAITH.
The SpectatorO NE of the most remarkable phenomena attending the struggle for Home-rule is the intensity of the faith which the project has developed in a considerable number of English-...
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THE LATE MR. AYRTON.
The SpectatorW E smile at Americans for dwelling on the." magnetic." qualities of their candidates for office (Mr. Blaine, for example, is described as the most " magnetic " man in America),...
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THE DISPUTE ABOUT MAIL CONTRACTS.
The SpectatorT IBERALS who have scoffed at Lord Randolph Churchill in his character of Grand Educator of the Conservative Party, and have predicted his speedy rejection by the party he...
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THE SCANDAL OF RECENT TRIALS.
The Spectator"G REAT cases" are becoming great public nuisances, and ought to be stamped out. Ever since the Tichborne trialâwhich ought to have been finished in a week, and was allowed to...
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PROFESSOR HUXLEY versus MR. LILLY.
The SpectatorM R. LILLY'S eloquent and impressive paper in the November Fortnightly, on "Materialism and Morality," in which, while confessing that Professor Huxley does not accept the name...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorMR. JOHN MORLEY AND THE ACT OF UNION. Cr0 THE EDIT013 OF THE " BYECT/T011."] Sia,âAnything that Mr. Morley has said about the Union of Ireland with Great Britain is likely to...
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EXPERIMENTAL PATHOLOGY.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR."] Sia,âIn the remarks appended to Mr. Mozley's letter on the John Lucas Walker studentship, you express the belief that "patho- logical...
MR. REANEY'S POLITICAL ECONOMY.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR. " ] Sra,âThe same day I read your article and Mr. Reaney's letter, I came across the following passage from Lord Shaftesbury's journals ("...
CIVIL SERVANTS AND POLITICS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR:1 Sin,âI am sorry that my inability to express myself clearly should have led you to think that I evaded your point. I quite meant to meet...
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A NEW SCHOOL OF HANDICRAFTS.
The SpectatorLTo THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."_1 SIE, â Your notice, on November 20th, of the opening of an -orphan asylum for the teaching of handicrafts, has no doubt awakened...
ART.
The SpectatorROYAL INSTITUTE OF PAINTERS IN OIL-COLOURS. [FIRST NOTICE.] Tax present exhibition of the Institute of Painters in Oil-Colours is remarkable chiefly for the average merit of...
THE MUZZLING ORDERS.
The SpectatorLTO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR. "] SIR,âIn the last return published by Sir Charles Warren of the dogs destroyed in the streets of London, supposed to be suffering from...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorCANNIBALS AND CONVICTS IN MELANESIA.* Tins is emphatically a smartly written book. The author makes no attempt at any kind of "word-painting," and is- content to describe...
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MR. WILKIE COLLINS'S LAST NOVEL.* Ma. WILKIE COLLINS has one
The Spectatorat least of the prime requisites of a novelist. His object, from the first chapter to the last, is to tell his story. He does not trouble the reader with wearisome reflections...
THE VANDERBILTS.*
The SpectatorLET Socialists say what they will, and the" unco' guid "denounce wealth as they may, the greater part of civilised mankind will always like to be rich, and take a warm interest...
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COLONIAL FACTS AND FICTIONS.*
The SpectatorTins amusing book is to some extent a counterblast to the Colonial " blow " which Mr. Anthony Trollope was the first to make us understand as a manifestation of Australian...
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THE MAGAZINES.
The SpectatorIT is a poor number of the Nineteenth Century. Mr. Justice Stephen gives us a good plan for the treatment of boycotting, which is, briefly, to punish it as conspiracy whenever...
THE SILENCE OF DEAN MAITLAND.* Is criticising this remarkable and
The Spectatorprovoking book, we shall take it for granted that "Maxwell Gray" is the real name of its author, that that author is a man and not a woman, and that this is his first effort in...
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SOME OF THE PRINCIPAL CHRISTMAS BOOKS.âIII.* THE friendly and intelligent
The Spectatorforeigner who observes our habits, our dwellings, and our country generally, is always welcome, especially so when he is interpreted to us by a translator who knows how to...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorGIFT BOOKS, Exc. Messrs. Macmillan send us a beautiful little edition of Lord Tenny. son's Poems, in ten small volumes, in a box. The type and paper are perfection, the former...
Some Essays of Elia. Illustrated by C. 0. Murray. (Sampson
The SpectatorLow and Co.)âFifteen of the essays, the best, if we may presume to make the distinction, anyhow the best-known, are plentifully illus. trated in this volume by Mr. Murray's...
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Madge Hardwicke, by Agnes Giberne (J. F. Shaw and Co.),
The Spectatoris a story of a strongly religions tendency, exhibiting the way in which a. man, himself without belief, is brought to a recognition of the truths which he had been accustomed...
The Boys who Lived on the Road from Long Ago
The Spectatorto Now. By Jane Andrews. (Mackie and Son.)âMiss Andrews begins with "Sabin, the Aryan boy who came down to the plains of the Indus," and so takes us through Persia, Greece,...
Some of Our Fellows. By the Rev. T. S. Millington.
The Spectator(Hodder and Stoughton.)âIn spite of some affectationâfor we cannot believe that. schoolboys ever talk in the way in which Frederick Jackineon opens his narrativeâthis...
Our Soldier Hero. By M. L. Ridley. (J. F. Shaw
The Spectatorand Co.)âA simply told story of the career of a young Christian soldier, one who does his duty first by giving up his desire for the soldier's life when other things seemed to...
Home for the Holidays. By Mrs. C. C. Campbell. (T.
The SpectatorNelson and Sons.)âThis book is a kind of miscellany, an account of how some young people amused themselves, or were amused by their elders, during the holidays ; stories from...
Hubbard and her Dog" being, we think, the best.âFrom the
The Spectatorsame publishers we have also The Children's Treasury of Pictures and Stories, 1887.âQuick March, by "An Old Soldier" (F. Warne and Co.), is a volume of rhymes, with coloured...
The volumes which compose "Oar Juniors' Library" (Dean and Son)
The Spectatorare generally satisfactory, both in point of writing and illustra- tion. A Soldier's Son, written by Miss E. Strickland, revised by Philip H. Hemyng, is a story of school life,...
Favourite Rhymes for the Nursery. (Nelson and Sons.)âThe rhymes are
The Spectatorthe old favourites,â" Mother Hubbard," "The Queen of Hearts," and the rest, some two hundred in number ; the illustra- tions are, we suppose, new, and certainly good. There is...
The six volumes of a series entitled "The Gordon Library"
The Spectator(Warne and Co.), have all merits of their own. We are inclined to give the preference among them to The Outpost : a Tale of the Backwoods, by R. Andi é. The scene is laid on...
Strong to Suffer : a Story of the Jews. By
The SpectatorE. Wynne. (Cassell and Co.)âThis story is laid in the time of Hadrian. The character of this Emperor, his many great qualities, marred as they were by a certain...
Thorns and Roles. By Julia Goddard. (Routledge and Sons.)â This
The Spectatoris a story of school life in which the familiar incident of the stolen essay and the wrongful accusation plays an important part. Familiar we call it ; but it belongs, we fancy,...
A hearty word of commendation is due to Two Years
The Spectatorin the Region of Icebergs (S.P.C.K.), a muituns in parvo of 121 pages on Newfoundland. The author, the Rev. F. E. J. Lloyd, was appointed in 1882 to the Mission of the Strait of...
The Eversley Secrets. By Evelyn E. Green. (Mackie and Son.)â
The SpectatorThis is a story of domestic life, the " secrets " being surprises which a family of children prepare against the return of their mother, and other things less agreeable. The...
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Tales of Captivity and Exile. (Black - ie and Son.)âThe compiler of
The Spectatorthis volume has collected a great variety of subjects belonging to all times and places, from Hegistrates of Elea, who cut off half his foot to escape from the Spartan stocks,...
Fulcher's Pocket-Book for 1887 (Simpkin, Marshall, and Co.) is, as
The Spectatorusual, full of verses, charades, enigmas, and the like, sometimes good, sometimes indifferent, but always intended to wile away a heavy hour. The illustrations are, we think,...
Great Historic Events. (W. and R. Chambers.)âThese narratives, selected from
The Spectator" Chambers's Miscellany," are six in number :â" The British Conquest of India," "Story of the Indian Mutiny," "France : its Revolutions and Misfortunes," "The Crusaders," "The...