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The death of the Princess of Bulgaria, which occurred on
The SpectatorTuesday from a sharp attack of pneumonia, may prove to have some political importance. The deceased lady, though she failed to prevent the baptism of her son, Prince Boris, into...
The Paris correspondent of the Times published on Thurs- day
The Spectatora very curious screed refusing to be silent on the Dreyfus case. The letter seems at first sight to be a mere deluge of words, but if you read it carefully you will see that in...
developments," has received a number of French artisans, and has
The Spectatormade a speech worthy of M. Drumont himself. " I know," he says, "the tenacity and valour of your patriotic efforts against the parricidal acts of an occult and cosmo- politan...
Rumours are growing more frequent that the Belgian authorities on
The Spectatorthe Upper Congo have suffered a series of defeats, that their native troops have mutinied, and that Baron Dhanis, the Commander-in-Chief, and Major Lothaire are prisoners....
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorWHE French Government have surrendered to the Army. -IL M. de Beaurepaire, the ex-Judge who acts for the moment as military spokesman, from the first demanded that the trial of...
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Mr. Rhodes has not yet obtained the guarantee for his
The Spectatorrail- way, but it now appears that he is only asking for a guarantee for a line running north from Bulawayo to the confines of the Chartered Company's territories. This seems to...
According to a telegram in Monday's Daily Neu;s, General Woodford,
The Spectatorthe former American Minister at Madrid, made a remarkable speech at the New York Army and Navy Club on Saturday last.. The 'Maine,' he declared, carried with her to the bottom...
Miss Flora Shaw, who recently visited the Klondike region, read
The Spectatora paper embodying her experiences before the Colonial Institute on Tuesday. Disclaiming all credit for her achievement, Miss Shaw nevertheless admitted that she travelled quite...
Mr. Balfour's speech on Tuesday to a deputation from the
The SpectatorManchester branch of the National Protestant League was in his very best manner. He exposed the monstrous absurdity of saying that Roman Catholics are bigots because they refuse...
The Cuban Army is, it appears, devoted to Cuba and
The Spectatorfreedom, and unless its arrears are paid up will die in the last ditch for both. That is very Spanish, as is also the fact that in the last resort the Cubans will die, and be...
The speech made by Mr. Balfour to his constituents at
The SpectatorManchester on Monday last, as is usual with his utterances, was marked by real originality of thought. He very properly insisted not only that it was necessary for the good...
A great Protestant demonstration was held in the Albert Hall
The Spectatoron Tuesday evening, over ten thousand persons being present. Lord Kinnaird was in the chair, and he was sup- ported by one English and one Scotch Peer and a good number of...
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At the dinner of the Jewellers' Association held at Birmingham
The Spectatoron Saturday last, Mr. Chamberlain showed the absurdity of a resolution lately passed by a committee at Aylesbury which declared this Government to be "the worst Government of...
There was a delightfully Irish scene in Limerick on Thursday.
The SpectatorThe mob, having elected a Council of Nationalists, and indirectly a Mayor with a record as a "fighting patriot," thought they would be welcome in the Council Chamber, and...
The Times of Tuesday last has a most excellent leading
The Spectatorarticle on the question of admitting aliens to the Bar,—a question which is now being considered by the Inns of Court. Unfortunately, a Joint Committee of the Inns appears to...
It is with great satisfaction that we record the unanimous
The Spectatordecision of the Australian Premiers (arrived at on Thursday) in favour of Federation. The establishment of the Australian Commonwealth—the excellent name already agreed upon—is...
The Colonial Office have appointed Lord Tennyson Governor of South
The SpectatorAustralia, and the newspapers have all made the absurd comment that it is an excellent appointment because Lord Tennyson's father was a great poet, who wrote vigorous verses in...
At a meeting held at Devonshire House on Tuesday, with
The Spectatorthe Duke of Devonshire in the chair, it was decided to establish a Cambridge University Association, with a view to e nlarging the resources of the University for educational...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorMR. BALFOUR AND THE " CRISIS" IN THE CHURCH. M R. BALFOUR'S courage, straightforwardness, and absolute soundness of view were never more strongly exhibited than in his two...
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THE SURRENDER OF THE FRENCH CABINET. H OW the real intellectuels
The Spectatorof France, the small caste of thoughtful and experienced men of unquestioned probite—the word covers more than probity—who in quiet times stand aloof from the stream of...
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THE MEETING OF MONDAY.
The SpectatorW E feel somewhat at a loss what to say about the meeting of Liberal Members of Parliament next Monday. Such remarks as we have already offered on the condition of the Liberal...
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MR. BALFOUR ON MISUNDERSTANDINGS.
The SpectatorM R. BALFOUR made a remark in his speech of Monday at Manchester which, uttered as it was by a statesman of the first rank, raises a commonplace into a thought of high political...
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THE GOVERNMENT AND MR. BALFOUR'S UNIVERSITY SCHEME.
The SpectatorI S the Government going to take up Mr. Balfour's Irish University scheme ? That is the question which, naturally enough, every one is now asking. It is clear that the...
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THE IMMEDIATE FUTURE OF THE CONGO.
The SpectatorW E suspect that the failure of the first attempt to found an India upon the Congo will in no long time be publicly admitted. Bing Leopold IL, who, though he inherits some of...
SOUL AND BODY. AT , R. ST. GEORGE MI VART, writing
The Spectatorin the current IX Nineteenth Century on " The New Psychology," scarcely tells us what he means by that term, but he does enter into a very interesting theme when he considers...
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BURROWING BIRDS.
The SpectatorT HE" walking fish " now to be seen in the tortoise-house at the " Zoo" are the most recent instance shown in London of a striking anomaly in Nature. But it may he doubted...
MR. STEEVENS'S INDIAN IMPRESSIONS.
The SpectatorM R. G. W. STEEPENS, who wrote "With Kitchener to Khartum," has accompanied Lord Curzon to India as special correspondent for the Daily Mall, and we have waited with great...
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[TO THE EDITOR ON T'HE "SPECTATOR."]
The SpectatorSIR, — The origin of the metre and the various sources of in- spiration of " In Memoriam " are very fully discussed in chap. 7 of Mr. Churton Collins's " Illustrations of...
INDUSTRY AND SCENERY.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR. " ] venture to send you an extract freely translated from an interesting and well-written Welsh work published last week—" The History of the...
(TO THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR:1
The SpectatorSlit,—Your article on " Industry and Scenery " gives much food for reflection. As our population increases day by day, and coal grows scarcer year by year, it does seem...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE NEW FOREST AS A SANCTUARY. [To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR...] SIR, —The writer of the article ender the above title in the Spectator of January 28th suggests that the...
THE "IN MEMORIAM" METRE.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR, — The poem, in a metre now and for ever consecrated as the peculiar property of Tennyson, which Dr. Garnett repub- lishes for the...
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BOOKS•
The SpectatorTHE LIFE OF SIR GEORGE POMEROY-COLLEY.a WHEN a great disaster has closed the career of any man of action, soldier or statesman, the world in general has no time to inquire what...
POETRY.
The SpectatorTHE MIDNIGHT SKIES. To finite minds there can but be The finite in infinity; And as within its system's space Each planet has allotted place, The whole must be a continent...
SIR W. HARCOURT AND THE CHURCH. [To 111X EDITCOlt OF
The SpectatorTEL " SPZCZATOR."] SIR,—It is curious in reading Sir W. Harcourt's philippics to note how wilfully and contemptuously he breaks the Fifth Commandment by abusing his "spiritual...
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PRINCIPAL CAIRD'S SERMONS.•
The Spectator"Logic and sermons do not convince," said Walt Whitman, and. speaking generally, there is not a little truth in that utterance. The sermon has become too conventional to arouse...
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MR. DAVIDSON'S NEW VOLUME.*
The SpectatorFOR the message, as we understand it, which Mr. Davidson ooneidere himself charged to deliver, we do not greatly care. Occasionally we regard it with the strongest detestation ;...
WEST AFRICAN STUDIES.*
The SpectatorMiss KINGSLEY needs no commendation as a narrator of experiences. No living traveller is half so amusing to read, and very few are half as instructive. In this book instruction...
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NOVELS OP THE WEEK.*
The SpectatorWE are not familiar with the earlier work of Mr. (or Miss?) Shakespear, whose latest novel, Rupert Armstrong, has, alike in tbeme and treatment, qualities that honourably exempt...
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THE MAGAZINES.
The SpectatorTae Contemporary Review has several serious papers, of which the most attractive, judging by public comments, is one from General Gatacre on the barbarities alleged to have...
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Picturesque India, by W. S. Caine (G. Routledge and Sons,
The Spectator10s. sa.), contains the results of a not inconsiderable ex- perience in India. Four winters of, say, three months each do not indeed make up a very long time for the observa-...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorMINOR BOOKS OF THE WEEK. 117nder this Breading we intend to notioe such Books of the week as have not been reserved for review in ocher forms.] Matters theological and...
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Sell's Directory of Registered Telegraphic Addresses, by Henry Sell (167
The SpectatorFleet Street, 21s.), reaches to nearly two thousand pages. The information is, it is true, given in different forms for sake of convenience of reference, and so repeated, but...