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BOOKS.
The SpectatorJEAN FRANcOIS MILLET.* "IN the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread." These words, constantly repeated by Jean Francois Millet, give the clue to his mind, and consequently to...
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BLOCKADE-RUNNING.*
The SpectatorNo other sport in all the worldâneither hunting, pig-sticking, steeplechasing, big-game shooting, nor poloâcan approach "running a blockade" for real excitement. That, at...
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TRANSATLANTIC ECONOMICS.* WHATEVER justification the people of the United States
The Spectatormay bring forward for the extraordinary economic vagaries that they have performed during their more recent history, they certainly cannot urge the lack of sound teachers on...
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THE YEAR AFTER THE ARMADA.*
The SpectatorBY this volume Mr. Hume will add very greatly to the re- putation as a serious but not dryasdustish or pedagogic historical investigator which he obtained by his Courtships of...
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THE EVOLUTION OF THE MUNICIPALITY OF GLASGOW.*
The SpectatorWITHIN the past quarter of a century much attention has been paid to the municipal progress of Glasgow, whose population has increased during the second half of the century by...
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GIFT-BOOKS.
The SpectatorWITH THE JUNGLE-FOLK.* BIIRMAII, not India, and Mr. Coming, not Mr. Kipling, are responsible for what is described by the author as a common- place story of Burmese village...
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TWO CHILDREN'S BOOKS.* The Parade exhibits a combination of all
The Spectatorthe talents for the entertainment of the children. About a score of people clever with pen and pencil have been called in to help, and if the young readers find anything lacking...
A BOOK ABOUT CATHEDRALS, ABBEYS, AND CHURCHES.*
The SpectatorA CONSIDERABLE portion of the rich store of information presented to the public in Cathedrals, Abbeys, and Churches of England and Wales can only be done full justice to and...
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The Girl at the Dower - House and Afterward. By Agnes Giberne.
The Spectator(W. and R. Chambers.)âThis is a very pleasant girls' book, but the now experienced author can hardly be said to be seen in it to the best advantage. She tries rather too often...
Mr. Edward Arnold has published a new edition of the
The Spectatorim- mortal fairy-tales of Hans Christian Andersen as rendered by Madame de Chatelain and illustrated by Mr. E. A. Leman. No prettier edition of these stories, of which,...
Philippa. By Mrs. Molesworth. (W. and R. Chambers.)â This story
The Spectatoris not quite in the vein which we associate with Mrs. Molesworth, but it is very clever, very fantastic, and very enjoyable. Perhaps it is a rather serious tax upon one's powers...
How Dick and Molly Saw England. By M. H. Cornwall - Legh.
The Spectator(Edward Arnold.)âMr. Eastwood is a most obliging father. When Aunt Jemima, thinking of the interests of his children, says to him that it is a shame that they should know so...
The Laird's Legacy. By Mary H. Debenham. (National Society.) âThe
The Spectatorstory is told, alternately by the nurse and her husband, of the fortunes of the laird's child, which he places in her hands on the eve of his exile to the Court of St. Germaine....
Catalina, Art - Student. By L. T. Meade. (W. and R. Chambers.)
The SpectatorâAdmirers of Mrs. Meade's work in fictionâwhich is often very excellentâmay be somewhat disappointed with this new story, because there is in it no story to speak of....
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Matthew Parkyn. By Mrs. Henry Clarke. (S.P.C.K.)âThe story opens in
The SpectatorAustralia, where we are introduced to the hero and the convict Sanders, with whose past and future the tale is inti- mately connected. Parkyn returns to England, where his...
The Kipling Birthday Book. Compiled by Joseph Finn. (Mac- millan
The Spectatorand Co.)âIf popularity is the condition of being exhibited in a birthday book, there can be no doubt of Mr. Rudyard Kipling's claim. Otherwise we do not think that this...
the reader will be inclined to shut up the book,
The Spectatoror to relieve it by peeping at the end. We may advise the doubtful to persevere. They will find a capital little story, with a very wholesome pur- pose, not too obtrusively put....
England's Navy. By F. M. Holmes. (S. W. Partridge and
The SpectatorCo.) âMr. Holmes also gives us a " glance at some navies of the ancient world," telling us about the naval supremacy of Athens, the fatal expedition to Syracuse, and, passing...
Goldsmith's Comedies. Edited by Joseph Jacobs. (George Allen.) âMr. Jacobs
The Spectatorhas something to tell us about the circumstances under which the comedies were brought out. In his criticisms of Goldsmith he does not give us anything of remarkable value....
Hornbook Jingles. By Mrs. Arthur Gaskin. (Leadenhall Press.) âMrs. Gaskin
The Spectatorbegins by describing, by pen and pencil, the horn- books out of which the little girls of bygone generations learnt to read. This is well enough ; let us hope that young people...
Juliana Horatia Ewing and her Books. By Horatio. R. F.
The SpectatorEden. (S.P.C.K.)âThe edition of Mrs. Ewing's books which we have noticed from time to time in these columns is now completed by a memoir, supplemented with a selection from...
Wulfric the Weapon - Thane. By Charles W. Whistler. (Blackie and Son.)âWulfric
The Spectatorwas the armour-bearer of Edmund, the East Anglian sub-King, who was martyred by the Danes in 870. Mr. Whistler has carefully studied the authorities, and gives us a very...
An Ocean Outlaw. By Hugh St. Leger. (Blackio and Son.)â
The SpectatorMr. Hugh St. Leger is a writer who evidently is quite at home on the roaring wave. We have storms and mutinies, and the unfail- ing attraction of treasure trove, and everything...
Hester Lavenham. By Helen Watson. (R.T.S.)âThe story opens with the
The Spectatorintroduction of Miss Hester Lavenham, a new pupil and a very charming and pretty girl, to the school-room of Miss Millington. She comes from a country rectory, where her...
The Black Tor. By George Manville Fenn. (W. and R.
The SpectatorChambers)âTwo neighbours in the North Country, the Edens and the Darleys, cherish an hereditary feud. No one exactly knows how it arose. The Edens attribute it to an...
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The Changeling of Brandlescrme. By Roma White. (A. D. Innes
The Spectatorand Co.)âAlthough a little too long drawn out, this is a very readable and conscientiously written historical romance dealing with the commencement of the struggle between...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorDr. Rumsey's Patient. By L. T. Meade and Clifford Halifax, M.D. (Chatto and Windus.)âThe authors of this novel call it " a very strange story " in their title-page, and then...
The World's Great Snare. By E. Phillips Oppenheim. (Ward and
The SpectatorDowney.)âMr. Oppenheim, who has undoubtedly proved himself a master of the art of writing sensational fiction, has here surpassed himself. From the first chapter, in which...
Sketches for Scamps. By the Hon. Ernest Pomeroy. (Digby, Long,
The Spectatorand Co.)âThe author of these slight sketches is by way of being a New Humourist, and he has no doubt an eye to the lighter and slighter aspects of life, as well as a command...
Doctor Nikola. By Guy Boothby. (Ward, Lock, and Co.)â Mr.
The SpectatorBoothby is making quite as effective play with Dr. Nikola as Mr. Conan Doyle ever did with Sherlock Holmes. This mar- vellous man, who is no less striking a personality than the...
Poems of Henry Vaughan, Sitarist. Edited by E. K. Chambers.
The SpectatorWith an Introduction by H. C. Beeching. " The Muses' Library." 2 vols. (Lawrence and Bullen.)âJudgment and knowledge are the qualifications demanded of an editor, and both are...
The Queen of Night. By Headon Hill. (Ward, Lock, and
The SpectatorCo.)â This is a moat ingenious story of the breathlessly sensational sort. The fundamental "idea" is a startling one, being that of a " murder syndicate" composed of persons...
The Adventures of Martin Hewitt. Third Series. By Arthur Morrison.
The Spectator(Ward, Lock, and Co.)âThe biographer of the pro- fessional "investigator," Martin Hewitt, has constituted himself successor to the biographer of the old favourite, Sherlock...
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Simple Sketches of England and her Churchmen in the Middle
The SpectatorAges. By " L. G." (Wells Gardner, Darton, and Co.)âThis little history opens with the reign of William the Conqueror, and ends with the martyrdom of William Tyndale in 1536....
My Reminiscences. By Luigi Arditi. (Skeffington and Son.)â These "Reminiscences"
The Spectatorof Signor Arditi, edited by the Baroness von Zedlitz, are exactly what we might expect. Stage-folk, despite (or by reason of) their special genius, are often in other matters...
William I., German Emperor, and his Successors. By Mary Cochrane.
The Spectator(W. and R. Chambers.)âThis is a useful little manual of Prussian history, for it deals with the Emperor William's predecessors as well as his successors. The writer's account...
Two books about London may be mentioned together. London Street
The SpectatorNames, by F. H. Habben, B.A. (T. Fisher Unwin), is a careful collection of notes about London streets. These notes are conveniently arranged in alphabetical order. Of course as...
What They Say in New England. Collected by Clifton Johnson
The Spectator(Lee and Shepard, Boston.)âWe confess to a fondness for books of folk-lore, especially when they are not too recondite and have the true smack of rusticity. There is often so...
The Mystery of Handwriting. By J. Harington Keane. (Lee and
The SpectatorShepard, Boston.)âMr. Keane, like all empiricists, holds that to dub any set of disconnected observations with a Greek word ending in "elegy" is to create a new science. To...
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Vox Stellarum 1897, Moore's Almanac. (Charles Letts and Co.) -It
The Spectatoris all very well to call this " The Original Edition," nor do we deny that it is full of useful information. But where are "The Remarkable Prophecies and Predictions" which...
An Odd Career. By G. Beresford Fitzgerald. (Digby, Long, and
The SpectatorCo.)-There seems to us an opportunity lost in An Odd Career. Though the author is not much at home in his first chapters, his style improves afterwards, loses its redundancy,...
The Power of the Dog. By Rowland Grey. (Jarrold and
The SpectatorSons.) -We are sorry to see that " Rowland Grey," who has done better things, can find nothing else to write about than a married woman's love for a man who is not her husband....
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London+ Printed by WT AN k SONS (Limited) at Noe.
The Spectator74.76 Great Queen Street, W.C.; and Published by Joel; James Basta. of No. 1 Wellington Street, in the Precinct of the Savoy, Strand, in the County of Middle's:, at the BremaOa"...
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Dr. Jameson was released from Holloway Prison late on Wednesday
The Spectatorevening by order of the Home Secretary, his condition, after a somewhat serious operation, causing some anxiety, and a very reasonable wish that he might be placed under less...
The Daily Telegraph has been betrayed into an indiscretion. Its
The Spectatorconductors have opened a national subscription to present a testimonial to Mr. Bayard, the American Ambassador, upon his departure from this country, and have headed it with a...
An important letter from Earl Grey to the Directors of
The Spectatorthe &nth African Company is published in the Times of Novem- ber 28th. In it his Lordship, who is now administering Rhodesia for the Company, states that a new policy will be...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE Government has received a disagreeable though not a disabling blow in Egypt. Under the absurd condominium of six Powers which prevails there, the Court of Appeal which...
At a meeting of the members of the British Empire
The SpectatorLeague, held on Thursday at the Guildhall under the presidency of the Lord Mayor, the Duke of Devonshire made a very im- portant statement as to the general agreement between...
FOR THE
The SpectatorNo. 3,571.] WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1896. [ REGISTERED MIL PRICE 6n. NEWSPAPER. .1 Br POST, 60.
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Nothing can surpass the adroitness of many special corre- spondents,
The Spectatorbut to say what you want to say in a capital where you might be imprisoned for saying it, and yet to give no offence, is a task that might puzzle Henri Rochefort. It is puzzling...
The Italian Government.has evidently made up its mind to quit
The SpectatorAfrica, but delays its decision, partly because it has to negotiate with England and Egypt, partly because the exist- ing Parliament might refuse its consent. The country, it...
Sir Alexander J. Arbuthnot, whose experience of the Civil Service
The Spectatorgenerally, and of the working of the Education De- partment in particular with which he has become acquainted. through his correspondence with it in relation to his own small...
A Conference on the Education question summoned by the National
The SpectatorEducation League a the Evangelical Free Churches met on Tuesday at the Memorial Hall, Farringdon Street, under the presidency of the Rev. J. Guinness Rogers, and determined on...
Sir Robert Reid, speaking yesterday week at Rugby on the
The SpectatorRadical leadership, said that Lord Rosebery was forced to accept the leadership by the refusal of many of the Liberal Ministers to serve under Sir William Harcourt,âa refusal...
In the course of an extremely interesting lecture upon war,
The Spectatorin which he strongly defended military training, Lord Wolseley on Thursday took occasion to repeat an old opinion of his,â that a great army might be formed in China. He...
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Lord Leighton's sisters have very generously presented their brother's house,
The Spectatorwith its beautiful Arab hall, to the nation on condition that it shall be properly maintained at the public expense. The only serious obstacles to be now sur- mounted are how to...
Mr. E. N. Buxton writes to the Times of Saturday
The Spectatorthat the Government of Bombay are about to set up a sanctuary for the African elephant in the coast-area of Somaliland. Within the reserve, shooting at elephants will be...
It is sometimes asserted that it would be impossible to
The Spectatorintroduce compulsory registrations of title to land into England, because England is an old country and its land system highly complicated. Registration may do very well for...
The Times' correspondent in India, the only one as yet
The Spectatorrecognised by the public, should be a little more minute in his detail of facts. He reports on Thursday a most important speech by the Viceroy on opening the Taptee Railway, a...
A very curious amphibious railway was opened at Brighton on
The SpectatorSaturday,âa railway which runs from Brighton to Rotting- dean (some four and a half miles) through the water instead of under it. This is accomplished by the rails being laid...
The story about Sir John Soane's will which we quoted
The Spectatorlast week from a contemporary turns out to be nearly base- less. The Trustees of the Museum were obliged, indeed, to open certain receptacles at considerable intervals, but they...
The Sheffield Poor-law Schools Committee has just issued a Repbrt
The Spectatoron its system of scattered or isolated homes for pauper children. The object of the scheme was to avoid all aggregations of pauper children and to secure the most com- plete...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE NEW POLICY IN RHODESIA. W E do not like the letter, describing the new policy to be adopted in Rhodesia, which Earl Grey addressed to his Directors of the Chartered Company...
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THE " FORTNIGHTLY " ON LORD ROSEBERY. T HE writer who
The Spectatorsigns himself " Emeritus " in the Fortnightly Review lays too much stress, we think, on the deficiency in Lord Rosebery of an aggressive attitude of political mind. He is,...
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THE MONOPOLY TROUBLE. T HE extension of the Trust system in
The SpectatorEngland will create a great fuss some day. " Trusts," i3 the sense in which we are now using the word, are only monopolies, and it is around the right to create a monopoly, as a...
THE MUDDLE IN EGYPT.
The SpectatorW E cannot take the same view as our contemporaries do of the latest incident in Egypt. It is quite true that this country can find half a million for the re- conquest of...
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AGGRESSIVE TJNSECTARIANISM. T HE Conference of the League of the Evangelical
The SpectatorFree Churches held on Tuesday at the Memorial Hall, Farringdon Street, under the presidency of the Rev. J. Guinness Rogers, determined on assuming a more " aggressive " attitude...
PUBLIC WORK AND LARGE SALARIES.
The SpectatorM R. BURNS, in the early days of the London County Council, is reported to have said that no man was worth more than £500 a year. Though the Council did not act rigidly upon...
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LAPSES OF MEMORY.
The Spectator_A NOTHER case is said to have occurred this week of one of those sudden lapses of memory which are some- times so bewildering when we consider the question as to ,how much of...
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JAPANESE CHARACTERISTICS.
The SpectatorN O national character is more difficult to understand than that of the Japanese; nor upon any is there a greater conflict of apparently trustworthy evidence. According to one...
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ANIMALS IN NOVELS.
The SpectatorT HE recent adventure of a " mad bull" in Langham Place shows that such animals still exist in fact. In fiction, where the mad bull once played an important part, giving endless...
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LETTER TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorCONTRASTED CONTINENTS. [TO TIM EDITOR OF THR " SPICTALTOR."] SIR,âThe writer of " Day-Dreaming in Politics," in the Spectator of November 19th, told his geographical...
POETRY.
The SpectatorTHE LILY. I DREAMED that after wandering long I came To a dark garden with frail souls for flowers; And saw the gentle lady we call Death Pace to and fro ; above each bloom...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorTHE ABBE DE LAMENNAIS.* IT is well that we have at last a monograph in English of that extraordinary man who shares with Comte de Maistre the position of founder of modern...
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MR. DICKINSON'S GREEK VIEW OF LIFE.*
The SpectatorTHIS volume is one of the " University Extension Series," and is primarily intended for students who do not read Greek. But like Mr. Mackail, who has written on Latin literature...
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FIONA MACLEOD'S POEMS.*
The SpectatorFIONA MACLEOn prefixes to her little volume of songs, which seem as if they had been made to accompany an 2Eolian harp, this sentence from the Finnish epic " Kalevala " :â"...
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SIX NOVELS.* IN William Romilly, the prominent figure of The
The SpectatorStory of Hannah, is given a striking, original, and thoughtful study of a person whose genuine, deep-seated love and tenderness are masked during most of his life by an...
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THE MAGAZINES.
The SpectatorDECEMBER is not a good month for the magazines, though it is possible to pick out some papers well worth reading. They are fewest for once in the Nineteenth Century, which is a...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorThe Church Quarterly Review, October. (Spottiswoode.)âThis is a number of more than usually varied interest. The articles are ten in number, of which the moat important,...
Messrs. Marcus Ward and Co. send us a very numerous
The Spectatorcollection of Calendars, Cards, Pocket-books, &c. The calendars are of every kind, presenting a quite extraordinary variety of quality and design. One of the most interesting is...