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INDEX,
The SpectatorFROM JANUARY 5th TO JUNE 29th, 1889, INCLUSIVE. TOPICS OF THE DAY. A ERICA :—European Position in, the ... 78 ..t3L Africa:—Lake Nyanza, the Coup d'Etat on 225 Africa, Our...
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LONDON: Printed by Jona CAMPBILL, of No. I Wel- lington
The SpectatorStreet, inthe Precinct of the Savoy, Strand, in the County of Middlesex, at 18 Exeter Street, Strand; and Published by him at the" Srxerreroa " Office, No. 1 Wellington Street,...
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General Boulanger has issued his address to the electors of
The SpectatorParis. He is vague, as usual, about his purposes, and denies any idea of claiming a dictatorship ; but he is not vague about his hostility to the Parliamentary regime. Its...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorK ING MILAN of Servia has beaten back his revolution. His second appeal to his people resulted in the return of a Great Skuptschina, or Constituent Assembly, in which he had...
Mr. Forwood, the Secretary to the Admiralty, made a good
The Spectatorspeech at Wavertree, near Liverpool, yesterday week, in which he remarked that the condition of Parliamentary business was the great question of the hour; that in the Session...
Sir Robert Morier's letter to Count Herbert Bismarck, enclosing Marshal
The SpectatorBazaine's denial that he had ever attri- buted his information as to the crossing of the Moselle by the German Army in 1870, to a telegram of Mr. Morier's (then representing...
The Russian agents who had been advising the Radicals were
The Spectatorbitterly disappointed, and according to a statement made on the following day in Parliament, bribed peasant Members heavily. The impression made, however, was too deep ; it was...
A statement was received in London on Thursday which, if
The Spectatorit is true, settles the question as to the fate of Emin Pasha. An Egyptian soldier who had been living for nine months at Khartoum, which he left on November 23rd, has arrived...
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Mr. Goldwin Smith has written a very interesting and instructive
The Spectatorletter to a Conservative M.P. on Lord Salisbury's strange "leap in the dark" in relation to female suffrage. He remarks that the Tory leader no doubt counts on it confidently as...
Lord Eversley,—the Speaker known to the House of Com- mons
The Spectatoras Charles Shaw-Lefevre,--died yesterday week at his house, Heckfield Place, Hampshire, at the age of ninety-four. He succeeded Mr. Speaker Abercomby in 1839, and though a...
Sir John Pender is selected as the Ministerial, that is,
The Spectatorthe Unionist candidate, for the Govan District of Glasgow, in place of the late Sir W. Pearce, who was a Conservative Unionist. Sir John Pender, as every one knows, is a strong...
The great people of the Continent "received addresses," as usual,
The Spectatoron New Year's Day, and except the Emperor of Germany, they all spoke hopefully of peace. The Emperor of Austria telegraphed to his brother Kaiser that he thought peace would be...
Lord Northbrook on Monday made at Winchester the most substantial
The Spectatordefence yet offered for the government of the counties by the country gentlemen. He showed that in Hamp- shire, the seventy gentlemen who have really done the work have managed...
The persistene2 of the English belief in beer has received
The Spectatora striking illustration this week. The great brewing firm of Truman,Hanbury, and Buxton have turned their concern into a limited liability Company. The partners keep all their...
The Indian Congress at Allahabad has broken up without demanding
The Spectatormore than half the members of the future Legisla- tive Council, and an unlimited right of raising volunteer regi- ments; but the sittings were marked by a suggestive incident....
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Mr. Labouchere evidently considers himself beyond the con- trol of
The Spectatorlaw. In a speech at the Junior Reform Club, Liver- pool, on Thursday, he "commented" on the proceedings of the Parnell Commission in a manner for which any orator not in...
The evictions at Olphert, in County Donegal, on Wednes- day,
The Spectatorillustrated the genuine humanity of the order not to fear to fire, if once it became necessary to use force at all to put down illegal violence. The Resident Magistrate was...
In revising the rents for 1889, the Land Commissioners in
The SpectatorIreland have actually ventured to suppose that rents are really to rise when the price of produce rises, as well as to fall when the price of produce falls. At this assumption...
A very strange murder of a child of less than
The Spectatoreight years of age occurred in Bradford on Thursday week. The child in question, John Gill, the son of a cabdriver, had been accus- tomed for some time past to go out with...
There is a general impression in the public mind that
The Spectatorfires in London increased during 1888, and it is satisfactory to find that it is inaccurate. According to the official report of the Fire Brigade, though fires in 1888 were of a...
The French Government has sustained what it considers a heavy
The Spectatorblow in the Far East. Hitherto it has always been regarded as the protector of all Roman Catholic Missions in China, and has in that character exercised an iunnense in- fluence...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorMR. GLADSTONE ON O'CONNELL. T HERE is a curious irony in the destiny which has brought Mr. Gladstone at the close of one of the longest public careers of the century, to the...
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THE MORTRR CORRESPONDENCE.
The SpectatorTH-P Morier correspondence is not very pleasant reading. here is a tone in Count Herbert Bismarck's reply to Sir Robert Morier, declining his request to have Sir Robert Morier's...
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THE DEMOCRACY AND ITS REPRESENTATIVES. T HERE is a change passing
The Spectatorover opinion—democratic opinion we mean—which if it continues will seriously affect all politics, and may profoundly modify the develop- ment of half the States of the world. It...
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THE CHANGE IN IRELAND.
The SpectatorT is impossible to mistake the signs of improvement everywhere visible in Ireland. Looked at from whatever point of view, the year 1889 opens for Ireland with far brighter...
KING MILAN.
The SpectatorK G MILAN has won the game,—won it, we suspect, IN as we argue below, more completely than is as yet quite understood either in London or Belgrade. We have ventured all through...
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THE BURGLARY SEASON. T HE customary dullness of the Christmas week
The Spectatorhas been relieved by the robbery of the jewels of the Austrian Ambassadress. When these things happen to great people, a number of smaller people feel the burden of life a...
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" MACBETH " AT THE LYCEUM THEATRE.
The SpectatorW HEN it became known that Miss Terry was about to appear as Lady Macbeth, there was a good deal of speculation as to whether she would endeavour to conform to the traditional...
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THE POETRY OF THE SEA.
The Spectator'E NGLISH poets are certainly not to be accounted great at all in proportion to their success in dealing with the sea. Some cu. the very greatest have concerned themselves...
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MR. F. HARRISON'S LECTURE ON NEW YEAR'S DAY.
The SpectatorW E have heard men, and men of undoubted piety and large experience, maintain that the best instrument for the propagation of a creed is assertion, persistent, un- flinching,...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorWOMEN ON COUNTY COUNCILS. [To THE EDITOR OF THE " Sim - resort:1 SIB, — The consideration of who are to act as our representa- tives on these new bodies is attracting much...
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THE EVIL EYE.
The SpectatorLTO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR, — It is not difficult to point to the antiquity of the belief in the influence of the " Evil Eye, " but it is surprising to find....
[To THE EDITOR OH THE "SPECTATOR."] Sie, — Your correspondent, R. H.
The SpectatorQuick, commits a slight error in attributing the division of Churchmen into High, Low, and Broad to the late Dean Conybeare. It was Dean Conybeare ' s eldest son, the Rev....
THE FORM OF ENCYCLOPEDIAS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin, — Your article on the " Encyclopmdia Britannica, " in the Spectator of December 15th, contains a suggestion that it might be possible to...
THE STRENGTH OF THE HAPSBURGS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR, — In his criticism of your interesting article on the above subject, Professor Freeman states as his opinion that Austria is not, and...
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POETRY.
The SpectatorA GREY DAY AT NAPLES, 1888. Tits lazy waters of the tideless sea, That murmur homage to Parthenope, Enveloped in November's cloak of brown, Hide their bright azure, as the...
[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR:]
The SpectatorSIE, -" P. C. W." speaks of the "Evil Eye" as a supersti- tion prevalent in the Ireland of forty years ago. I can tell him that at this hour it is as widespread as ever. I have...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorTHE LAND OF DARKNESS.* WE could dispense with "the experience of the little Pilgrim," who has never seemed to us half as impressive as the other spiritual conceptions of the...
CLOSED CATHEDRALS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR?'] had not intended to trouble you again on the subject of opening cathedrals. But as two of your correspondents have taken notice of my...
WORDSWORTH'S SENSE OF FATE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR:] St,—In your interesting article of December 22nd, 1888, on Mr. John Morley's essay on Wordsworth, you say,—" We cannot agree with Mr. Morley...
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THE SUPPRESSION OF THE MONASTERIES.* THI8 book is the work
The Spectatorof an English monk, and is dedicated to the Pope as "the first-fruit of work undertaken in obedience to his command." We must confess that we began to read it with some dread,...
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CANARY LAND.* WHATEVER place in their science learned geographers may
The Spectatoraccord to "the Canaries," fancy will always delight to think of them as "the six [really seven] Islands of the Gods, which some persons have called the Fortunate Islands," where...
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THE COUNTY COUNCILS.*
The SpectatorNOTHING is more interesting than to trace in modern legis- lation the resistless influence of the past. Those even who are ignorant of, or feel no sympathy with, the spirit in...
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PROFESSOR PFLEIDERER ON " PRIMITIVE CHRISTIANITY." * {FIRST NOTICE.] Tins work is
The Spectatorone with which all students of primitive Christianity will have to reckon. In it Professor Pfleiderer recognises that the solution offered by the Tubingen school is no longer...
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PRAED'S POLITICAL POEMS.* FEW poets of any kind come with
The Spectatorundiminished reputation out of the publication of their collected works, and, as a rule, few have cause to congratulate themselves on the undis- criminating zeal of the admirers...
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THE MAGAZINES.
The SpectatorWE have discussed elsewhere Mr. Gladstone's essay on "Daniel O'Connell," which will be, we suppose, the most read paper in the Nineteenth Century for January ; but there are...
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Proposals : being a Maiden Meditation. (Ward and Downey.) — More
The Spectatorof meditation than maiden, is the reflection that will probably strike the reader of this book. The authoress gives us a description of her various suitors, and of the different...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorWe have received a new edition of The Book of Household Manage- ment, by Mrs. Isabella Beeton. (Ward, Lock, and Co.)—The edition is described on the title-page as being...
Garry' s Elocutionist. By Rupert Garry. (Marcus Ward and Co.)—This
The Spectatoris a capital selection of recitations, and the general tone of the pieces does great credit to Mr. Garry. It is both an extremely well-selected and useful volume, and an...
Beautiful Jim. By "John Strange Winter." 2 vols. (F. V.
The SpectatorWhite and Co.)—The author of this military story, the latest of a long line of similar works, must have astonished others besides the present writer by dedicating her book to...
The Encore Reciter, edited by F. E. Marshall Steer° (Warne
The Spectatorand Co.), contains 128 pages of selections, divided into humorous, serious, and dramatic (a cross division, but intelligible, and, from the writer's point of view, useful, for a...
Amateur Work. Vol. VII. (Ward, Lock, and Co.)—The author of
The Spectator"Every Man His Own Mechanic" issues another volume of this excellent series. To judge by the large correspondence which the editor conducts, it is more popular than ever, and...
Usher Life. By Francis Holt, M.A. (W. Rapp and Sons.)—If
The Spectatorit is true that ushers as a class are held in low esteem by the rest of mankind, we are afraid that Mr. Holt's book will not do much to improve their position. He establishes,...
Fairy and Folk - Tales of the Irish Peasantry. Edited and Selected
The Spectatorby W. B. Yeats. Camelot Series. (Walter Scott.)—This book, made up mainly from the writings of Crofton Croker, W. Carleton, and others, was intended by its editor to be...
Of the publications of the English Dialect Society (Triibner and
The SpectatorCo.) we have received, West Somerset Word - Book, by Frederick Of the publications of the English Dialect Society (Triibner and Co.) we have received, West Somerset Word - Book,...
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Specimens of Antique Carved Furniture and Woodwork. Measured and drawn
The Spectatorby Arthur Marshall. (W. H. Allen and Co.)—Mr. Marshall has figured on fifty plates a number of fine specimens of chairs, chests, tables, bedsteads, cabinets, and the like. They...
The Earth's Past History. By Major-General Drayson. (Chap- man and
The SpectatorHall.)—The author declares that he has discovered the second rotation of the earth, and that by this fact properly grasped thirty thousand years of the earth's past history can...
To Gibraltar and Back in an Eighteen - Tonner, by "One of
The Spectatorthe Crew" (W. H. Allen and Co.), deserves some special attention as being superior in style to most accounts of pleasure trips. Its author and one or two other friends accepted,...
Bracton's Note - Book. Edited by F. W. Maitland. Vol. I.: Apparatus.
The SpectatorVols. II. and III.: Text. (C. J. Clay and Sons.)— Professor Maitland has made in these volumes a most valuable contribution to the study of English law. The sub-title of his...
The Track of the Storm. By Dora Rustell. 3 vols.
The Spectator(Hurst and Blackett)—Miss Dora Russell's latest novel is not behind her previous work in the qualities of readableness and interest. Some of her materials are tolerably...
Led from Afar. By Mallard Herbertson. 2 vols. (Remington and
The SpectatorCo.)—Mr. Herbertson, who is apparently a new writer, cannot be regarded as an important addition to the ranks of contemporary ' novelists. His present story is neither very bad...
NOVELS.-A Crack County. By Mrs. Edward Kennard. (F. V. White
The Spectatorand Co.)—For some time now Mrs. Kennard has been before the public as a writer of sporting novels. We are, however, unable to discover that experience has had the effect of...