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We have expressed elsewhere our sense of the gravity of
The Spectatorthe situation in China. Here we will only note that the Chinese plenipotentiaries are said to have agreed to the Joint Note in principle, but want to discuss it in detail. This...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE event of the week which has most occupied public attention has been the return of Lord Roberts, and rightly, for England never had a worthier soldier hero to honour. We...
The inauguration of the new Commonwealth of Australia was celebrated
The Spectatoron New Year's Day in Sydney with the pageantry and enthusiasm befitting a great historical ocoasioe. The great procession, two miles loug, passed along a roll , . decorated with...
Lord Roberts reached Cowes on Wednesday, and paid his visit
The Spectatorto the Queen. On the Thursday he landed at Southamp- ton and proceeded to London, where the welcome from the Prince and Princess of Wales and half the great men of the nation...
There is nothing very striking to chronicle from South Africa,
The Spectatorfor we are not alarmed by the fact that the Elo■ - ■ commandos that have penetrated into the Celony have as pig been able to evade capture, and that they have even gut within...
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Saturday's Times reprints from the Nome Vreraya an inter. view
The Spectatorin regard to China with a Japanese diplomatist at present in St. Petersburg which is of the highest interest. The Japanese have, he declares, an enormous advantage over all the...
The list of New Year Honours published on Tuesday is
The Spectatorhardly worthy of the dawn of a new century. We note, how- ever, with satisfaction the bestowal of Privy Councillorships on Mr. Barton, one of the protagonists in the drama of...
It will be interesting to see what will be the
The Spectatoreffect of the Pope's threats. We hope and believe that some compromise in regard to the Bill will be arrived at, as we hold the policy of harrying the Orders to be utterly...
The Daily Telegraph of Thursday publishes a summary of a
The Spectatorremarkable article in the Soir on the Bonapartists' plans. According to the writer, great efforts are being made in France to place Prince Louis Napoleon—the Russian General —on...
Tuesday's Times publishes an interesting letter from Mr Holls, an
The Spectatorable American lawyer, defending the action of the Senate in its recent handling of the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty. We have always held that the Americanisation of the canal and its...
The Main last Saturday published a long and most impor-
The Spectatortant conversation held by a member of its staff with the Pope, in which Leo XIIL discusses the relations of France and the Vatican, and, in fact, takes up the challenge flung...
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The French Shore question in Newfoundland, in other words, the
The Spectatorinterpretation of the rights of the French fishermen for whom a separate reserve was created on the coast of Newfoundland by the various treaties and agreements beginning with...
The Daily Telegraph of Saturday last contains an account of
The Spectatora conversation with some Boer prisoners on their way to Ceylon which deserves special attention as showing the real feeling of the Boers. "You will return," said the writer in...
It is stated this week that the Sultan has issued,
The Spectatoror, more correctly, renewed, a decree forbidding Jews to remain in Palestine for more than three months. By this means he evidently intends to strike not only at pilgrims and...
The Princess of Wales, as President of the Soldiers' and
The SpectatorSailors' Families Association, has issued a further appeal for subscriptions. The task imposed on the Association by the exigencies of the war has been the maintenance of the...
Mr. William O'Brien, M.P., having been ordered abroad for his
The Spectatorhealth, has addressed a parting manifesto to the Irish nation. Primarily his address takes the form of an appeal for subscriptions to the Parliamentary Fund, in the course of...
The fine cartoon in this week's Punch—Time checking the chariot
The Spectatorof Bellona—is the last that will appear from the pen of Sir John Tenniel, who retiree, after an unbroken connec- tion of fifty years, from the active staff of the journal so...
A violent westerly gale, attended by considerable loss of life
The Spectatorand great destruction of shipping and damage to sea - defence works, raged throughout the whole of Friday week. The ' Primrose Hill,' a four-masted ship, was wrecked off the...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE SITUATION IN CHINA. W HEN a few marauding binds break into Cape Colony and play hide-and-seek there with our troops, the British public grows anxious and restless and...
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THE BIRTHDAY OF THE AUSTRALIAN NATION.
The SpectatorlIl `E Queen, of course, always says the right thing on public occasions, great and small, but her Govern- ments are not so infallible. There is, therefore, much ground for...
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RIFLE CLUBS AND VOLUNTEERS.
The SpectatorW E stated last week that we reserved the subject of the voluntary forces available for military pur- poses for future treatment. We propose on the present occasion to make a...
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GERMANY'S CHIEF DANGER.
The Spectator12V - E are not very much alarmed by the signs of Mammonism in Berlin detected by our correspon- dent, " L. K.-D.," in his letter in another column,—at least in the form in...
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THE GOVERNMENT AND SECONDARY EDUCATION.
The SpectatorW E have not hitherto said anything about the judgment of Mr. Justice Wills and Mr. Justice Kennedy in " The Queen v. Cockerton," and we desire to repair the omission ; though...
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THE SPIRITUAL MOVEMENT IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY. F EW thinkers have
The Spectatorever made a worse shot than did John Stuart Mill when he expressed wonder that there had not been a revival of the Manichean philosophy. For what- ever else may be affirmed of...
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LINKS WITH THE PAST.
The SpectatorA T the opening of a new century the minds of some men look forward with hope, whilst others turn back- wards with a lingering regret. To these the ()harms of the past are more...
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AN INLAND STORM.
The SpectatorT HE storm of this week came in two relays, either of which would have made more than ample disturbance in the normal changes of weather inland, where, except for the...
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CORRESPONDENCE.
The SpectatorTHE WATERWAYS AND WATER-POWER OF CANADA. [To THU EDITOR Or Tai " sorwroam SIR,—There is nothing in the world like the waterways and water-power of Canada. A bare catalogue of...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE GROWTH OF MAMMONISM IN BERLIN. (To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sts,—Our journals will, in their retrospective articles usual at this time, express their satisfaction...
ENGLISH EDUCATIONAL APATHY.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR." a Sra,—Is it any wonder that we are apathetic about educa- tion, when the Education Department has for thirty years abstained from doing...
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THE SEA IN THE NEW TESTAMENT.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF TILE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—I hope the " shrinkage of the world" has made sufficient progress to allow a reference from Australia to the admirable article in...
CHRISTIANITY A HEROIC ADVENTURE.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] SIR,—Your expressed desire that men would look upon Christianity as a heroic adventure, to which " A Lay Worker" refers in the Spectator of...
THE AMEER'S MEMOIRS.
The Spectator[fo THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR, —The correspondents who have referred, in two recent issues of the Spectator, to the " dog and cooking-pot" occurrence in the Ameer's...
SONGS OF MODERN GREECE.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Six.,—Your issue for November 3rd contains a notice of my work, "Songs of Modern Greece." The critic, in his other- wise very sympathetic...
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SIR ARTHUR SULLIVAN.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR." Sic..—In the interest of every man of letters in England, will you allow me to say a few words about your article on Sir Arthur Sullivan, by...
THE UNPRODUCTIVENESS OF BRITISH LABOUR. [To THE EDITOR OP THE
The Spectator"SPECTATOR."] Srn,—Referring to your article on " The ITnproductiveness of British Labour" in the Spectator of December 29th, may I give you my experience in a spinning mill P...
"COX AND BOX."
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR." Sra.—With the " piece of musical fooling which, in the opinion of many competent judges, Sullivan himself never surpassed," as " C. L. G."...
[To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR,"] Sra,—In your very interesting
The Spectatorarticle on this subject in the Spectator of December 29th you altogether omit (can it be intentionally P) any reference to another contributory cause of inefficiency of labour,...
MR. BRODRICK'S TASK.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR." Sin,—In your article in the Spectator of December 29th on "Mr. Brodrick's Task" you suggest with regard to the reform of the Yeomanry, " We...
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" CROMWELL," BY MR. MORLEY.
The Spectator[To THR EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,—According to the Right Hon. Mr. Morley, Lord Brook, when besieging Lichfield, was shot in a room. And he says nothing about the spot...
LEADLESS GLAZE ON POTTERY.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] Sin,—From Canon Gore's letter in your recent issue of December 22nd, 1900, one might be led to infer that the ques- tion of procuring...
[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "]
The SpectatorSin,—Your article in the Spectator of December 29th on " The Unproductiveness of British Labour" ought, in my opinion, to be issued in the form of a leaflet and circulated...
. ARMY REFORM.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] Sra,—People are asking the question, What is to be done with the Army? and many are the suggestions that have been put forward, but I have...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorTWO GREAT PORTRAIT PAINTERS.* THE proper way to write the Life of an artist is a matter of controversy. As a rule, books dealing with the lives and' works of painters are...
ABRAHAM LINCOLN.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sra,—The following extract from Thayer's Life of Abraham Lincoln may be of interest at the present moment :- " In less than two months...
POETRY.
The SpectatorNICHOLAS IL TEE double eagle of thy crest Looks either way, for sign The Empires of the East and West, Past and to come, are thine. To thee their hundred millions bow, Whom...
THE IMPORTANCE OF SPEED TO COMMERCE.
The Spectator[To TIER EDITOR OP TEE "EPDOTAT011.1 Ackworth's letter is hardly ad rem.,—the temporary loss of his empty portmanteau and the other petty grievances he enumerates are annoying...
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ZACHARY MACAULAY.*
The SpectatorLADY KNUTSFORD has undertaken in a spirit of filial loyalty a task which a bold man might well shrink from, and she has carried it through with a praiseworthy sympathy. The...
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MR. WALLACE ON SCIENCE AND SOCIOLOGY.* IN these two volumes
The SpectatorMr. Alfred Russel Wallace presents us with the varied fruit of several years of study in the form of numerous essays dealing with problems both in physical and social science....
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SIR WILLIAM HUNTER'S "BRITISH INDIA," VOL. II.
The SpectatorWHEN the first volume of Sir William Hunter's History of British India appeared every one thought that, in the loss of his chance of writing the far larger work he had at one...
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NOVELS OF THE WEEK.*
The SpectatorMR. TREHERNE'S From Valet to Ambassador is far removed from the category of books of which From Log - Cabin to White House may serve as a typical example. If it be true that no...
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THE MAGAZINES.
The SpectatorTHE Nineteenth Century and After. This is how Mr. Knowles has got out of the difficulty of his title. He leaves us, in fact, a name with so many worthy traditions, and yet...
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The Hampstead Annual. Edited by Greville E. Matheson and Sydney
The SpectatorC. Mayle. (S. C. Mayle. 2s. 6d. net.)—The Annual presents a quite imposing list of contributors : Dr. Garnett, Professor Hales, and Messrs. Ernest Rhys, Arnold White, and I....
Mr. W. T. Stead was not likely to miss the
The Spectatoropportunity afforded by the time. Accordingly we have as the Review of Reviews Annual, "Lest we Forget" : a Keepsake from the Nineteenth Century (Review of Reviews Office, is.)...
The Preacher's Dictionary. By E. F. Cavalier, M.A. (Hodder and
The SpectatorStoughton. 12s.)—" A Compendium of Religious and Secular Thought" is a pretty large scheme. In fact, it compre- hends all things temporal and eternal. Mr. Cavalier has put...
The Catholic Directory, 1901 (Burns and Oates, ls. 6d. net),
The Spectatorcontains the usual information, statistical, ecclesiastical, &c., with authoritative directions for fasts, abstinence days, " holidays of obligation," " days of devotion," &c....
SOME BOOKS OF THE WEEK.
The Spectator[Under this heading we notice such Books of the week as have not been reserved for review in other forms.] We gladly renew our annual welcome to the Journal of Educe'. turn,...
The Art Journal, 1900. (H. Virtue and Co. 21s. net.)—It
The Spectatoris needless to say much about this annual volume. The Art Journal is, we think, the oldest of the periodicals of its class, and need not, as regards either its literary or its...
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Bridge : a Complete System of Instruction in the Game.
The SpectatorBy R. F. Foster. (Lawrence and Millen. 624-Bridge is, in the opinion of some critics, a noxious intruder on the domain of whist. It has attractions-otherwise it would not be...
New EDITIONS.-The Bible in Spain. By George Borrow. (J. Lane.
The Spectator2s.)-We are especially glad to see a cheap reprint of this book, one which may be read, perhaps, with more unmixed pleasure than any of Borrow's writing. What a strange story it...
BOOKS OF DEVOTION.-Short Lives of the Dominican Saints. By a
The SpectatorSister of the Congregation of St. Catharine of Siena. Edited by the Very Rev. Father Procter. (Kegan Paul, Trench, and Co. is. 6d )- Ham Sufferings. By Francois Cop*. Trans-...
Sketches and Skits. By Arthur Hopkins. (Elkin Mathews. 684-This is
The Spectatora volume of graceful sketches. The faces are very pretty; we have not often seen as pretty. This goes a long way, for the humour of pictures goes off, so to speak, while the...
The Alleged Haunting of B - House. Edited by A. Goodrich
The SpectatorFreer and the late John, Marquess of Bute. (C. Arthur Pearson. 2s.)-Much of this volume has already appeared, bat this new edition contains some interesting additions. Some of...
ScnooL-Boons.-Sallust's Catiline. Edited by the Rev. W. A. Stone. (Blackie
The Spectatorand Son. ls. 6d.)-One of the " Illustrated Latin Series." There is a useful essay in the prolegomena on Ballast's style and diction, and another on the political aspect of the...