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NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE news from Constantinople is serious. The Armenians of the capital are, of course, greatly excited by the outrages on their kinsfolk, and on Monday a body of them resolved...
Lord Salisbury has taken the right course in China. He
The Spectatorhas demanded that the Viceroy of Sze chnen, who is respon- sible for the non-prevention of the massacre of missionaries in that province, should be dismissed ; and has ordered...
It is useless as yet to form any opinion as
The Spectatorto the probable course of events. All the conditions of a frightful outbreak are present in Constantinople. The Sovereign is a man of keen but unstable mind, dominated at one...
No news of the fall of Antananarivo had been received
The Spectatorin London up to Friday afternoon. According to the Times' correspondent there, writing as late as August 23rd, no de- fence against the French is possible, the Hovas being...
It is difficult to estimate precisely the importance of any
The SpectatorMussulman rising against China, if it occurs within the State itself. There can be no doubt, however, that the Court regards such a rising as a formidable danger. It crashed the...
NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS.
The SpectatorWith the " Sin:memos " of Saturday, October 12th, will be issued, gratis, a SPECIAL LITERARY SUPPLEMENT, the outside pages of which will be devoted to Advertisements. To secure...
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The Daily Chronicle of Tuesday gives an interesting account of
The Spectatorthe scheme for bringing water to London from Wales, which has been drawn up by Mr. Binnie, the engineer of the County Council. He would make five artificial lakes (one of them...
We are glad to find that, thanks in a great
The Spectatormeasure to the activity of the Navy League, South Africa seems likely to do the very thing which we lately advocated in these columns, found a local navy, which could be, were...
The Continent is interested in a fact which may be
The Spectatorwholly unimportant, or the signal of a great change. The German Emperor has sent to the Czar, by the hands of Captain von Moltke, a much-trusted Aide-de-camp, an autograph...
If the Revenue comes in during the next six months
The Spectatoras it has done in the past, Sir M. Hicks-Beach will be able to calculate upon a considerable surplus to dispose of. There is a large increase for the six months ending September...
By the death of M. Pasteur, which occurred at St.
The SpectatorCloud on Saturday, France loses the man whom she thought most eminent in the scientific world. Originally a student of chemistry, M. Pasteur is credited with discoveries in the...
The Referendum has again saved Switzerland from a piece of
The SpectatorSocialistic legislation. Last week a proposal to amend the Federal Constitution in such a way as to authorise the Legislature to make the manufacture of matches a Govern- ment...
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Mr. G. D. Pollock, F.R.C.S., delivering the annual address -at
The SpectatorSt. George's Hospital on the opening of the Medical Session, gave on Monday some curious instances of idiosyncrasy. It is well known that there are many persons who cannot eat...
The Blue-book issued on Monday, containing the reports of the
The Spectatorresidents in the protected Native States of the Malay Peninsula and the general report of the Governor, is a very remarkable State paper, and contains a record of pro- gress and...
The Times during the past week has been opening its
The Spectatorcolumns to protests in regard to the condition of Hyde Park. Complaint is made as to the filthy condition of many of the tramps and roughs who sprawl on the grass and infest the...
Bruges, which was once one of the great cities of
The Spectatorthe world—it had a population of two hundred thousand in the fourteenth century—but is now little but a place of memories, with a quarter of its inhabitants living on clarity,...
We trust that the demand for an Agricultural Parcels Post
The Spectator—that is, the conveyance of small quantities of batter, eggs, vegetables, fruit, cream, Sx., through the Post Office at cheap rates—will not be overlooked by the Government....
The weather has changed with the month. The morning of
The SpectatorTuesday, October 1st, was fairly warm, but the day grew colder as it went on; and Wednesday and Thursday set the fires going in most country and many town houses. Early on...
A very curious instance of those sudden and total losses
The Spectatorof memory which raise such perplexing and appalling problems as to the nature of the personality of man is reported this week from Brighton. Whilst sitting on the sea-front a...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE ULTIMATUM TO CHINA. S ITBJECT to a reservation which we discuss below, Lord Salisbury has managed very well in China. It was quite certain that we must protect English mis-...
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THE NEW PROJECT FOR THE LORDS. T HE week has been
The Spectatorfull of rumours as to the intentions of the Government in regard to the House of Lords, and certain prominent Peers are said to be at work on schemes of reconstruction. These...
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THE RISE IN THE REVENUE. T HE hymns of gratulation which
The Spectatorpeople are singing about the rise in the Revenue are, we suppose, most natural; but they mark a change in national sentiment which will have far-reaching consequences. They are...
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WHITES AND BLACKS. T HE white race is taking charge of
The Spectatorthe black race every- where—we do not mean the Asiatic race, but the African—and it will have to make up its mind very soon as to the conditions of its guardianship, otherwise...
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BARON DE KALLAY'S ACHIEVEMENT.
The SpectatorW E sometimes talk as if it were only Englishmen who could take over a province full of mountains and brigands and torn with tribal feuds and religious hatreds, and in ten or a...
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CARDINAL VAUGHAN AND MR. HUGH PRICE HUGHES.
The SpectatorD URING the past week there have appeared two some- what notable manifestoes on the Voluntary School question, neither of which, unfortunately, can be said to have contributed...
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M. PASTEUR.
The SpectatorI T is difficult for us to write about M. Pasteur. It is impossible not to respect a man so devoted to an intellectual pursuit, that he gave his whole life to it, worked on...
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TOM MOORE.
The SpectatorM R. STEAD has devoted one of the numbers of his "Masterpiece Library," or, to speak more intelligibly, of his "Penny Poets," to Tom Moore. That he should have done so is a sign...
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DANGEROUS ANIMALS OF EUROPE.
The SpectatorT HE author of "Happy Thoughts," on comparing the in- formation received in a country visit as to the habits of domestic animals, concluded that they were nearly all dangerous,...
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AGRICULTURAL DEPRESSION.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR 01 THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—In the Spectator of September 28th, you commence one of your notes as follows : The Agricultural Returns for Great Britain during 1894...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorIRISH HATRED OF ENGLAND. [To THE EDITOR Or THE "SPECTATOR."' SIR,—I think you are unduly despondent in your article on the Chicago Convention in the Spectator of September...
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THE CONGO STATE AND KING LEOPOLa
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF IRE " BPRCTATOR,n SIR,—Many have read with profound thankfulness the strong;. and, let me add, statesmanlike, article in the Spectator or September 28th, on...
THE ALPS, FROM END TO END.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF TIM 8FECTATOR."] SIR,—Will you allow me to make a few comments on some- statements contained in your review of Sir W. Conway's.- book, "The Alps, from End to...
BUTTER-FACTORIES.
The Spectator[To TIM EDITOR OF TEE "SPECTATOR."] Sta,—If a Wolff may presume to answer a Bear, speaking about a Cow, I should like to be allowed to say just two words in reply to Mr. Bear's...
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RECOLLECTIONS OF A VIRGINIAN.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] desire to express my pleasure on reading a very kind notice in the Spectator of August 17th, of a book written by me about a year ago. It is...
THE HABITS OF ROOKS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."3 SIR, — Can any of your numerous readers who are lovers of natural history throw light upon the laws and government of that curious...
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LACK-MINDEDNESS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OE THZ "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—I have lately come across another example of "lack- mindedness," as I would call it rather than "absent-minded- ness." A Berne...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorM. PAUL BOURGET ON AMERICA.* No one who begins this charming book will lay it down with- out finishing it, or without a doubt whether he has gained from its perusal quite so...
POETRY.
The SpectatorTHE OLD GARDEN. AN odour rich of full-bloomed flowers Bids me restrain my steps, and lean Over an old grey wall, where cowers The shrinking moss in crevice green. Spread here...
A WISH.
The SpectatorDEATH, when I die, I pray thee let it be In autumn, when across the spiky furze There floats the film of silver gossamers : In early autumn, when the cherry-tree Is touched with...
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A VOLUME OF JEWISH SERMONS.*
The Spectator• Aspeafa of Jact,ians being Sixteen SerntOns byliraal Abrahams and Claude G. Xantejiatra. Loadox I Ilacmilan and Co. So little is accurately known of the special and...
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THE OLD MISSIONARY.*
The SpectatorIN The Old Missionary Sir William Hunter has revealed a hitherto unsuspected power. We were aware that the erudite and brilliant interpreter to England of its Indian Empire...
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FURTWANGLER'S "MASTERPIECES OF GREEK SCULPTURE."*
The SpectatorIT is quite impossible to do justice within any space which we can command to this interesting and beautiful book. Written by an expert of the first eminence, who joins a finely...
MY JAPANESE WIFE.*
The SpectatorJr we could have welcomed this little story as an original conception it would have given us considerable pleasure, since it is prettily and daintily written; but as it is...
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THE MAGAZINES.
The SpectatorTHERE is no article in the Nineteenth Century of commanding interest, but several that are very readable. "The Trafalgar Captains," by Mr. Laird Clowes, would have delighted...
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Bird-Notes. By the late Jane Mary Hayward. Edited by Emma
The SpectatorHubbard. (Longmans.)—This is a book which is quite worthy to be ranked with Mr. Warde Fowler's, and which, so far- as its special subject is concerned, the letters of White of...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorPopular Astronomy. By Camille Flammarion. Translated from the French by J. Ellard Gore. (Chatto and Windus.)— M. Flammarion has, in a very large measure, that gift of a....
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The Education of Girls in the United States. By Sara
The SpectatorA. Burstall. (Swan Sonnenschein and Co.)—It would not be fair to attempt an epitome of Miss Burstall's most interesting volume. Indeed, it is itself an epitome, crowded with...
Adantnani Vita S. Columbae. Edited, with Introduction, Notes, and a
The SpectatorGlossary, by J. T. Fowler, M.A. (Clarendon Press.)—Mr. Fowler's introduction deals with early Irish Church history. The first section is given to the pre-Patrician period, the...
Modern Journalism. By J. B. Mackie. (Crosby Lockwood and Co.)—This
The Spectator"Handbook of Instruction and Counsel for the Young Journalist" is of a very practical, and, we should imagine, very useful kind. If you aspire to journalism, you must begin by...
Peter Steele, the Cricketer. By Horace J. Hutchinson. (J. W.
The SpectatorArrowsmith.)—If "England v. Australia" matches and the like are indeed, as an eminent authority tells us, the "things that Englishmen really care about," here is a book that...
Parish Problems. By Lady Baker. (Wells Gardner, Darton, and Co.)—The
The Spectatorcomplexities of the Local Government Act, 1894, with its Parish Councils and Meetings, Charities, Allotments, and the rest of it, are here discussed in a series of dialogues in...
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An Historical Survey of Pre-Christian Education. By S. S. Lawrie,
The SpectatorA.M. (Longmans.)—Three of the sections in this volume are of special value, those which deal with China, Greece, and Rome. In respect of China—where, however, there is more...