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The d: Jute between this country and Spain is rapidly
The Spectatorbecoming serious, On the back of the Tornado case comes that of the Queen tctoria, in which the Spanish Government is so hopelessly in the wrong, that Lord Stanley was...
Mr. Disraeli's estimate for the financial year now begun wax-
The Spectatores. follows :— Foa 1867-8. REVENUE. EXPENDITURE. Customs .C22,000,000 Interest on Debt .C26,000,000 Excise 20,700,000 Other Consolidated Stamps 9,550,000 Fund...
In a House of less than the ordinary animation, Mr.
The SpectatorDisraeli made his Budget speech on Thursday, which was bare and meagre in the extreme as regards the detail of our finance, but clear and concise as to the future. Mr. Disraeli...
The speech on the Budget was amusing chiefly for its
The Spectatorindi- cations of Mr. Disraeli's charming state of spirits. The depression under which he laboured during the first series of Reform messes has quite *Bed away, and the success...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorA MEETING of the Liberal party was held on Friday at Mr. Gladstone's house, and, as we are told, the final decision was of this kind. Mr. Coleridge, whose clear brain and...
The Luxemburg affair has entered into a new phase. The
The SpectatorPrussians who garrison the fortress have announced in a some- what informal manner that they do not intend to leave it, and the Grand Duke, who is also King of Holland, has...
NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS.—The Publisher requests that Advertise- ments may be
The Spectatorsent in as early in the week as possible, in order to insure insertion, In future, the latest time will be 2 o'clock on Friday Afternoons.
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Both Mr. Gladstone and the Chancellor of the Exchequer have
The Spectatorreceived deputations this week from the Reform League. The former persuaded the working men not to make any demonstra- tion on Good Friday, and said something to soften the...
Count von Moltke, Carnot of Prussia, the man "who organizes
The Spectatorvictory," made a rather remarkable speech on the 3rd inst. A proposal had been made to reduce the term of service to two years, but the General affirmed that the short term...
Who governs the British Army? We pay for it, but
The Spectatorwho governs it? Last Thursday week Sir J. Pakington consented to limit flogging to men reduced from the first class, that is, to about a tenth of the Army, and to confine it to...
Baron Ricasoli has placed his resignation in the hands of
The Spectatorthe King of Italy. No explanation has reached England, but we presume it to be this. Ricasoli is pledged to the Vatican to carry out his ecclesiastical scheme, but finds he...
London was startled on Monday by a telegram stating that
The SpectatorRussia had ceded all Russian America to the United States, and the treaty needed only the ratification of the Senate, which, by the way, is reported doubtful, the price to be...
The Sultan has, it is stated, declined to cede Crete
The Spectatoron the demand of the four Continental Powers. Indeed, if gossip may be trusted, the Grand Vizier has not dared to show his master the "collective note," fearing an instant...
The Paris Exhibition was " opened " on 1st April,
The Spectatorby the Emperor in person. It is chiefly full of unpacked boxes. The Commission has undertaken too much, very little is ready, and the scene is dreary in the extreme. By the 1st...
Mr. Massey, Indian Chancellor of the Exchequer, produced his Budget
The Spectatoron the 5th of March. For 1865-1866 he had a surplus,— chiefly matter of account,—but for 1866-67 he had a deficit of 2,395,2471., caused chiefly by the Bombay panic, which...
Mr. Gladstone, of course, gave Mr. Disraeli's proposals his hearty
The Spectatorsupport, excepting so far as they involved the great increase in the Army and Navy Estimates. Even on that point he said that "there are particular reasons at the present moment...
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Lord Amberley introduced on Tuesday a little Bill to legalize
The SpectatorSunday religious discussions and lectures such as were held last year and this at St. Martin's Hall ; and it may, we hope, pass without any substantial opposition. The Bill...
The Metaphysical Professorship vacant by the transfer of Mr. M.ansel
The Spectatorto the Professorship of Ecclesiastical History at Oxford ought to be, and we hope may be, filled up by the election of one of the candidates, Mr. Green, the author of a hard but...
Count Bismarck has evidently something of that frank, popular manner
The Spectatorwhich a strong Minister so often combines with the greatest impatience of popular control. When reproached in the Chamber yesterday week with the passionate language he had used...
Some large parcels of Stock having been disposed of for
The Spectatormoney, the market for National Securities has been inactive this week, and the quotations have shown a tendency to give way. The leading figure for Consols has been 91i ;...
Mr. Dent on Tuesday called attention to the Report on
The SpectatorAgri- cultural Gangs which we recently analyzed, demanding regulation for those gangs on the principle of the Factory Acts. Mr. Walpole assented, but agreed with Mr. W. E....
The Shropshire magistrates dismissed the charge against Mr. Eyre yesterday
The Spectatorweek, Sir Baldwin Leighton delivering the judg- ment of the bench, as usual. The worthy magistrates chose to interpret legal " malice " in the popular and familiar sen.se, and...
We call attention to a letter of Dr. Mary Walker's
The Spectatorin another column, the object of which is to remove certain false impressions as to her medical standing, which a letter in our columns last week was—we regret to say—the means...
The closing prices of the leading Foreign Securities yesterday and
The Spectatoron Friday week are subjoined :— Mexican .. .. .. Spaniels Passive .. .. Do. Certificates .. .. Turkish 0 per Gems., 1658 .. „ 1862 .. Unite! 8tates15.26U .. .. .. .. .. .....
Yesterday and on Friday week the leading British Railways left
The Spectatoroff at the annexed quotations :- Friday, March 29. Friday, April 5. Great Eastern .. 2 • • 11 11 .. 27 Great Northern .. .. • • 4V 123 1104 Great Western.. • . 12,34 . •...
They have got some very original critical ideas in the
The SpectatorUnited States. The publishers of Mr. Horace Greeley's American Conflict, Messrs. Case, have sent round a circular to their agents, in which they explain that, as it is...
There was a debate on the Naval Estimates on Monday,
The Spectatorwhich came to nothing, but in the course of which Mr. Stansfeld made an extraordinarily suggestive speech, the drift of which was this. He wanted the Admiralty to remember that...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorMR. DISRAELI'S STRATEGY AND ITS BERM TS. - This, then, is in all probability the practical alternative in which Mr. Disraeli's strategy has landed us,—a thoroughly democratic...
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THE BUDGET.
The SpectatorT HE observation which Mr. Read, the one tenant-farmer who sits in the House of Commons, made upon Mr. Disraeli's Budget, that it was in fact adapted to conciliate the support...
LUXEMBURG.
The SpectatorT HERE is a scent of danger in this Luxemburg business. The demi-official accounts are still not entirely in accord, but none of them tend to diminish the gravity of the...
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MR. CRAWFORD'S RAILWAY PLAN M ,. R. CRAWFORD deserves, and
The Spectatorwill, we hope, receive the highest credit for his motion and speech of Tuesday night. It required no slight moral courage in the representative of a commercial aristocracy, a...
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THE LIBERALS AND MILITARY DISCIPLINE.
The SpectatorO H for a little honesty! If only one Liberal leader, say Mr. Gladstone or Mr. Bright, one Liberal of "advanced" views, say Mr. Forster or Mr. Stansfeld, or even Mr. Peter...
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SPAIN AND ENGLAND.
The Spectator"T T is the unforeseen," as the Frenchman said, "which I always arrives." Of all improbable occurrences, one would have said that a war between Great Britain and Spain was the...
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THE WICKEDNESS OF LARGE DIVIDENDS.
The Spectator• profit like that of a prosperous bank, but there is no temptation even to try. If the experiment succeeded, nobody who ran the • risk would enjoy the benefit to the full. The...
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MR. DARWIN AT THE ANTIPODES.
The SpectatorryinE native [Maori] saying is, AB the white man's rat has I driven away the native rat, as the European fly drives away our own, as the clover kills our fern, so will the...
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THE PROVINCIAL HISTORY OF ENGLAND. XXIV.—SUSSEX AND SOTJTH SURREY.—SAXON PERIOD.
The SpectatorA NDERIDA appears as one of the fortresses of the Comes of the Saxon Shore or March in Britain, and as garrisoned by a company of the Abuki, whoever these may have been_ What...
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the two sexes" extends to any function which men and
The Spectatorwomen have in conimon. Male and female students in any branch of science, or practitioners in any art, must have their qualifications and capacities tested by precisely the same...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorDR. LIGHTFOOT ON THE GALATIANS. * THE present volume is intended to form part of a complete edi- tion of St. Paul's Epistles. Judging from the ripe scholarship, the patient...
FAILURE.
The SpectatorVicron from the fight disrobing, Lover, now that heaven's attained— Ere the shouts be lost in sobbing, The clear heaven with storm-clouds stained— Mind ye—'mid your golden...
DR. MARY E. WALKER.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—The statement contained in your last issue purporting to be a document signed by Assistant-Surgeon Crane, by order of the...
[To THE EDITOR OF TEE SPECTATOR."]
The SpectatorSta,—The letter and statement purporting to be from a "Medical Student" in Boston, Massachusetts, in reference to Dr. Mary E. 1Valker's proceedings in London being calculated to...
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THE SEA-GULL (LA GAVIOTA).*
The Spectator• The sea-Oull (La Oariola). From the Spanish at Fenton Caballero. By the Hon. Augusta Bethell. 2 vols. Loudon; Bentley. DONA CECILIA FABER, who is, as Miss Bethell informs us,...
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TWO ARISTOCRATIC TRAVELLERS.*
The SpectatorIT is natural that these two books should be abused, but then it is also a little unfair. The capacity to write books is not hereditary, as the capacity to legislate is assumed...
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SKETCHES BY A LAW REPORTER.* THERE seems to be a
The Spectatorspell cast over every one who attempts to write about the legal profession, which prevents the production of a really good book. There are many curious points of social and...
HARRIET ROUTH.*
The SpectatorWE wonder if Mr. Yates is aware that in Harriet Routh he has made by far the highest effort, the one most worthy of an artist, which he has yet attempted. Apparently he is not,...
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INCIDENTS OF THE III.JNDRED YEARS' WAR.* . THERE are few
The Spectatorplaces more interesting to the English lover of history or architecture than Normandy. Almost every part is in some way connected with the history of the two peoples so...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorReviews and Magazines. The Westminster for April has articles on the Italian campaign of 1866, on Hobbes of Malmesbury, "Contemporary Musical Literature," "Mr. Swinburne's...
Ebury. He would not hear of the present service being
The Spectatorshortened. But he would like to have a daily form of more brevity. He would have busy people coming for part of the service on week days, and the churches always open for...
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A Chronological Synopsis of the Four Gospels. By H. Grenville
The Spectator(John Russell Smith.)—This will be useful as a book of reference. Mr. Grenville gives in - line an event in the New Testament, going chronologically through the whole course of...
The Wholesome Words of Jesus Christ. Four Sermons preached before
The Spectatorthe University of Cambridge. By C. J. Vaughan, D.D. (Mac- millan.)—We heard the other day of a bishop who refined to ordain a young man on the ground that he had been reading...
The Song of Rest, and Minor Poems, by Alexander Winton
The SpectatorBuchan (Whittaker) ; Percy Villiers, and Other Poems, by John Newlands, formerly a volunteer under General Garibaldi (A. W. Bennett) ; Meg Soupirs—Italian Dreams—Mirrors and...
Pope's Essay on Criticism, with Notes. By Samuel Neil. (Houlston
The Spectatorand Wright.)—Mr. Neil's notes are copious and well selected. He writes for the use of students and for the University of London B.A. examination. Bachelors of Arts might indeed...
A Traveller's Notes in Scotland, Belgium, Devonshire, the Channel islands,
The Spectatorthe Mediterranean, France, Somersetshire, Cornwall, the Scilly Islands, Wilts, and Dorsetshire, in 1866. (A. M. Pigott.) — None of the places here described are very strange to...
A Christian View of Christian History from Apostolic to litedimval
The SpectatorTimes. By John Henry Blunt. (Rivingtons.)—This is a convenient and readable sketch of the history of the Church from the birth of Christianity to the Middle Ages. By calling it...
Discourses on the Lord's Prayer, by Caleb Webb (Houlaton and
The SpectatorWright); Sermons Doctrinal and Didactic, by Thomas Williamson Pelle, D.D. (Rivingtons); The Religion of Redemption, by R. W. Monsell, B.A. (W. Hunt and Co.)—Three of those books...
The After - Glow Songs and Sonnets for My Friends. (Smith, Elder,
The Spectatorand Co.)—We feel no doubt that to the writer's friends these songs and sonnets will be a very welcome volume. They seem to be a happy self-revelation of the author, and...
Bible Photographs: a Contrast between the Righteous and the Wicked
The Spectatoras Described in the Word of God By a Bible Student. (Pitman.)—In this odd little book the righteous have a page of texts to themselves, while the wicked are accommodated with...
Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London. Vol V. (Murray.)
The Spectator—This volume has its own peculiar public, and does not need much notice at our hands. If it did, we should say that we found the first paper, "On the Stature of the Lapps, byJ....
On the Origin of Language. By Hensleigh Wedgwood. (Triibner.)—: Mr.
The SpectatorWedgwood agrees with Mr. Farrar, rather than with Professor Max Muller, as to the importance of imitative sounds in the creation of a language. We do not know that he adds much...
The British People. By One of Themselves. (Hall and Co.)—Enter-
The Spectatortaining, though absurd, and paradoxical under a show of reason. We will not enter into the author's argument about the Germans and the Normans, or do more than allude to his...
Benedicite ; or, the Song of the Three Children. By
The SpectatorG. Chaplin Child, M.D. Two vols. (Murray.)—At first sight this seems rather a strange idea, and if it was worked out in the manner natural to so many preachers, it would be...
Christianity among the New Zealanders. By the Right Rev. William
The SpectatorWilliams, D.C.L., Bishop of Waiapu. (Seeley, Jackson, and Halliday.) —The Bishop of Waiapn begins with a half apology for publishing a history of the growth and spread of...
Lancashire Folk - Lore. By John Harland and T. T. Wilkinson. (F.
The SpectatorWarne and Co.)—" We always get out of bed either on the right side or with the right foot first ; we take care not to cross two knives on the table ; mothers never allow a child...
to consist of letters from an Assyrian ambassador to his
The Spectatormaster Bolus, recounting the various incidents taking place at the Court of King Saul r to whom the ambassador is accredited. We write with all seriousness, as will be seen by...