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In the western theatre of the war we must once
The Spectatormore record that no operations of importance have taken place, and this though there has been a good deal of fierce fighting. For example, the German wireless reports claim the...
While we hold that the Government are thoroughly justified in
The Spectatorundertaking the attack on the Dardanelles, even though it may Illeall the deflection of a certain amount of naval and military energy from other places. we do not fail to...
The progress of the Allies has been, all things considered,
The Spectatorwonderfully rapid„,for the weather has been anything but favourable. During the earlier part of the week a stiff gale was blowing. Admiral Carden, indeed, was in the / position...
We wrote last week as to the effect of our
The Spectatoraction at the Dardanelles on the Mediterranean and Balkan Powers, and the news since derived from Rome, Athens, Sofia, and Bucharest amply confirms our view. For the Powers in...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT EE advance made during the week by our naval force in the Dardanelles has been snout satisfactory. As we write our ships are engaged with the great group of forts at the...
It must have been a great anxiety to the Commander-in-
The SpectatorChief to handle his ships under conditions of gale and mist in these narrow waters with their rocky shores and swift currents, and with all the ordinary navigation problems...
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That, no doubt, would be for them sound policy. We
The Spectatormust not forget, however, that the German General Staff are a good deal more involved in the fog of war than they care to acknowledge. It is easy enough to say that they will...
We publish elsewhere letters of protest against the holding of
The Spectatorfashionable race meetings during the continuance of the war, and have added a note expressing our agreement. We should like to say here also that, though we are in no way...
The great German campaign against our shipping, under which we
The Spectatorwere to be cut off from all human aid and every merchant ship that dared to approach our ports torpedoed and sunk, has ended in what can only be called an amazing fiasco. In the...
Occasionally a merchant ship can do a great deal better
The Spectatorthan escape, witness the plucky action of the Newcastle steamer • Thordis.' Captain Bell when off Beachy Head last Sunday morning saw the periscope of a submarine. A torpedo was...
On Monday in the Commons Mr. Asquith made one of
The Spectatorthe most important announcements of the war when he described the new naval measures to be taken by Britain in response to the so-called blockade by German submarines. We have...
In the eastern theatre of the war the news is
The Spectatorsolely good. There seems little doubt that in the north, on the extreme of the Russian right wing, the German advance has not only keen checked, but that the Germans are...
In the Commons on Tuesday the Bill for amending the
The SpectatorDefence of the Reale' Act was in Committee, when the Government made various concessions. The principle is that civilians are not to be subject to martial law unless the...
Lord Kitchener has been most successful in keeping the veil
The Spectatorspread over our military forces. It is not too much to say that there is no one in this country outside Lord Kitchener's immediate personal staff who now knows how many men are...
Before we leave the western theatre of the war we
The Spectatormust record a splendid feat of arms accomplished on Wednesday by the French airman, Captain Happe. He dropped bombe on the great German ammunition factory at Rottweil in Baden...
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The struggle could be shortened only if the equipment were
The Spectatorforthcoming. Great as was the need for men, the need for war material was still greater. "This is an engineers' war." He did not wish to tell the enemy the state of our...
On Friday week the Government issued through Sir George Askwith
The Spectatora summons to the Clyde engineers and their employers to resume work on the following Monday. It was pointed out that a serious situation in the production of war material was...
Renter's Agency sent to the papers of Wednesday the text
The Spectatorof Germany's answer to the American Note on the use of submarines against merchantmen, of unanchored mines, and of neutral flags. The German Government say that they would be...
• On Wednesday the Commons debated the control of aliens.
The SpectatorMr. Joynson-Hicks demanded much more drastic measures. Mr. McKenna replied that since November 11th control had been entirely in the hands of the War Office, and Lord Kitchener...
Last Sunday Mr. Lloyd George made one of the best
The Spectatorspeeches of his life at Bangor. The urgency and solemnity with which be spoke about the labour troubles that were retarding the output of war materials were emphasized rather...
The Foreign Office announced at the end of last week
The Spectatorthat a blockade of German East Africa would begin at midnight on February 28th—March 1st. The blockade includes the whole coast and the islands. Four days' grace was allowed for...
We are very glad to be able to record the
The Spectatorgrowing success of the new Welsh Guards. The life of the regiment formally began last Saturday, when more than five hundred men recruited for the Grenadiers took up their...
The dispute about the 'Dacia' (the German ship wide!: was
The Spectatorbought by a German-American) took an unexpected direction at the end of last week, when the vessel was seized in the Channel by a French cruiser and taken to Brest for the...
On Wednesday the Admiralty published the despatches describing Sir Doveton
The SpectatorSturdee's action off the Falklands and Sir David Beatty's action in the North Sea. The facts are already well known, but we must mention one point. Admiral Beatty emphasizes the...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE FUTURE OF CONSTANTINOPLE. W E sincerely trust that our Russian allies will not be perturbed by rumours as to the attitude of the British people towards the future of...
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LORD KITCHENER.
The SpectatorM R. BONAR LAW has a happy power of focussing public opinion in his speeches. He has never shown this power to better advantage than on Monday night. The country in general...
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THE NEW NAVAL MEASURES AND THE UNITED STATES.
The SpectatorA FEW weeks ago Britain and the United States were drifting towards a very dangerous situation. The American grievance was that Britain was destroying the trade of the United...
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A PLEA FOR POSTERITY.
The SpectatorT HE summary financial statement which Mr. Asquith presented to the House of Commons in moving for a Vote of Credit on Monday raises questions of supreme national importance. He...
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THE "WILLING" BADGE.
The SpectatorW E are sorry not to see more support accorded to the suggestion made by Lord Roaebery and endorsed by i,ord Derby for the issue of a badge to the men who have presented...
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THE ETERNAL SERIAL.
The SpectatorO NE of the most marked features of life is its plotlessness. Just when things seem to be going to take a dramatic turn they do not take it. Instead the unexpected happens, very...
A GIFT.
The SpectatorS HE was too beautiful and too idiotic for words. She had a fascinating smile of which only her close friends had fathomed the meaning. She would draw back her upper lip...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorASCOT IN WAR TIME. [To Toe EDITOR OP TIM ...SPECTATOR.") SIR, — There has been much discussion recently over the question of the Epsom Grand Stand. As to the rights and wrongs...
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LABOUR AND THE WAR.
The Spectator[To ens Enrroa He THE ‘. Sracrvroe."1 . 1 EIS.,--011every-side you hear people asking the same question How is it that the working .classes .do not realize the serious position...
THE WORKING MAN AS EMPLOYER. trO THE Eonort or THE
The Spectator..HMOTATOR."ll Sin,—May I trespass on your space to put in a plea for the general practitioner at tire present time? Many doctors have left their practices in the service of...
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[To ens EDITOR Or can " Srerryro...] wish I Lad
The Spectatorthe ability to give you an idea of the heart- ache and eoul.hunger that possess many thousands of men and women to-day and the failure of the Church to satisfy their longing....
[TO Tan EDITOR OF Tan "ElPFCTATOU.") SIR,—" Expectans " will
The Spectatorfind the "simplified religion" he wants in the Church of England, if he will look not on the outward appearance but on the heart. The only religions principles which deserve and...
HUTS V. TENTS.
The SpectatorLT. Tan Eerron or Tux "Serc-rsron."1 Siu,—Your remarks on colds contracted by the use of huts interested me. Twenty-five pare ago, under the then Commander-in-Chief, Lord...
. DOCTRINAIRES AND THE DYE SCHEME.
The Spectator[To rem Enrron OF TUE " Serer...on:1 Sim,—As a reader of thirty years' standing, I have noticed with great interest your opinion on the Government's dye-ware scheme, and am not...
WANTED—A SIMPLIFIED RELIGION. [To rex Eamon or xes " SrEYAres."1
The SpectatorSIR,—I have read with much delight the timely letter of " Expectans" in your last issue. On some such broader and more liberal lines the Churches will have to proceed if they...
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THE LATE MR. FRANK T. MILLEN.
The Spectatorrro TEE EDITOR or cos nSrocnoroo."] Si,—Readera of the Spectator will, I am sure, have observed with regret the death of Mr. Frank T. Hellen at Madeira on the 26th ult., for...
"NOSOITIJR A SOCHS."
The Spectatorme TOE EDITOR OF THE ..Bssrmos.'i SIP.,—I have only to-day received from my house in Italy, whither It had gone, the advertisement of a press-cutting agency enclosing "S. R....
ANIMAL SENTRIES.
The Spectator[To Tee R.owon OF THE "SPROTATOR:1 SIB,—III your issue of the 27th ult. you give many pleasing examples of bird-sentinels in war times. You omit, however, the historic case...
MANANDER AND SCAMANDER. [To THE Mason or TEE "SPEcraTo."] BIEr—POSSibly
The Spectatorthe following lines may serve to excuse the nnluelry slip of thepen mono of your "News of the Week" notes last Saturday.—I am, Sir, Ste„ BCAMANDER. "Bunt duo rivorum madam...
THE BATTLE OF AEGOSPOTAML [to see Moron OF Tos .Sosormroo.”J
The SpectatorSea—In the Spectator of February 27th on p. 288 Alcibiades is said to have "lost the sea empire of Athens "—at Aegospetami—" on a gamblefs throw." 4 - 1-rate in his history in...
ON COMMAS.
The SpectatorrTo ros EDITOR OP TEE "SPECTAT08,1 Sass—On reading your amusing article "On Commas," it has occurred to me that the writer may have been in his youth the school inspector who,...
[TO Too Emma OF TEE " Szaorrrox."] Sin,--Are not all
The Spectatorbirds good sentinels P I once spent a pleasant hour in Devizes Gaol with a notorious burglar. He told me that he had given up a well-planned burglary of a large house in...
A JOURNEY TO NATURE."
The Spectatorpro lam Enrroa OF VIE .. 8EacrraTox."9 Son,—A review appeared in your columns last week of a book called A Journey to Nature. It is not stated that the book is an old one or...
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.ctITSSIAN COPYRIGHT.
The Spectator[To Tun EDITOR or Tex "ErsoreTon."] Silt,—The Publishers' Association of Great Britain has on its own showing been unsuccessfully endeavouring since 1911 to bring about a...
THE CENTRAL ASSOCIATION OF VOLUNTEER TRAINING CORPS.
The SpectatorPassinzwr ; LORD DESBOROUGH. Hoer. Sneeze - rear u PERCY A. HARRIS, Esq. HEAD OFFICES: Judges ' Quadrangle, Royal Courts of Justice (Carey Street entrance). The aims and...
COUNCIL FOR THE STUDY OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS.
The Spectator[To THE EDUCE or Tun "SerorsTon.'1 Szn,—.Tuat before the outbreak of the war Viscount Bryce expressed the view that the provision of a wider and deeper education in...
ROCK PLANTS AND THE WOUNDED.
The Spectator[To Tux Eniyon or TER " Synorsros.") Szn,—I venture to tell you that I am very much obliged to yen for inserting my appeal for orders for Alpine and herbaceous plants to raise...
EOTICE.—Trhen "Correspondence" or Articles are signed with the writer's name
The Spectatoror initials, or with a pseudonym, or are marked "Communicated," the Editor must NCI necessarily be held to be in agreement wills the rime therein expressed or with the mode of...
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POETRY.
The SpectatorDIES 1RAE. PATIENCE a little niece and then the Day Which hurls us 'gainat the Foe in deadly strife. 'We know the price our Fathers had to pay That bought for us, their sons, a...
THE " SPECTATOR " HOME GUARDS FUND. SUBSCRIPTIONS for this
The SpectatorFund should be sent to the Spectator Office, or direct to Messrs. Barclay and Co., Goslings' Branch, 19 Fleet Street, London, E.C. Cheques should be made payable to the...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorPARIS WAITS.* MRS. CLARICE, an English resident in Path, has written a, diary of events from the eve of the war till Christmas. It is notable for its gracefulness, fine shades...
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BULLS AND BLUNDERS.*
The SpectatorBULLS, as Mr. Percy remarks in the preface to his agreeable but somewhat chaotic, collection, are not an Irish monopoly, though the Irish bull generally has a peculiar quality...
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PEACE IN FRICTION.* Tag centmy of peace between Great Britain
The Spectatorand the United States which the two countries are celebrating this year did not open with much promise. The war of 1812 might easily have been avoided, and the Treaty which...
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N,OVGOROD THE GREAT. * " WHo can stand against God and
The Spectatorthe Great Novgorod ?" So ran the mediaeval proverb which expressed the civic pride of the great trading city which laid the foundation of modern Russia. It was the people of...
A COMPANION OF CORTES.*
The SpectatorTHE world posiesses few books of this chum more entertaining or more valuable than the "truthful history of the Conquest of New Spain" which was written in his old age by Bernal...
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PRACTICAL MYSTICISM.*
The SpectatorMiss Utingiusitr.. has shown herself on previous occasions a learned and accomplished expositor of the mystical writers. In her present book she assumes the ride of preacher,...
THE MAGAZINES.
The SpectatorTINDER the heading "The War of Purification Dutch- man's View" in the Nineteenth Century, Mr. I. I. Brants con- tributes a striking paper on the " Germanization " of Holland, •...
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FICTION.
The SpectatorWITHIN TIIE TIDES.* MR. CONRAD'S stories, though they may never appeal to a wide circle of readers or enter into competition on the score pt • Wition Ore Tides. • Taloa by...
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price.)—Au anonymous book, written in excellent English. The plot is
The Spectatorslender, and exists as the foundation for a good. deal of religious thought and conjecture.
Miss Maud D. Haviland was invited to accompany Miss Czaplicka
The Spectatoron her important anthropological expedition into Siberia last summer, and gives a vivid account of her experi- ences in A Summer on Cie Yenesei (Edward Arnold, 10s. 6d. net)....
There is a popular impression that the foundation of Public
The SpectatorSchools (or grammar sehoola) in England dates only from the time of the Reformation. Apart, indeed, from Eton and Winchester, it is generally believed that no Public Schools...
SOME BOOKS OF THE WEEK.
The Spectator[Natio* in it,, column does not necessarily preclude sutorquint roviina] The March number of the Round Table (Macmillan and Co., 2s. 6d.) contains as usual many thoughtfully...