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The second visit of Mr. Gladstone to Midlothian has been
The Spectatora triumphant success. From Chester to Invercauld, wherever he has appeared, the people have assembled in thousands on the barest chance of seeing him, and giving him one cordial...
The single difficulty to observers of this Expedition is to
The Spectatorttiderstand its precise object. Nominally, it is intended to rescue General Gordon and Colonel Stewart, but as those officers can come away when they please, there must be some...
The existing position on the Nile is believed to be
The Spectatorthis. Agents of the Mahdi are besieging General Gordon with large forces of Arabs, who, however, make little impression, General Gordon's troops being obedient, and the fire of...
NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorA N Expedition to raise the siege of Khartoum has now been finally resolved on, and the preparations are rapidly advancing. General Wolseley, with the Staff which invariably...
Mr. Gladstone delivered three speeches in Edinburgh, of which the
The Spectatorone spoken in the Corn Exchange on Saturday was the most important. It was devoted to the Franchise Bill, and was from end to end a warm but closely reasoned piece of argument...
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Upon the question of annexing a Redistribution Bill to the
The SpectatorFranchise Bill, Mr. Gladstone entered into much detail. The proposal was physically impossible. The Government has nominally 90 days in a Session, but really only 65, in-...
One of the most striking, for Peers perhaps most ominous,
The Spectatorpassages in this speech was that in which Mr. Gladstone, in the strength of his fifty years of experience, described the habitual action of the Lords. So far from representing...
The same note is being struck in all recent meetings.
The SpectatorFor instance, Sir Hussey Vivian, addressing a large meeting in Glamorganshire on Tbursday, made it his single text. The right of Dissolution, he said, belonged to the Sovereign...
The third speech delivered by Mr. Gladstone in the Waverley
The SpectatorMarket was, in one way, the most important of all, for the audience consisted of from twelve to fourteen thousand work- men of Midlothian, who had come to present an address ex-...
Mr. Heneage, Member for Grimsby, who is in some ways
The Spectatora representative man, on Wednesday made a most out-spoken speech to his constituents. He declared that in his borough, at all events, the extension of household suffrage to the...
The second speech in the Corn Exchange was a general
The Spectatorde- fence of the action of the Ministry since 1880, and was very heartily applauded. We have given its substance elsewhere, and need only add here that Mr. Gladstone intimated,...
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The British Association at Montreal was greatly moved on Tuesday
The Spectatorby a telegram from Sydney couched in these words : —" Caldwell finds monotremes viviparous, mesoblastic ovum." That does not seem to outsiders to be an epoch-making message; but...
The rumours that the three Emperors will meet towards the
The Spectatorclose of the month at some point in Russian Poland, not yet revealed, are gradually acquiring consistency, and are probably true. The three Chancellors will, it is said,...
The Canton of Berne, in Switzerland, has taken the extra-
The Spectatorordinary step of forbidding the exercises of the Salvation Army throughout its jurisdiction. The reasons assigned are,—that the police cannot 'protect the Salvationists from...
At the meeting of the British Association at Montreal on
The SpectatorMonday, Sir F. Hincke, who had been invited to address the Economic Section, made the only political speech delivered at the meeting. It was one against Federation. He declared...
The outburst of cholera in Italy is severe, and the
The Spectatorpeople in the South appear to have gone mad. They are worse than the French. Instead of treating the disease as a disease, they treat it as a kind of invading force, and ehnt...
The grand difficulty of M. Ferry's position is this. If
The SpectatorChina .does not yield, he must send a large force to defend Tonquin, or a larger to threaten Pekin. He has not got such a force to send unless the Chamber votes war, and the...
The Chinese Governmenthas not been alarmed by the destruc- tion
The Spectatorof the Foochow forts, but has placarded Pekin with warlike announcements, and has directed General Tso, who conquered Kashgar, to invade Tonquin in three columns of 20,000 men...
The Dean of Wells is trying to raise by subscriptions
The Spectatorfrom all Churchmen a sum of £1,500 to put up a memorial window to Bishop Ken, once Bishop of the See, and n. man whose memory is still reverenced as that of a saintly poet and...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE NILE EXPEDITION. W HATEVER the merits or demerits of the Expedition to Khartoum, now finally decided on, one thing about it is certain. Nothing more original or more daring...
MR. GLADSTONE AND TrIE HOUSE OF LORDS.
The SpectatorI T is difficult, it is almost impossible, for anyone who reads his first speech at Edinburgh to believe that the Tory theory of Mr. Gladstone's personality can be quite...
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MR. GLADSTONE ON THE MINISTERIAL RECORD.
The SpectatorT HE Householders judge Governments broadly, and with greater consideration for special and isolated mistakes than the Ten-pounders used to show, and so judging, they will, we...
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M. FERRY'S REAL DIFFICULTY.
The SpectatorG ENERAL CAMPENON'S recent admissions, if they are correctly reported, show that the trying moment for M. Ferry is rapidly approaching. A very few days may severely test both...
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CHOLERA MT ITALY. I TALY at this moment presents a spectacle
The Spectatorwhich, in modern times at least, is altogether unexampled. We seem to be taken back to the Middle Ages, when the only method of deal- ing with a pest was to stamp it out more...
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THE UNPRECEDENTED PRICE OF WHEAT.
The SpectatorF OR the week ended on Saturday last, the official average price of wheat was 35s. id. per quarter. This is the lowest weekly average recorded since official returns have been...
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THE NEW EDUCATION BILL IN BELGIUM.
The SpectatorT HE Belgian Ministers would probably have preferred to leave the Education Law of their predecessors untouched. They represent the moderate section of the Catholic Party, and...
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MR. FAWCETT AND THE TELEPHONES.
The SpectatorI F no other Department had justified the existence of a Liberal Ministry, the Post Office at least would have amply redeemed its credit. The same official who has given us the...
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BOARDING-SCHOOLS AND DAY-SCHOOLS.
The SpectatorW E all talk education, but we confine the talk to the poor, and there is danger in the difficulties and dangers of the rich being ignored. It is often assumed that our...
THE MYSTERY OF MAIDA VALE.
The Spectator" I DO so enjoy my murders," says the nice old lady in Miss Eden's charming novelette, "The Semi-Detached House ;" and we suppose that sentence, which was uttered in simplicity...
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WOOL AUCTIONS.
The SpectatorT HE Wool Trade, though in magnitude it ranks below cotton, is far the more ancient and inieresting of the two in- dustries. Wool has been used for clothing from time imme-...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE HOUSE OF LORDS. [To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIII,—I thank you for your courtesy in publishing and corn- menting on my letter, and I venture to trouble you with one...
A MISCONCEPTION OF HISTORY.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR7] Sra.,—In an article in your issue of August 9th, entitled "A Misconception of History," you raise a very interesting historical question. I...
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SOME PERSONAL RECOLLECTIONS OF GEORGE SAND.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF TEE "SPECTATOR"] SIR,—The recent unveiling of George Sand's statue at La Chatre has set people thinking about her afresh. At no time since " Indiana " and "...
THE HATFIELD PICNIC.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPF.CTATOR."] SIR,—The number attending the Hatfield Conservative demon- stration was grossly over-estimated in the London morning newspapers. I was in...
ELEMENTARY EDUCATION IN IRELAND. [To THE EDITOR OF THE "
The SpectatorSPECTATOR.") SIR, — In an article on the Queen's Colleges in Ireland in your issue of the 9th inst., you refer to the Government as being "pledged as no Government ever was...
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POETRY.
The SpectatorIN THE BEGINNING. AUGUST, year unknown ; time, Six o'clock in the morning ; Sate in a tree an Ape ; irrational; eating an apple, Raw ; no cook as yet, no house, no shred of a...
RARE EPITAPHS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF TEE " SPECTATOR."] • • Sin,—The following epitaphs are Scotch, and may be interesting to many of your readers :— In a country churchyard near Paisley :—...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorWE are indebted to the late Prcfessor Green for the proposal to make Lotze's System of Philosophy accessible to English readers. Part of the translation had been executed by...
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COLONEL BRACKENBURY'S "FREDERICK THE G RE AT."*
The SpectatorCOLONEL BRACKENBURY'S Life of Frederick the Great is the first of a series of volumes "illustrative of the operations and the art of war, by writers of distinction in the...
A ROMANCE OF GLASGOW.*
The SpectatorTHIS is an excellent novel. There are characters in it which the creator of Baillie Nicol Jarvie might have " fathered " with- out feeling them any discredit to their kin, and...
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SIX CENTURIES OF WORK AND WAGES.
The SpectatorIN this work Professor Rogers has essayed to give a history of English labour from the forty-third year of Henry III., i.e., 1259, up to the present time. The subject is an...
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THE MAGAZINES.
The SpectatorTHERE is nothing very striking in the Magazines this month. There are, of course, many papers on the conflict between Lords and Commons, but we perceive little in them that has...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorThe English and Scottish Popular Ballads. Edited by Francis James Child. Parts I. and II. (Houghton and Co., Boston ; Henry Stevens, London.)—Mr. Child has been long known as a...
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The Sea-Fisherman. By J. C. Wileocks. Fourth Edition. (Long- mans
The Spectatorand Co.)—It is many years since we reviewed the first edition of this book. It then, we thought, took its place as the best work on the subject. Now that it appears "much...
On the Frontier. By Bret Harte. (Longmans.)—This little volume contains
The Spectatorthree of Bret Harte's characteristic tales, of which the third, "Left out on Lone Star Mountain," is the best. The first two are a little obscure as to their detail. The last is...
A Companion to the Creek Testament and the English Version.
The SpectatorBy Philip Schaff, D.D. (Macmillan.)—Dr. Schaff's volume contains an account, as complete as could be desired, of what may be called the circumstances of the New Testament and...
A Two Months' Cruise in the Mediterranean in the Steam
The SpectatorYacht 'Ceylon.' By Surgeon-General Munro. (Hurst and Blackett.)— This work reminds us of the letters which Mr. Bouncer wrote to his mother when he was at Oxford. Each letter...
History of Protestant Missions in India, 1706-1882. By the Rev.
The SpectatorM. A. Skerring. Revised by the Rev. E. Storrow. (Religions Tract Society).—This book was first published ten years ago. Ten years are a long period in the history of Indian...