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London has had a short Cab strike. The cabmasters were
The Spectatorirritated by an order, embodied in that unlucky Metropolitan Streets' Act, directing them to provide their cabs with lamps, and on Wednesday all cabs drove home at four o'clock....
There was a debate on Thursday in the Lords upon
The SpectatorAbyssinia, the tameness of which was a little broken by a speech from the Earl of Ellenborough. His Lordship, who has ordered invasions in his time, thought the war just enough,...
The cabmasters and cabmen accordingly called a meeting at seven
The Spectatorp.m. at Exeter Hall, which was attended by about 5,000 masters and drivers, so many., indeed, that a supplementary meeting was held in Trafalgar Square. The meeting was most...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorP ARLIAMENT has finished its work, and will not reassemble till the fith or 13th of February. It has been sitting seventeen days, during which it has voted two millions for the...
The event of the week has been a sudden and
The Spectatorto us unintel- ligible change in French politics. On Monday, M. de Moustier was reasonable, not to say conciliatory, in his language about Italy, and even on Wednesday said at...
Colonel Merewether announces, in a _letter which Sir Stafford Northcote
The Spectatorpublishes without a date, that lie has discovered a pass from the coast to the highlands of Abyssinia, passable-for cavalry and camels, and improvable by hard work. A second...
The new Bishop of Lichfield is to be Dr. Selwyn,
The Spectatornow Bishop of New Zealand. We have discussed the appointment, which, in spite of our cordial dislike to Dr. Selwyn's Church principles, we heartily approve, elsewhere. The new...
The propriety of pouring these insults upon Italy was affirmed
The Spectatorby a vote of the Chamber, rejecting M. Jules Favre's proposals by 237 to 17. The Napoleons announce that their permanent func- tion is that of gendarmes to the Vatican, and a...
The Publisher of the SPECTATOR will feel obliged by Advertisements
The Spectatorintended for the Current Number being sent in as early in the week as possible. - It is impossible to guarantee the insertion of Advertisements sent in after 12 o'clock on Friday.
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The return of Mr. Paget for South Leicestershire by a
The Spectatormajority of 33 was officially declared this day week, the issue having been doubtful to the very last moment. The Liberal victory shows, as we explained last week, an enormous...
The Farnham investigation is proceeding, but the only fact it
The Spectatornow brings out is the extreme feeling of some of the Guardians against "petting paupers." Several of them declared the tramp wards, which are shameful overcrowded hutches, as...
Lord Shaftesbury and other gentlemen write to the Times to
The Spectatorrecommend a peculiar form of charity. The poor children in Loudon are half starved, so starved that they can learn nothing in the Ragged Schools. It is found that one good...
Mr. Horace Greeley, editor of the New York Tribune, has
The Spectatorbeen offered the American Embassy in Vienna,—an appointment con- firmed by the Senate, but declined by Mr. Greeley himself, who Mr. Johnson nominated him to the post, in order...
because the Duke of Marlborough is about as fit to
The Spectatorbe a is right, we think, in objecting to the appointment of any one to the bead of our Educational institutions as an average Sunday- Vienna who is entirely unable to speak...
The necessary Bill was introduced by Lord Derby the same
The Spectatorevening with a very few remarks, but one curiously perfect repartee. Lord Romilly pleaded for free trade, the price to be painted up on each cab every six months, and said...
Calcutta was visited on November 1 by a cyclone, said
The Spectatorto have been worse in its effects than that of October, 1864. The storm began at 11 p.m. and raged till morning, sweeping from N. to S. and N.W. to S.E. with tremendous fury,...
The American Secretary for the Treasury reports that the revenue
The Spectatorfor the year ending June, 1869, will be 76,200,000/., and the expenditure 74,400,000/ s and that the public Debt has, in the year ending November 30, been reduced by...
Mr. Reuter has furnished the public, through the Atlantic Cable,
The Spectatorwith a brief report of President Johnson's Message to Congress, presented on 2nd December. We have commented at length elsewhere on the two first paragraphs, which announce that...
The new contract with the P. and 0. Company was
The Spectatoraccepted by the House of Commons on Friday se'nnight, though not without some murmurings. Mr. Ayrton objected to the shortness of the time allowed for tenders, ridiculed the...
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The most remarkable speech of the evening was the Earl
The Spectatorof Denbigh's, who, as a convert to Romanism, was, as usual, violent and rather silly. He "repudiated such a thing as nationality, and said he was nothing but a Catholic, an...
The Pope's friends got up a powerful meeting on his
The Spectatorbehalf irk St. James's Hall on Wednesday, at which Dr. Manning, the Catholic Archbishop of Westminster, presided, to protest against -" the outrage and sacrilege which had been...
There was last night the most terrible fire in London
The Spectatorthat has been seen there for some years, Her Majesty's Theatre took fire, and the fire illuminated the top tier of Somerset House—at least a mile off—as brilliantly as a...
The Times' correspondent at Vienna reports that a new creed
The Spectatoris spreading fast in Hungary, but does not very clearly describe its tenets. Its followers call themselves Nazarenes, appoint no priests, refuse to baptize their children, swear...
The "Church Conference" (Evangelical) met last week, 600 .strong, at
The SpectatorWillis's Rooms, and decided on raising 50,000/., "to enable the Council to assist parishioners who may apply to them ior advice and expenses of appeals to the Law Courts,...
The Archbishop of Canterbury has announced in a Greek letter
The Spectatorto the Eastern patriarchs, bishops, and others the sending of the recent Pan-Anglican Encyclical, a copy of which he encloses. He auks his correspondents to rejoice with him and...
A fall of fully per cent. has taken place in
The Spectatorthe value of National Securities this week, although the sale of Money Stook has not been extensive. On Monday, Consols were done at 93f, ex. div., for delivery, and 93a, for...
The Dean of Westminster is a man of so genial
The Spectatorand urbane a nature that he sometimes exposes himself to impertiuences the risk of which would not be even incurred by another. Not satisfied with the ample and most courteous...
Mrs. Thorne writes to us to say that the Apothecaries'
The SpectatorSociety have not yet absolutely decided to exclude women from their diploma. The Secretary has now told her that the subject would be "taken into consideration." It requires it.
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE PARLIAMENTARY COLLAPSE. T IIE Autumn Session is over. No one of any sense or know- ledge of the world looked to it to take great practical resolves on more than one subject...
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THE PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE.
The SpectatorP RESIDENT JOHNSON'S Message to Congress, the last but one that he will ever transmit, will give the finishing stroke to his reputation as a statesman. No man in our time ever...
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THE FRENCH CARDINALS ON THE ROMAN QUESTION.
The SpectatorA MONG the speeches uttered in all parts of the world upon- the Roman question, perhaps the most noteworthy are- those just delivered in the Senate of France by two Cardinals...
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THE NEW BISHOP OF LIOHFIELD. T HE Government have made an
The Spectatorexcellent choice for the Bishopric of Lichfield,—and we at least shall not be accused of partiality in saying so; for we hold that the new Bishop has done as much political...
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THE CABMEN AND THE GOVERNMENT. T HE little fight between the
The SpectatorCabmen of London and Mr. Hardy, which terminated so pleasantly on Wednesday, cannot be fairly described as a contest between Her Majesty's Government and a section of her...
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Gnus AND WIVES. T WO publications of merit, one a quarterly
The Spectatorreview, the other a monthly magazine of the elder and graver sort, attempt this week to reopen a discussion which three years ago almost occupied the Recess. In the North...
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" REPRESENTATIVE " CATS.
The SpectatorT HE special friends of the Cat have been somewhat outraged in feeling by the remarks which we made on the qualities accounting for her imperfect civilization in our last...
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THE FREE CHRISTIAN UNION.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. " ] Sur,—The gentlemen who have recently met to institute a Union under the above title, seem to me to strangely misapprehend the nature of...
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THE IRISH LAND QUESTION.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] have read Mr. Bright's letter in your number of last Saturday, and beg leave to apologize to him for having said that did not think he...
CATS AND CIVILIZATION.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sie,—Having always enjoyed your quaint and instructive articles on the animal creation, it was with great astonishment that I read your paper...
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A Roirs.r. Coatausstosi and. an Act of Parliament, both having
The Spectatormarkable power of suggesting action. The group of Arabs on in view " the improvement of the stream, bed, and banks of the the right hand are positively alive. A masterly drawing...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorFATHER LACORD AIRE.* Tnrs great reviver of the Dominican Order in the most modern nation of modern times,—the nation to whom "the new era" confessedly owes its birth and its...
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A BOOK ABOUT DOIIINIES.* Tins is a manly, earnest book.
The SpectatorThe author describes in a series of essays the life and work of a schoolmaster, and as he has lived that life and done that work from deliberate choice, his story is worth...
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MR. BISSET'S HISTORY OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF ENGLAND.*
The SpectatorTHE second volume, now published, completes the History of the Commonwealth of England by Mr. Bisset, of which the first volume was published three years ago. We do not propose...
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FOUR MAGAZINES.
The SpectatorThu Corshill is full this month of the very best padding, papers worthy the careful perusal of men who know something. Two among them, at least, are absolutely new. One contains...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorThe Englishman in India. By Charles Raikes. (Longmans.)— When we opened this book we expected to light on a description of an Englishman's life in India. The contents are in...
We have received from Mr. Laurent de Lara a set
The Spectatorof Venetian Minia- ture Vignette Outlines for Illuminating. The centre of each contains ft small picture, very well executed, and the space around is to be filled up according...
German for the English. First Reading - Book. By A. Sonnenscheirt and
The SpectatorJ. S. Stallybrass. Second Edition. (D. Nutt.)—In order to con- quer the feeling of strangeness which meets a learner on the threshold of a new language, this excellent little...
The Psalter and Canticles Pointed for Chanting. By the Rev.
The SpectatorHenry Pullen. (Macmillan.)—There are considerable novelties in the arrange- ment of bars and the pointing of this psalter, but without deciding the question, we think Mr. Pullen...
Poems. By Bramantip Camenes. (A. W. Bennett.)—Not actually pad, but
The Spectatora very close imitation of bad verse, and puzzling from this very closeness. It is often a toss-up whether the lines have a meaning or not, whether that meaning is expressed or...
The Boys of Beechwood, by Mrs. Eiloart (Routledge); Archie Blake,
The Spectatora Seaside Story, by Mrs. Eiloart (Routledge).—These are two very plea- sant stories for boys, by the author of a novel which we lately had occasion to commend. The boys of...
The Fortunes of Fairstone. By It. W. Baddeloy. Three vols.
The Spectator(Saunders and Otley.)—To speak candidly, this novel is great rubbish, but it has the merit of being fairly skimmable, and can be gone through without difficulty in little more...
The Wood Cart, and other Tales of the South of
The SpectatorFrance. By F. M. P. (J. and C. Mozley.)—These are short tales, which will be found pleasant, by children and instructive by their parents. The Wood Cart itself is highly to be...
Library Edition of the Works of W. Al. Thackeray. Vanity
The SpectatorFair. VoL L (Smith and Elder.)—We must content ourselves hero with chronicling the appearance of the first volume of Messrs Smith and Elder's "Library Edition" of Thackeray....
Sermons by the late Rev. W. H. Drummond D.D., with
The SpectatorMemoir. By the Rev. J. Scott Porter. (E. T. Whitfield.)—We have no doubt that these sermons and this memoir will be welcome to the friends and flock of the departed preacher....
Lyra Silunan. By W. Downing Evans. (Simpkin, Marshall, and Co.)
The Spectator—These are fair verses. The idea at the end of the copy called "A Lunar Eclipse" is good. We can say no more. We might have said loss. Sermons Preached in Liverpool. By Andrew...
Discourses on Subjects relating to Christian Faith and Life. By
The SpectatorThomas Madge. (Whitfield and Green.)—We learn from this volume that Mr.. Madge was formerly Minister of Essex Street Chapel, and that these sermons are published at the request...
Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress, with coloured illustrations (F. Warne, and Co.);
The SpectatorThe Travels of Baron Munchausen, with five woodcuts by George Cruikshank. (Tegg.)—This edition of Bunyan is small and, handy, but there is not much to be said of the...
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Night: a Poem. By George Giillillan. (Jackson, Walford, and Hodder.)—It
The Spectatoris cruel of Mr. Gilfillan not to have published this poem during the lifetime of Professor Aytoun. Another scene might then have been added to the spasmodic tragedy of Firmilian...
Edwin's Fairing. By the Rev. E. Monro. (Strahan.)—A nice and
The Spectatorgood little story, but too obviously nice and good to be recommended to any but young children. To them we recommend it heartily.
Cassell's Penny Readings. Edited by Tom Hood. (Cassell, Peter, and
The SpectatorMoron's Standard Penny Readings. Vol IL (Moxon.) — The first of these books is, apparently, a private pennyworth, for the illus- trations can be of little use in a public room...
The Sacraments and Sacramental Ordinances of the Church. By the
The SpectatorRev. John Henry Blunt. (Rivingtons.)—" A Sketch-Map of Sacra- mental Theology is the name given to this book by its author. It is not surprising that he should express the...
Six Essays on Commons Preservation. (Low, Son, and Marston.)— 'When
The SpectatorEarl Spencer proposed to improve Wimbledon Common by selling part of it and enclosing the rest, a committee of the commoners and residents of Wimbledon was formed to watch over...