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BOOKS.
The SpectatorTHE SIGHTS OF LONDON IN 1771.* AMONG collectors of old books, some, we know, confine their desires to what may be called ." little books," chiefly, though not all, children's...
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FANNY BURNEY.*
The SpectatorIT is to the personality of Fanny Burney, as reflected in the Diary and Letters, that we in this generation turn our eyes, rather than to her novels. Evelina and Cecilia will...
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MR. TOM HUGHES'S BERKSHIRE AND WILTSHIRE TALES.* NEITHER, of these
The Spectatortales is new, though The Ashen Faggot has appeared only in a magazine, and never been published before in any other form ; while The Scouring of the White Horse, with the late...
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THE PARADISE OF BIRDS.*
The SpectatorA HAPPIER and more graceful flight of fancy has seldom been given to the world than Mr. Courthope's Paradise of Birds. We reviewed it at length on its first appearance, nearly...
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GENERAL DRAYSON'S NEW TALE.*
The SpectatorThe Diamond-Hunters looks like what may be called a "publisher's title." Very possibly it may have been chosen by the author ; but it must have been for a publisher's reasons,...
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The Old, Old Fairy - Tales. Collected and edited by Mrs. Valen-
The Spectatortine. (F. Warne and Co.)—Here are forty of the fairy-tales that have delighted many generations of children. The names of Madame d'Aulnoy, Charles Perrault, and the Princess de...
Golden Silence. By Emma Marshall. (Nisbet.)—This is a really good
The Spectatorstory of a simple kind, quite up to the level of the author of " Mrs. Matchett's Mistake," and not too long. It chronicles the material, and still more the moral, ups and downs...
The Eagle Cliff. By R. M. Ballantyne. (Partridge.)—This is one
The Spectatorof the pleasantest, best constructed, most humorous, and most im- probable stories that Mr. Ballantyne has written. It is a positive triumph in the way of plot-invention for him...
BETWIXT THE FORELANDS.*
The SpectatorIT was a happy thought of Mr. Clark Russell's to give us a volume of pleasant talk about the stretch of coast which lies between the Forelands. None, not even that which reaches...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorGIFT-BOOKS. For Honour's Sake. By Jennie Chappell. (Partridge.)—This is an easy-flowing story which runs on familiar lines. In it a marriage takes place which is a mistake, and...
Eena Romney. By Myra Felton. (Griffith, Farran, Okeden, and Welsh.)—This
The Spectatorbook differs from most works of the class to which it belongs—the class of Evangelical fiction—in that the scene is laid not in England, but in New South Wales, whither Mr....
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The Day of Days Annual (Home Words Office) is the
The Spectatoryearly issue of a " Magazine for Sunday Reading," edited by the Rev. Charles Bullock. Mrs. Marshall contributes a serial story, "The Line of Beauty ;" there are sketches of "...
Dr. Arnold of Rugby. By Rose E. Selfe. (Cassell and
The SpectatorCo.)— This little volume belongs to a series entitled " The World's Workers." Miss Selfe has caught the main points in Dr. Arnold's character and life, as they have been...
The Woman's World, 1889. Edited by Oscar Wilde. (Cassell and
The SpectatorCo.)—A very handsome volume is this, well printed, well illustrated, and with a varied abundance of reading. Fashions of dress, past and present, naturally occupy a considerable...
Granny's Story - Box. Illustrated by Marie Seymour Lucas. (Griffith, Farran, and
The SpectatorCo.)—The stories have a certain novelty about them, which sometimes pleases, though for the most part one is inclined to say, in literature of this kind, that the old is better....
The Modern Seven Wonders of the World. By Charles Kent.
The Spectator(Routledge and Sons.)—The " wonders " are of the material kind, but they are inventions rather than huge constructions, such as were the ancient " seven " of which we have all...
We have received the third volume of the " Jubilee
The SpectatorEdition " of Cassell's History of England (Cassell and Co.), the volume including the period " from the Great Rebellion to the Fall of Marlborough." We need not recommend to our...
The Boy's Own Poetry - Book. Edited by E. Davenport. (Griffith, Farran,
The Spectatorand Co.)—The editor has collected here between two and three hundred poetical extracts of various kinds, best to be seen from an enumeration of the classes into which they are...
The Rectory Children. By Mrs. Molesworth. Illustrated by Walter Crane.
The Spectator(Macmillan and Co.)—Mrs. Moles worth, content as usual to work on a small scale, and with very modest colours, does not fail to produce an excellent effect. In The Rectory...
Messrs. Routledge publish a book of very spirited pictures, The
The SpectatorBoy's Book of British Battles, by Richard Simpkin. These begin with Blenheim in 1701, and end with Tel-el-Kebir in 1882, a very complete affair, no doubt, in its way, but hardly...
Going on Pilgrimage. By Lucy Taylor. (T. Nelson and Sons.)—
The SpectatorThis little book is described as a " Companion to ' The Pilgrim's Progress' for Young Pilgrims." A brief introduction tells us who Bunyan was, what was his early life, and how...
The Young Marooners. By F. R. Goulding. With a Preface
The Spectatorby Joel Chandler Harris. (Routledge and Sons.)—It is about thirty- seven years since Dr. Goulding published this story. It had an immediate success in America (Dr. Goulding was...
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Walter Crane's Painting - Book (Routledge and Sons), supplies the young aspirant
The Spectatorafter the art of colouring with twelve coloured plates, occupying a page each, and faced by an outline left plain, which he is to colour in imitation of the original. Better...
Netley Abbey. Written by Thomas Ingoldsby. Pictures by Ernest M.
The SpectatorJessop. (Eyre and Spottiswoode.)—There is some- thing, we cannot but think, in the Ingoldsby humour that does not quite suit the present day. Its quality of fun is undoubted,...
Our Sunday Book of Reading and Pictures. By Thomas Archer.
The Spectator(Griffith, Farran, and Co.)—Mr. Archer has made his extracts, which are more than a hundred and twenty in number, from a wide range of books, and with considerable judgment....
The Child of the Caravan. By E. M. Green. Illustrated
The Spectatorby Edith Scannell. (Griffith, Farran, and Co.)—This is a very pathetic, almost too pathetic story. There are not many, we fancy, who will read it from beginning to end dry-eyed....
White Lilac. By Amy Walton. (Blackie and Son.)—This is a
The Spectatorvery simple story, leading up to no more dramatic denouement than little Lilac White's choice whether or no she shall stop at Orchard's farm ; but, for all its simplicity, it...
The Cruise of the Wasp.' By Henry Frith. (Routledge and
The SpectatorSons.) —This a story of the usual kind, even bringing in the accustomed shark, but it is told with more than usual vigour. The hero is a young lad who gets a Midshipman's berth...
Three Boys. By G. Manville Fenn. (Griffith, Farran, and Co.)
The Spectator—This story is a little too extravagant in its details, we might almost say, farcical, to give Mr. Fenn's great power as a writer of tales a very favourable opportunity of...
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Songs of the Spindle and Legends of the Loom. Selected
The Spectatorand arranged by H. H. Warner. (N. J. Powell and Co.)—This volume comes in plain and homely guise among the gorgeously coloured and ornamented throng that competes for popular...
Messrs. Cassell and Co.'s Saturday Journal makes up into an
The Spectatorannual volume of goodly size, and full of entertaining reading. It is very strong in fiction. We have Miss Florence Warden's " St. Cuthbert's Tower," which has already been...
The Appeal to the Serpent ; or, Life in an
The SpectatorAncient Buddhist City. By the Rev. Samuel Langdon. (Religious Tract Society).—To take the reader back to " Ceylon in the Fourth Century A.D." (surely this is not a correct use...
Banning and Blessing. By the Author of " The Atelier
The Spectatordu Lye." (National Society.)—This tale centres in the doings of Lois Smerdon, a " black " witch, who had the luck of living at a time when witches were no longer burnt or...
The `Blue Dragon.' By Frances Mary Peard. (National Society.) —This
The Spectatoris a tale of the latest years of the fifteenth century. As a tale, indeed, it loses something from the variety of interests which the author has introduced. She has evidently...
Yours and Mine. By Anna B. Warner. (Nisbet and Co.)—A
The Spectatorpleasant little story this, which has for its moral and purpose the necessary truth, which it is yet one of the very hardest things to learn, which the Christian Church began by...
Such matters as signalling, traffic, permanent-way, and laws relating to
The Spectatorthe liability of Companies, are common to most rail- ways, but the geneial tenor of the work reflects the working of Mr. Findlay's own line ; while the description of engines,...
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The Crime of Keziah Keene. By Mrs. Vere Campbell. (Ward
The Spectatorand Downey.)—The authoress, or some character who seems to speak for her, asks about the heroine, when—to the great relief, we should think, of all readers—she is satisfactorily...
Selections from Wordsworth. By William Knight, and other Members of
The Spectatorthe Wordsworth Society. With Preface and Notes. (Kegan Paul.)—We are glad that this interesting volume, which contains so much of Wordsworth's finest work—that is to say, of the...
An "I.D.B." in South Africa. By Louise Vescelius-Sheldon. (Trubner and
The SpectatorCo.)—If we are to believe the writer, a somewhat An "I.D.B." in South Africa. By Louise Vescelius-Sheldon. (Trubner and Co.)—If we are to believe the writer, a somewhat low...
A Text - Book of Inorganic Chemistry. By Ira Remsen. (Macmillan.)—This volume,
The Spectatoron the whole, has much resemblance to Professor Remsen's smaller text-books. It is larger indeed, and it is fuller in treatment ; but then, we are not sure that the value of the...
A Year with the Birds. By W. Warde Fowler. Third
The Spectatoredition, enlarged. (Macmillan and Co.)—It is unnecessary to say much in favour of this delightful book, which was reviewed in our columns on its first appearance about three...
SERMONS.—The Light that Lighteth Every Man. Sermons by Alexander Russell,
The SpectatorB.D. With an Introduction by the Very Rev. the Dean of Wells. (Macmillan.)—Dean Russell (he was Dean of Adelaide for seventeen years, 1869-1886) was by birth and training a...
Paradoxes of a Philistine. By William S. Walsh. (Lippincott and
The SpectatorCo., Philadelphia, U.S.A.)—The writer justifies, in a way, his self-taken title. But neither is he properly a Philistine, nor does he write paradoxes. Leaving the word itself as...
The House of the Woifings. By William Morris. (Reeves and
The SpectatorTurner.)—There can be no doubt that, whatever extravagancies exist in The House of the Wotfings, Mr. William Morris has caught in a marvellous manner the martial stir and the...
Express Trains, English and Foreign. By E. Foxwell and T.
The SpectatorC. Farrer. (Smith, Elder, and Co.)—We get in this volume details as to all the express trains in England, the Continent, and America. It is, indeed, very comprehensive, with...
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General Geography. By H. R. Mill. (Macmillan.)—This digest of general
The Spectatorgeography should fulfil its purpose well enough, for the writer has combined with his geographical text various historical, political, mercantile, industrial, meteorological,...
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LONDON: Printed by Joan Clitreitir., of No. 1 Wellington Street,
The Spectatorin the Precinct of the Savoy, Strand, in the County of Middlesex, at 18 Exeter Street, Strand ; and Published by him at the " SPICTATOE" Office, No. 1 Wellington Street, Strand,...
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Mr. Gladstone spoke at Manchester on Monday and Tues- day.
The SpectatorHe thought the conduct of the Government required explanation as to Crete and Armenia. He was not prepared to condemn it, but he did hope that there would be no attempt to keep...
On Tuesday, at the Manchester Conference, Sir William Harcourt contrived
The Spectatorto get in a little speech before his leader spoke. It was devoted to showing how little the Conservatives and Liberal Unionists could agree upon. They could not agree on a name,...
Ste *tytetator
The SpectatorFOE THE No. 3,206.] WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1889. 1: aLGIBTIME D AS • r Paws M. NEWSPAPER. l Br POST, Old.
It is understood that the Cretan Amnesty will contain some
The Spectatorremarkable features. A large number of reforms will be promised, such as impartial tribunals, economy in expendi- ture, improvements in the ports, naval schools, industrial...
France is fast relapsing into a policy of Protection. A
The Spectatornew and large group, already including two hundred and fifty Deputies, has been organised within the Chamber to defend the interests of agriculture and of rural electors...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT ' first Message of President Harrison to Congress was sent in on Tuesday, the 3rd inst., and is altogether in rose- 'colour. The Union has no serious quarrel on hand with any...
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Mr. Balfour spoke at Partick, in Lanarkshire, on Mon- day;
The Spectatorat Glasgow on Tuesday ; at a great banquet in the Waverley Market, Edinburgh, on Wednesday, where the tables were laid for 2,700 persons,—and a very brilliant speech it was,...
The Sultan, says the Birmingham Post, is about to have
The Spectatorhis treasure valued, and has asked for the services of an expert from London. He cannot raise money sufficient for the ex- penditure of the Palace, and is inclined to utilise...
In Mr. Gladstone's second speech, the speech of Tuesday, he
The Spectatorreturned to the attack on the Liberal Unionists with all his old ardour, accusing them of having prevented the Tories from embracing Home-rule,—it would indeed be a meritorious...
In his fourth speech, to the great concourse of ten
The Spectatorthousand persons packed into Waverley Market on Thursday, Mr. Balfour set himself to reply to Mr. Gladstone, but did not find very much to reply to, as he declined to go again...
In the speech at Glasgow, Mr. Balfour echoed Sir William
The SpectatorThomson's reproach to English politicians, that they are too impatient in looking for the fruits of a wise and firm policy in Ireland. We are reaping some of the fruits of that...
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The members of the London School Board hardly appre- ciate
The Spectatorthe risk they will run at the next election. If they do not insist more earnestly upon a searching investigation into the building of their school-houses, they will all be...
South London is threatened with a plague of darkness. The
The Spectatorgas-stokers employed by the South Metropolitan Gas Company recently asked for better terms, and the Directors, besides reducing their shift of work to eight hours, offered them...
H. Stanley, Emin Pasha, and the entire cavalcade accom- panying
The Spectatorthem, have arrived in safety at Bagamoyo, on the coast. They were escorted from Mpwapwa by German soldiers, and express strongly their sense of the kindness and helpful- ness of...
Mr. C. D. Holmes, of Fargo, North Dakota, in a
The Spectatorletter to the Times denying that the crops have failed in that State, tells a story illustrative of the extraordinary rate at which wild animals are perishing on the North...
No further information of any importance has been received from
The SpectatorBrazil, where the embargo evidently laid by the Pro- visional Government upon messages by the cable has not yet been removed. There is an impression in Lisbon that a...
The elevation of the Lord Chief Justice of Ireland, Sir
The SpectatorMichael Morris, to be Lord of Appeal in Ordinary, in the place of Lord Fitzgerald, will secure for London the frequent presence of one of the ablest and the most humorous of the...
The Conferences of the Liberal Associations at Glasgow and Manchester
The Spectatorhave set forth a number of very wild claims, to which no one who knows anything of politics attaches the smallest importance. Even the more serious principles adopted, such as...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorMR. GLADSTONE'S POLITICAL METHODS. T HE most curious feature in Mr. Gladstone's speeches at Manchester is the light they throw on the forma- tion of his political confession. -...
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MR. BALF01TR, ON NATIONALITY.
The SpectatorM R. BALFOUR'S Edinburgh speech on the relation of nationality to Home-rule was one of the most striking speeches of the Long Vacation. It was delivered to a brilliant audience...
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THE ACQUITTAL OF MOUSSA BEY.
The SpectatorW E hardly understand our Conservative friends upon this trial of Moussa Bey ; they seem to miss the important points so completely. They write as if all who call attention to...
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THE TITHE QUESTION. T HE cirenlar on the present position of
The Spectatorthe Tithe Question issued by a committee of which Lord Selborne is the chairman, is unquestionably right in in- sisting upon the importance of passing without delay a measure...
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THE GRAND ADVANTAGE OF THE UNITED STATES.
The SpectatorT HE deduction which sensible people will draw from President Harrison's Message of Tuesday is, that it is very pleasant for any country to be geographically situated like the...
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LORD SALISBURY ON PEASANTS.
The SpectatorT ORD SALISBURY, in one of his bright speeches of last week, put a question to the world at large to which no one has as yet given a reply. He was, he said, entirely favourable...
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UNREAL SINS.
The SpectatorT HE Bishop of Peterborough defends himself very success- fully in the Fortnightly Review from the attacks of those foolish and conventional persons who think it very shocking...
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"PROVERBIAL PHILOSOPHY."
The SpectatorT HE secret of Mr. Tupper's success in selling his only very successful work was, we believe, only this,—that the less educated middle class is far less thoughtful than it...
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CORRESPONDEN CE.
The Spectatorhave just newly stepped across the threshold of life. I re- member long ago—how long ago !—in those days which were so foolish, and are so pretty to look back upon with that...
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GERMANY AND JAPAN.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] Six, — In your article in the Spectator of November 30th, you refer to the German Government as if it had taken the initiative in isolated...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorMR. GLADSTONE AND BY-ELECTIONS. [TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.'') Sin, — May I call your attention to Mr. Gladstone's article in the last Nineteenth Century, to show in...
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THE LATE MR. WALKER.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR "] you allow me to say a word with reference to my brother, Mr. Walker, whose name forms the text for your article of November 30th on " The...
A PEOPLE'S GALLERY IN CAMBERWELL.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. " ] SIR, — The constantly growing interest which is manifest on all hands in every endeavour to spread the knowledge and love of Art among the...
THE DRIFT OF "HAMLET."
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] " Thus conscience does make cowards of us all; And thus the native hue of resolution Is sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thought."...
A VILLAGE LIBRARY.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] SIR, — Mr. F. D. Perrott's letter in your issue of November 30th, in which he asks if your readers have any books suitable for a village...
.[TO THE EDITOR Or THE "SPECTATOR. " ] SIR, — Will you allow me
The Spectatorto suggest to your correspondent that the true way to provide a village library is to subscribe to the Popular Book Club, Acre Square, Park Road, Clapham, S.W. ? As far as my...
AMERICAN BROOK CHAR IN ENGLAND.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—It may not be generally known that the American brook char, Salvelinus fontinalis, yields its ova some time previous to our own trout...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorMR. JOHN MORLEY'S " WALPOLE."* A VINDICATION, or shall we say a sympathetic presentment, of Sir Robert Walpole from the skilful pen of Mr. John Morley, is as refreshing as a...
ART.
The SpectatorSOCIETY OF PAINTERS IN WATER-COLOURS. IT can fairly be said of the present exhibition that it is a representative one, including as it does examples of all styles, from the...
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SOME VOLUMES OF SERMONS.* CANON HOLLAND divides the twelve sermons
The Spectatorof his volume into three parts, respectively bearing the titles of " Concerning the Resurrection," " Concerning the Church," " Concerning Human Nature." We have seen nothing...
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THE LATE MR. HENRY RICHARD.* WORTHY man as he was,
The Spectatorthe late Mr. Henry Richard did nothing to call for two biographies,—indeed, for anything of permanent and enduring influence that he accomplished, he might have been left...
ZOLA'S EARLIEST WORK.* IF ever we consider Zola's influence or
The Spectatorrank as a writer, it can only be with respect to such of his works as have made him justly famous, and given worthy results of his convictions con- cerning truth in literature....
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THE MAGAZINES.
The SpectatorSin W. W. HUNTER concludes " The Old Missionary " in this . month's Contemporary Review. It is by far the best story of the kind ever told, and indicates in its author the...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorAustralia, America, Africa, Asia, and the Aryan peoples. In these first six chapters we get a concise and critical summary of the general views as to definition of kinship....
Robert Brett (of Stoke Newington) : his Life and Work.
The SpectatorBy T. W. Belcher, D.D., D.M. (Griffith and Farran.)—Mr. Brett, a medical man by profession, is chiefly known as the unflinching advocate of High Church ritual at a time when...
Blooms and Brambles : a Book of Verses. By Edgar
The SpectatorFawcett. (Elliot Stock.)—The critic whose lot it has been to read much of the verse produced by our minor poets will be struck by the great facility displayed in versification,...
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An Exploration of Dartmoor and its Antiquities. By John Ll.
The SpectatorEngland. Mr. Page divides his book into four quarters, after the points of the compass, probably as convenient a method as could have been followed, after giving a preliminary...
H. M. Stanley, the African Explorer. By Arthur Montefiore. (S.
The SpectatorW. Partridge.)—H. M. Stanley is an Englishman, or, to speak more accurately, a Welshman (his real name is John Reliant), born at Denbigh, and educated in the workhouse school of...
Lady Missionaries in Foreign Lands. By Mrs. E. R. Pitman.
The Spectator(S. W. Partridge.)—Why " lady " missionaries P We do not say " gentlemen" missionaries. Apart from this objection to an affected title, we have nothing to say against Mrs....
Media. By Zenaide A. Ragozin. (T. Fisher Ifnwin, London ;
The SpectatorG. P. Putnam's Sons, New York.)—We do not mean to undervalue this volume (one of the " Story of the Nation " series) when we say that its subject proper does not occupy a very...
Glimpses of Animal Life. By William Jones, F.S.A. (Elliot Stock.)—Any
The Spectatorreader who begins the first chapter of this book, entitled "Animal Playfulness," will certainly finish it, and having finished it, will certainly go on to those that follow....
We have received another volume of The Biblical Illustrator, by
The Spectatorthe Rev. Joseph S. Exell, M.A. (J. Nisbet and Co.) It deals with the Gospel of St. Luke, and, as it contains between seven and eight hundred pages very closely printed (the...
The Parliamentary History of Cornwall. By W. P. Courtney. (Printed
The Spectatorfor private circulation.)—Mr. Courtney tells the story of the representation of Cornwall, of its County Members, and of the Burgesses who sat for its boroughs, down to the year...
Cut by the Mess. By Arthur Keyser. (Chatto and Windus.)—
The SpectatorThe plot of this story is very simple. One of two messmates- they belong to a man-of-war—" shows the white-feather " in a row in which they foolishly involve themselves, and the...
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Fulcher's Pocket - Book. (H. Pratt, Sudbury.)—We have received this Pocket-Book for
The Spectator1890, which, as usual, contains engravings— one of Rushmere Bridge, near Southwold, is very good—poetry, enigmas, charades, &c., besides the regular diaries. The local poetry,...
A Complete Life of Homer. By F. A. White, B.A.
The Spectator(Bell and Sons.)—Is this book seriously meant or not ? Is it an elaborate effort to pay the destructive critics in their own coin ? The "higher criticism," for instance, is...
The Complexion : How to Preserve and Improve It. By
The SpectatorW. H. I. Brown, M.D., and A. Campbell, M.D. (H. Renshaw.)—It must not be supposed that these doctors of medicine wholly occupy themselves with "complexion," properly so called....