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INDEX.
The SpectatorFROM JANUARY 7th TO JUNE 24th, 1899, INCLUSIVE. A DULATION and Detraction .. Advance, Australia! Africa, South, the Fruit of .. — — the Crisis in — — Treason and Loyalty in .....
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A remarkable conversation between Prince Bismarck and Herr Lothar Bucher
The Spectatoron the future of Austria has been published this week. The Prince evidently thought that the rise of the Slav population, whom be despised and disliked, would be fatal to...
Many Eoglishmen believe us to be too pessimist in antici-
The Spectatorpating a revo'ution in France. We would ask them if they ever knew even Frenchmen indulge in their present violence of language unless a revolution was at hand. It is useless...
Lord Cromer reached Omdarman during the week, and on Thursday
The Spectatorheld a reception of a large number of Soudanese Sheiks and notables. He told them that in the future they would be governed by the Queen of England and the Khedive of Egypt. The...
The Dreyfus affair has this week produced a new League
The Spectatorcalled the League of the French Fatherland. It appears that some chiefs among the Anti-Dreyfueards, with M. Brnnetiere, of the Revue des Deux Mendes, as their adviser, are...
The Vienna correspondent of the Standard, who is well informed,
The Spectatordeclares positively that the Hungarian crisis is over. The Opposition, alarmed, as we believe, by a passionate movement among the electors, who are paying their taxes in advance...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorO N Thursday the War Office received information that the last remnant of the Dervish force, under Ahmed Fedil, had, while crossing the Nile at the cataracts north of Rosaires,...
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The Ti»tes of Monday publishes a letter from "a well-
The Spectatorinformed correspondent" in Mauritius which states that we have by no means heard the last of Madagascar. The French, he says, have sent out so great an army of officials that...
The death of the Duke of Northumberland on Monday at
The Spectatorthe age of eighty-eight is noteworthy because he stood in a way at the very head of the aristocracy. He was head of a house which has been great ever since the Conluest; he had...
The list of New Year Honours is not remarkable. Lord
The SpectatorCromer is made a Viscount, but should more appropriately have been made an Earl, and Sir Philip Carrie, Sir Joseph Russell Bailey, Sir Henry Hawkins, and Mr. Garden are made...
The Malin of Monday publishes a letter from Rear- Admiral
The SpectatorReveillere which is of no small interest for the French sailor. He declares that the possession of the "French shore" on the coast of Newfoundland is "of no kind of value for...
Lord Elgin, the retiring Viceroy of India, delivered his farewell
The Spectatorspeech on Monday, January 2nd, to the Bengal Chamber of Commerce. It was, of course, a review of his administration, and though deprived of some of its interest by excessive...
Lord Elgin had little to say upon external relations, indeed
The Spectatorhe declined to discuss them for fear of embarrassing his suc- cessor, but he admitted that the tribes on the North-West border were a source of constant anxiety. We are "hyper-...
The Americans are sure to subdue the Philippines, for the
The SpectatorSpaniards did, and they are far stronger than the Spaniards. Moreover, the Tugela, who alone signify, are just civilised enough to understand the good treatment and gradual...
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The very difficult question of the rating of tithe-rent charge
The Spectatorwas raised by a deputation of clergymen who waited upon the Archbishop of Canterbury on Monday last. They drew his attention to the extreme distress often caused by the pressure...
The Revenue returns for the third quarter of the year
The Spectatorare ex- tremely satisfactory. They show that the total receipts into the Treasury in the three months just ended have been 228.632,334, which is an increase of 2864,000 over the...
Considerable excitement has been caused by an article in the
The SpectatorContemporary Review, in which Mr. E. N. Bennett accuses Lord Kitchener's army of gross cruelty after Omdurman. Substantially the charge amounts to this, that the Soudanese and...
The Cobden Club has taken a new, but what we
The Spectatorcannot regard as a wise, departure. It has issued a manifesto in favour of the open door." The manifesto urges that though we should recognise the right of foreign Powera to...
If Sir William Harcourt bad only couched his letter on
The Spectatorthe confessional, published in Thursday's Times, in lean violent language, it might have done far more good than we fear it now will. We feel quite as strongly as he can against...
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•
The SpectatorTOPICS OF THE DAY LORD CHARLES BERESFORD AND OUR CHINESE POLICY. T ORD CHARLES BERESFORD has, we believe, done a good service to his country by his speech at Hong-kong. He has...
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THE NEW BONAPARTIST MANIFESTO.
The SpectatorA N enemy to the French Republic hitherto disregarded has appeared this week in a new and formidable light. It has been the custom to assert that Prince Victor Bonaparte, though...
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SIR WILLIAM HARCOURT AND HIS PARTY. T HREE things seem clear
The Spectatorfrom Sir William Harcourt's last letter on the leadership question. He is not going to come back as leader, he is not going to retire from politics, and he is going to sit at...
THE TENURE OF THE INDIAN VICEROYALTY.
The SpectatorI T is very hard to get a hearing for a reform which would, we believe, be of great advantage to India,— viz., an extension of the term for which the Viceroyalty is held. The...
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THE END OF THE HUNGARIAN CRISIS.
The SpectatorA USTRIA is not exactly "a milk-white hind," but certainly she seems " fated not to die." The Standard of Thursday contained a statement which to those who think, as we do, that...
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THE "LIGUE DES CONTRIBUABLES."
The Spectator"p EACE, Retrenchment, and Reform." The old Liberal cry has fallen upon evil days. Reform, in the political sense of the word, is won. No armed bands from Birmingham are ever...
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THE LATE DUKE OF NORTHUMBERLAND. T HE late Duke of Northumberland
The Spectatorwas one of those men, of whom there are now not so very many, whose career enables one to decide whether or no the aristocratic idea is still powerful in England. He was not a...
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THE CHARM OF WINTER SCENERY.
The SpectatorT HE present writer, when praising the charms of the country and the superiority of a green field to Fleet Street, is sometimes told by his friends that such talk is well enough...
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WILD ENGLAND OVERSEAS.
The SpectatorT HE House of Representatives of the United States have passed a Bill for granting powers to the Commission of Fish and Fisheries to stock the woods and forests with game and...
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CORRESPONDENCE.
The SpectatorCATCHING COLD. [To ram EDITOR OD TER " SPECTITOR.1 SD:a—Many people may be surprised to hear that even in this world there are places where it is impossible to catch a cold,...
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THE VATICAN AND THE JESUITS.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR 07 THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—At the risk of "saying ditto to Mr. Burke," I should be glad to have space in the columns of the Spectator to con- firm the views...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE "BLACK" POPE AND THE " WHITE " POPE. [To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR."] Stn,—May I point out that in your interesting article on "The ' Black' Pope and the ` White' Pope,"...
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THE PROBLEM OF OLD-AGE PENSIONS.
The SpectatorLTO THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR."' have read your article under this heading in the Spectator of December 31st with interest, and believe that your solution of this...
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[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—I would venture to
The Spectatorsuggest what strikes me as being an improvement on your very attractive suggestion of last week, as regards a scheme of old-age pensions, which is, that the Government should...
THE ALLEGED WANT OF PITY IN CHILDREN. [To THE EDITOR
The SpectatorOF THE " SPECTATOR."] SIR, —If Mr. Tollemache has no better evidence to give con- cerning the alleged "inconsiderate pitilessness of children" than that contained in his letter...
IRISH UNIVERSITY EDUCATION.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR.,"] SIR,—At a meeting of the General Assembly's Committee on the Higher Education held on December 27th, 1898, in the Assembly's Offices, May...
OLD AGE IN THE VILLAGE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OE THE "Spzerwros."] SIR,—My attention has just been caught by what seems to me to be a curious mistake in your otherwise strikingly truthful article in the...
ROAD-MAKING ANIMALS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR Or THE " SPEOTATOR."] SIR, I was surprised to see that the writer of the very interesting article in the Spectator of December 31st made no allusion to the paths...
COMPULSORY ARBITRATION.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR. "] Sin.,—Before accepting as an argument for compulsory arbitration the assumption that it works well in New Zealand (Spectator, December...
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ART.
The SpectatorBURNE-JONES AT THE NEW GALLERY. "IF, as I hold, the noblest picture is a painted poem, then I say that in the whole history of art there has never been a painter more greatly...
POETRY.
The SpectatorONLY A SONG. LOVE says not much, but says it, oh ! so well, We cannot tell What is the meaning of its secret spell. Its charm divine Is like the murmur of a sounding shell,...
THE CO-OPERATIVE MONEYLENDER.
The Spectator(To THI Roma or Tar "Eirscrixos.."] SIB,—Will you allow me to supplement Mr. Hussey-Walsh's very clear statement of the working of the Raffeissen banks in Ireland P The...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorNEW CHAPTERS IN THE LIFE OF PITT.* GIBBONIAN circles were lately fluttered by the appearance, in a list of new publications, of the following entry : "Gibbon (E.), Pitt's Life...
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"LEWIS CARROLL."*
The SpectatorTHIS age may claim to have added nonsense to the accepted forms of literature. Nonsense has, of course, been talked and written from the beginning of talking and writing, but...
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FIGHTS FOR THE FLAG.*
The SpectatorFights for the Flag is as good as Deeds that Won the Empire. To say more than this in praise of the book before us is un- necessary, for Deeds that Won the Empire was one of the...
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JEROME CARDAN,
The SpectatorWE congratulate Mr. Waters on this interesting and careful biography of a strange figure,—one of the strangest in the history of European culture and science. The work is most...
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REGENT SHORT STORIES.*
The SpectatorA WRITER in one of the January magazines contends that we must, in our books, have an escape from the actual. We can see the outside of things for ourselves ; " what we require...
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THE MAGAZINES.
The SpectatorTEE three papers on "The Liberal Collapse" which occupy the front pages of the Nineteenth Century do not strike us as very nutritive. Dr. J. Guinness Rogers says nothing rather...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorTHE laNOIL MAGAZINES. Besides a fresh instalment of the delightful " Etchingbam Letters," and the first chapters of a new story by Mr. S. R. Crockett, "Little Anna Mark,"...
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The Queen's Hounds. By Lord Ribblesdale. (Longmans and Co. 25s.)—No
The Spectatorone has a better right to be the historian of the-Queen's Hounds than Lord Ribblesdale. • He held office as Master of the Buckhounds from 1892 to 1895 under somewhat peculiar...
With Bat and Ball. By George Giffen. (Ward, Lock, and
The SpectatorCo.) —" Five and Twenty Years' Reminiscences of Australian and Anglo-Australian Cricket" is the sub-title of this volume. Mr. Giffen is still under forty, so that his quarter of...
Dolly the Romp. By Florence Warden. (F. V. White and
The SpectatorCo., —Children who are always in mischief or making mistakes art more apt to be tiresome in fiction than in real life. In life there are intervals of sobriety and sanity; in...