Children And Their Dinners.
IVO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.'] SIE•jill your interesting article on the above subject, you say :—" To raise the race, the growing boys and gills must be Led too, and the......
Convicts.
[TO THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR."] 01E, — I observe in the Spectator this morning a remark (with regard to the intrusion of French recidivistes in Australia) that 4' it is......
The Church Of England.
LTO THE EDITOR OF THE " $PECTATOR."J SIR,—I ask with diffidence for authority for a phrase now so commonly in men's mouths,—" The Church of England as by law established." Can......
Longevity.
[TO TIER EDITOR Or THE " SPECTATOR?' 1 Sta,—As a constant reader of your excellent paper, I have been: much interested in the letters on "Longevity." Regarding the instance......
The Word "cuss."
LTO THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOII.1 Sta,--It seems to me your correspondent from Colorado Springs is himself in error in stating that the word "cuss," when em- ployed in the......
Professor Flower At Reading.
(To THE EDITOR or THE "SPECTATOR.] Sift,—In your article on "Professor Flower at Reading," you say that the Clergy quake lest the doctrine of Evolution may interfere with the......
Poetry.
AN ENGLISH HOME. DEEP in a hazy hollow of the down The brick-built Court in mellow squareness stood, Where feathery beeches fringed the hanging wood, And sighing cedars spread a......