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THE

CONTEMPORARY
REVIEW

VOLUME LIII. JANUARY-JUNE 1888

ISBISTER AND COMPANY

LIMITED

56 LUDGATE HILL LONDON

1888

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CONTENTS OF VOLUME LIII.

JANUARY, 1888.

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The Lord was not in the Earthquake." By Frances Power Cobbe .
Welsh Nationality. By the Right Hon. G. Osborne Morgan, Q.C., M.P..
The Value of the Individual. By Vernon Lee

Freedom of Bequest. By I. S. Leadam

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The Age of the Pentateuch.-I. By the Dean of Peterborough
The Liberal Party and its Prospects. By R. B. Haldane, M.P.

Islam and Christianity in India.

FEBRUARY, 1888.

The Homeric Here. By the Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone, M.P.
Mr. Kinglake's Crimean War. By W. H. Russell, LL.D..
The New York Police. By Charles Williams

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The Age of the Pentateuch.-II. By the Dean of Peterborough

Nationality. By J. Westlake, Q.C., LL.D.

Irish Land and British Legislators. By William E. Bear.

The Scottish Church Question. By Walter C. Smith, D.D.

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The Negro Question in the United States. By George W. Cable

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JUNE, 1888.

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AN AUSTRALIAN EXAMPLE.

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WHEN Rawdon Crawley takes down his little boy to the old family seat, where he is regarded as a rather discreditable poor relation, his heart warms at the idea of being once more at home.

A colonist commonly returns to England in the same sentimental mood, and finds it as little understood or reciprocated. The respectable citizen who has had the enterprise and courage to stay at home, secretly regards his neighbour who has wandered to the ends of the earth as a man who has somehow lost caste. For three generations the Indian army, whose colonels and generals became plain Mr. Smith or Mr. MacPherson when they passed the Cape of Good Hope, was a focus of discontent and Radicalism from this provocation; and I heard an old moustache from Calcutta once insist that the contempt which Englishmen still feel at bottom for Americans. was simply a reminiscence of the fact that they had once been colonists. When England sends out an expedition in scarlet tunics or blue jackets, with gay banners and loud music, the heart of the nation goes out along with it, like a mother watching her children, but the silent expeditions in broadcloth and fustian destined to conquer new regions for civilization and commerce, and to drain away the impatient discontent which would make England a fen instead of a garden-who watches them when they set out, or welcomes them when they return? I assisted a few years ago in the Mansion House at a spectacle which made a permanent lodgment in my memory. Lord Mayor McArthur got together at a banquet the most notable statesmen and soldiers of the Colonial Empire. It was as impressive an assembly as I ever witnessed. There sat at his board the founders, the Ministers, and the Governors or ex-Governors and ex-Ministers of thirty colonies, mingled with the lords of immense

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