17 MAY 1924

Page 1

The success of the Cartel des Gauches has been quite

The Spectator

unexpected in extent. It was calculated before the elections that eighty seats would have to be won from the Bloc National in order to put the Left on equal terms with it in the...

EDITORIAL AND PUBLISHING OFFICES : 13 York Street, Covent Garden,

The Spectator

London, W.C. 2.

The success of the Left is attributable to many things.

The Spectator

In the fast place the poll was a large one. Eighty-five per cent. of the electorate voted, as against 70 per cent. in 1919. But, of course, the main element has been the...

NEWS OF THE WEEK.

The Spectator

O NE thought alone sprang to the mind when the result of the French elections was announced—" Is it too late ? " England threw off her old War Government and all that it stood...

Page 2

Mr. Snowden seemed to be much disconcerted by the reasonableness

The Spectator

of Mr. Baldwin's speech, which he des- cribed as a " milk-and-watery " production. He con- gratulated the Unionists on their interest in the problem of unemployment, " so very...

The King and Queen of Rumania have been popular figures

The Spectator

in London during the week, and we hope that they have found their visit as agreeable as the whole nation desired that it should be. Behind this royal visit there are rumours of...

There has undoubtedly been much reprehensible exaggeration on both sides

The Spectator

about the McKenna Duties. We have always maintained that one of the chief dangers in imposing a tariff is the difficulty of taking it off, and this view has been thoroughly...

M. Poincare will in all probability carry on till the

The Spectator

Chamber meets on June 1st, but will resign just before meeting the Deputies. We discuss the probable reactions of the elections on French foreign policy, and so on the whole...

It is not thus that we may expect to reap

The Spectator

the benefits of the change in French opinion. It is rather that the whole atmosphere of the negotiations has changed. M. Poincare has cancelled his visit to Chequers on the...

The Government have taken no further action in connexion with

The Spectator

the Irish Boundary. It is reported that they may ask Sir Robert Borden to be Chairman of the Commission. The Commission, however, could not bring about a settlement unless...

In the House of Commons on Tuesday Mr. Baldwin moves

The Spectator

that it was inexpedient, in the midst of the present distresses, to remove the McKenna Duties of 1915. He said that he regarded the question entirely from the point of view of...

Page 3

* * * * Bank Rate, 4 per cent., changed

The Spectator

from 8 per cent. July 5th. 5 per cent. War Loan was on Thursday, 100* ; Thursday week, 1001 ; a year ago, 101 Si per cent. Conversion Loan was on Thursday, 77f r Thursday week,...

* * * At midnight last Sunday Waterloo Bridge was

The Spectator

closed to traffic. The serious subsidence of one of the piers had become worse rather rapidly—certainly more rapidly than had been expected—and the L.C.C. announced that both as...

* * * * In the House of Commons .on

The Spectator

Friday, May 9th, when Mr. Buchanan's Scottish Home Rule Bill was debated, a most uproarious and discreditable challenge was directed against the authority of the Speaker. Mr....

* * * *

The Spectator

Last week we pointed out that the Free State could not logically demand what she regards as a strict fulfil- ment of the Treaty in respect of the Boundary and yet regard as a...

At the Mansion House on Thursday, May 8th, Mr. Morgenthau,

The Spectator

who was formerly American Ambassador at Constantinople, made a moving appeal on behalf of the Greek refugees. He said that the only thing in history like the present situation...

* * * * In the House of Commons on

The Spectator

Thursday, May 8th, Mr. Ammon, the Secretary to the Admiralty, expressed the sympathy of the Government with the resolutions passed by the American Senate in favour of a further...

* * * * When the Speaker would not accept

The Spectator

the closure some of the Scottish Members were guilty of such a violent demonstration and such unbridled language—some of it directed against the Speaker himself—that we think it...

Page 4

TOPICS OF THE DAY.

The Spectator

FRANCE—THE TWO NATIONS. T HERE are, and there always have been, and as far as political vision can extend there always will be, two French Nations. There is the nation of...

Page 5

LORD BEAVERBROOK—THE CENSOR.

The Spectator

ORD BEAVERBROOK, in the last number of ■ the Sunday Express, dealt with our protest in regard to his attacks on Mr. Baldwin. As Lord Beaver- brook seems to expect, indeed...

Page 6

THE NEXT AMERICAN PRESIDENT.

The Spectator

BY FRANK R. KENT OF THE Baltimore Sun. TN even a general way there is in American history no parallel to the present political situation. A Presidential campaign of quite the...

Page 7

THE PROBLEM OF THE MINES.

The Spectator

T ORD BUCKMASTER'S Court of Inquiry into the Miners' Wages could hardly have performed a more useful service than to show what the facts are. This it did as a Court only can...

Page 8

THE CIVIC SENSE AROUSED ?

The Spectator

T HAT notable Indian Deity, " The God of Things as They Are," has many worshippers in this country. I confess that I, for one, feel full of sympathy for the people who, in the...

Page 9

IN DEFENCE OF THE " ADELPHI."

The Spectator

[The following article is Mr. Middleton Murry's defence of his magazine, the Adelphi, which is criticized on page 793.] IN order that the criticism of the Adelphi may not -I- be...

Page 10

THE

The Spectator

ENGLISH-SPEAKING WORLD. BY EVELYN WRENCH. T WO passages from the Prime Minister's speech, when he opened the Empire Press Club at Wembley last week, are deserving of...

It is gratifying to note that as a result of

The Spectator

the meeting held at the Ulster Hall, Belfast, when representatives from the various sections of the Tailteann Games in Dublin were present, it was decided to form a Council for...

In these notes I purposely abstain from dealing with current

The Spectator

events in a party spirit. The removal of the McKenna motor duties in Great Britain is a subject of acrimonious discussion in the Press in this country. On one side we have those...

Page 11

I have referred several times to the ravages caused by

The Spectator

the boll weevil to the cotton crops of the southern States in America, and an organized campaign has been carried out in many parts of the south to stir up public interest in...

In these notes on several occasions I have referred to

The Spectator

a problem which does not receive much attention in the British Press, namely, the large migration of Canadians to the United States each year.- We in Europe are so accustomed to...

There seems little doubt that Professor Thomas Smiddy, of Cork

The Spectator

University, will be appointed the First Minister of the Irish Free State at Washington. The Minister- designate was chairman of the recent Fiscal Commission in the Irish Free...

THE THEATRE.

The Spectator

"THIS MARRIAGE , " AT THE COMEDY. THERE are some plays that seem full of wit and of thought- provoking ideas when you are watching them. But when you go away and begin in your...

The collaboration between Mr. Aldous Huxley and the original author

The Spectator

of two centuries ago—Mrs. Sheridan—worked smoothly. The Discovery, as it was acted, certainly had some faults. It was, for instance, a little long, and some of the acting was...

The international frontier line is such an unsubstantial thing that

The Spectator

the ambitious young Canadian moves to Detroit or Buffalo, New York or Chicago, with no more to-do than he would move to Toronto or Montreal. The recent period of industrial...

A belief in the return of President Coolidge, regardless of

The Spectator

whom the Democrats may select, is growing. In Wall Street, the odds to-day in favour of Mr. Coolidge being returned are 8 to 5. One of the causes for the growing belief in...

Page 12

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.

The Spectator

A' COMPARISON OF ARTS. [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—If I thought that there was any likelihood of the cinema displacing the art of painting I should practise every...

THE CINEMA.

The Spectator

HOPE FULFILLED. A REALLY efficient comedy—in which there is perception behind the wit and a perfect rounding of the action so that nothing irrelevant or forced mars the bright...

Page 13

THE NEXT BUDGET.

The Spectator

[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sra,—The Chancellor, in opening the Budget, is reported as saying :— " Now I turn to Inland Revenue duties. I propose no alteration in the...

THE IRISH BOUNDARY DANGER.

The Spectator

[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—To those like myself who chiefly desire a peaceful settlement of the Boundary question, it is distressing that a paper usually so fair and...

Page 14

[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.]

The Spectator

SIR,—In his article, "The Last Laureate ? " Mr. " Richard Jennings asserts or implies that Lord Salisbury did not recommend William Morris for the Laureateship on account of his...

THE SUNLIGHT LEAGUE.

The Spectator

[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sra,—Very late in the day, but not too late I hope, we are remembering that " In the beginning, God said, Let There be Light." The protests of...

THE LAST LAUREATE ?

The Spectator

[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sm,—Your correspondent, Mr. Richard Jennings, is guilty of a curious lapsus calami in your issue of May 10th last when he states Byron makes...

"ONE TOUCH OF NATURE----"

The Spectator

[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—On May 4th there was held in the Royal Exchange in Manchester, a Thanksgiving Service for the work of the Royal National Life-boat...

POETRY.

The Spectator

EVOLUTION. As in the monkey's musing eye There broods a sort of muddy guess Upon the brink of consciousness, Our human vision may descry ; So will the rare, transfigured face...

Page 15

LITERARY SUPPLEMENT

The Spectator

TO No. 5003.] FOR THE WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1924. REGISTERED FOB. 1 L TRANSMISSION ABROAD. GRATIS.

Page 17

tittrarp Oupptrinent.

The Spectator

LONDON: M.4Y 17th, 1924.

ANATHEMA.

The Spectator

The Adelphi. Nos. 1-12. Edited by John Middleton Murry. " So the Lord Buddha, with majesty of person and full dis- tinctness of speech, delivered the Scripture. Monks and nuns,...

Page 18

JANE WELSH CARLYLE.

The Spectator

Jane Welsh Carlyle : Letters to Her Family, 1839-1863. Edited by Leonard Huxley, LL.D. (John Murray. 21s. net.) HERE at last is a book of unquestionable, and for myself at any...

Page 19

A MAN—FINISHED.

The Spectator

A. Man—Finished. By Giovanni Papini. Translated by Mary Prichard Agnetti. (Hodder and Stoughton. 7s. 6d. net.) PArau wrote this book in 1912. It is an account of his life up to...

Page 20

BEAST INTO MAN.

The Spectator

Making of Man : a Study in Evolution. By Sir Oliver Lodge, F.R.S. (Hodder and Stoughton. 3s. Sd. net.) Sin. OuvEn LODGE has several sides. On one he is a physicist of great...

Page 22

CAMPEACHY.

The Spectator

The Pirates Who's Who. By Philip Goose. (Dulau and Co. 10s. net.) I was born of poor but respectable parents who (I am convinced) had formed the intention of apprenticing me to...

Page 24

THE SOUL OF RUSSIA.

The Spectator

EVERY page of this remarkable book breathes the spirit of Russia, the Russia which so vividly and unforgettably builds itself up in the mind out of the works of such great...

Page 26

THE REPUTATION OF MARCEL PROUST.

The Spectator

La Prisanniere. By Marcel Proust. (La Nouvelle Revue Frangaise. 2 vols. 7.50 fr. each.) Fox any writer whose reputation undergoes a vogue, critical opinion seems to draw up a...

LADY SUFFOLK.

The Spectator

FASCINATING without being beautiful, intelligent without being profound, cool and well-bred without being heartless, Lady Suffolk was one of those people in whom an epoch is...

Page 28

A MARSHAL OF FRANCE.

The Spectator

Vauban, Builder of Fortresses. By Daniel Halfvy. Trani- lated with notes by Major C. J. C. Street, O.B.E., M.C. (Geoffrey Bios. Os.) A VERY beautiful rose was called after a war...

Page 30

Loudon: Printed by W. SPLUUET & SONS, LTD., 98 &

The Spectator

99 Fetter Lane, E.C. 4 ; and published by THOMAS SAUNDERS for the " SPECTATOR" (Limited), at their Office, 13 York Street, Covent Garden, London, W.C. 2, Saturday, May 17th, 1924.

Page 31

MOOD.

The Spectator

Secrets. By W. H. Davies. (Cape. 3s. ed.) NOTHING is harder to criticize than lyrical poetry. It is the expression of a mood, and any subject or point of view it may have is...

A BOOK OF THE MOMENT.

The Spectator

THE BURDEN OF A FAMILY. IT is often assumed that the economic arrangement by which the burden of supporting a family of children falls on a single wage-earner is of immemorial...

BOOKS.

The Spectator

THIS WEEK'S BOOKS. BLAKE was no innocent : behind his most seeming-simple lyric was a whole mass of doctrine and cosmology. " Tyger, tyger " and " Little lamb, who made thee "...

Page 32

FICTION.

The Spectator

The Best Short Stories of 1923: American. Edited by E. J. O'Brien. (Cape. 7s. 6d.) Harbottle. By John Hargrave. (Duckworth. 7s. 6d.) THE injunction of Henry James that a...

Page 34

FINANCE-PUBLIC & PRIVATE.

The Spectator

[BY OUR CITY EDITOR.] POLITICS AND MARKETS. [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Of the influences operating upon the Stock Exchange outlook during the past week or two, chief...

FINANCIAL NOTES.

The Spectator

It is rather difficult to determine whether there has or has not been a throw-back in the stirrings of trade activity noticeable at the beginning of the year. The dockers'...