8 DECEMBER 1950

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"The Second Lesson"

The Spectator

"6 The Second Lesson " SIR,-Much of the difficulty about St. John's Gospel disappears if v e adopt the theory that it was based, not on " Q " material, but on another, lost...

Animal Lover

The Spectator

Animal Lover SIR.-Mlr. Atkins letter recalling the incredible stories of animal kindness which the Spectator published some forty-five years ago is very interesting to one who...

"Spectator" Religious Articles

The Spectator

"6 Spectator" Religious Articles SIR,-Will you allow me, as a very old reader of the, Spectator, to thanlk you for its consistently Christian tone ? When our spiritual pastor...

Sparta

The Spectator

Sparta SIR,-It was pleasant to learn from Mr. Anthony Kerr's charming article that Sparta is much less Spartan than when I knew it years ago. But there were no lemons there,...

The Bevan Lunch

The Spectator

The Bevan Lunch SIR.-I am astonished at the credulity of Janus in regard to the Be.an luncheon party. It is almost as irresponsible as Mr. Bevan's acceptance of the invitation...

Employment and the Old

The Spectator

Employment and the Old SIR,-YOur correspondent, Mr. Barrett, asks how I would relish a b.,tman's job. I think that I (like many retired officers since the last wvir) would find...

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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT

The Spectator

FINANCE AND INVESTMENT By CUSTOS IN face of the news from the international political front, stock markets are fighting a stern rearguard action. It is a striking testimony to...

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Queens of the Circulating Library. By Alan Walbank.

The Spectator

Victorian Fiction Queens of the Circulating Library. By Alan Walbank. (Evans. 1 2S. 6d.) MR. WALBANK mixes Three Ideas, to the disadvantage of them all. He presents, as the...

Boswell's London Journal, 1762-1763. Now first published from the original manuscript with introduction and notes by Frederick A. Pottle.

The Spectator

Reviews of the Week The Revelations of Boswell Boswell's London Journal, 1762-1763. Nonv first published from the original manuscript with introduction and notes by Frederick...

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[SIR,-Your correspondent, Mr. H. T. Lane, in challenging Christians to...]

The Spectator

SIR.-Your correspondent, Mr. H. T. Lane, in challenging Christians t) I show to overseas students in this country a reception at least as kind1h as that accorded to them by...

[SIR,-Mr. Christie expresses a view with which I, as another layman, find...]

The Spectator

SIR,-,\r. Christie expresses a view with which 1. as another layman. find .~~~~~~~~~~~~~ . I .- myself in complete agreement. In only one sentence-his last one-do I differ. and...

[SIR,-As a parson, I found Mr. Christie's article most refreshing.]

The Spectator

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Church Unity SIR,-As a parson. I found Mr. Christie's article most refreshing. As long as the problem of unity is approached solely by theologians and...

[SIR,-As Mr. H. T. Lane was good enough to point out in his letter...]

The Spectator

Foreign Students in Britain SIR,-As Mr. H. T. Lane was good enough to point out in his Iler | in your issue of December Ist on "West Africans in Britain," the Br "Th Council...

America and the Festival

The Spectator

America and the Festival SIR,-While I agree completely with the sentiments expressed by J. Dupont of this village, in his letter in the Spectator of November 24th, I think he...

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The Younger Audience

The Spectator

The Younger Audience REVIEWERS of " juveniles " have been tending to exult of late over the increasing number of writers, normally addressing themselves to grown-up readers,...

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Freedom and Society

The Spectator

Freedom and Society SER,-it is a pity the grave and judicious attitude of mind brought to bear upon the practical limits of opposition to euthanasia was not available fcr your...

"Seeds of Treason"

The Spectator

" Seeds of Treason " SIR,-AMr. Fredric J. Warburg can hardly be a very regular readc; your columns if he believes that anything I write is likely to "p.;n1e the Kremlin," or...

Pensioners of the Colonial Service

The Spectator

Pensioners of the Colonial Service | SIR,-On July 26th the Legislative Council of the Federation of Mlah. Sa was informed that the Colonial Office had been asked to recruit...

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Referring to the Bines

The Spectator

Referring to the Bines 1l My recent description of the burning of the hop-bines every Octlrhcr has brought a letter of protest. I quote from it. " Somewhere near 75 a great man...

[A BOOK just published by Staples, Ltd., has enabled me this week to...]

The Spectator

COUNTRY LIFE I A BOOK just published by Staples, Ltd., has enabled me this WcCN to make a vicarious journey to the islands ott the coast ot Fembrokesire that little-knqwn...

Wasted Fruit

The Spectator

Wasted Fruit l Nor can one walk a hundred yards from home without being conmpelled to contemplate the economic side of country life. I live in a small hamlet which is served,...

In the Garden

The Spectator

In the Garden I Il As a counterblast to the practical nature of my notes this week. I am happy to record that in the garden I have taken up a flourishing and fertile wall-peach...

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The Saturday Book. Edited by Leonard Russell. The Bedside Lilliput. Diversion. Edited by John Sutro. Robin Redbreast. By David Lack. Facades and Faces. By Osbert Lancaster.

The Spectator

The Adult Stocking The Saturday Book. Edited by Leonard Russell. (Hutchinson. 2 is.) Ihe Bedside Lilliput. (HUlton Press. ios. 6d.) Diversion. Edited I)v John Sutro. (Miax...

Selected Poems of William Barnes.

The Spectator

The Dorset Poet Selected Poems of William Barnes. (The Muses' Library. Routledge and Kegan Paul. i os. 6d.) IT is over forty years since Thomas Hardy published his small...

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PRIZEWINNERS

The Spectator

PRIZEWINNERS (MRS. M. STANIER) Time to pack up, old tram: you've been cashiered, "Rude donatus." Not ingloriously You've sailed to harbour from the world's rude sea. Now the...

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[THE French Government's decision to accept a provisional...]

The Spectator

NEWS OF THE WEEK T- HE French Government's decision to accept a provisional solution of the problem of German rearmament, suggested by Mr. Spofford, the American representative...

Coal Expedients

The Spectator

Coal Expedients The Coal Board's efforts to bring about a quick increase in coal production go on with energetic ineffectiveness. The revival of the idea of bringing in Italian...

Raw Materials Co-ordination

The Spectator

Raw Materials Co-ordination The decision of Mr. Attlee and President Truman to tackle the question of raw material requirements without delay was a very necessary step towards...

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Seen From A Hilltop

The Spectator

Seen From A Hilltop Now from this island, high Suspended in the sky, I see the village below, Far away, long ago, A clear pictorial map Lying in the downs' lap. The...

The Puppet Book. Edited by L. V. Wall.

The Spectator

Puppets The Puppet Book. Edited by L. V. Wall. (Faber. 2 IS.) THIS book, written by members of the Educational Puppetry Association, will be welcomed both by those already...

The Little Princesses. By Marion Crawford.

The Spectator

A Governess's Story The Little Princesses. By Marion Cra%%ford. (Cassell. I 2S. 6d.) THIS is an unusually readable, amusing and intimate book about the household o f the...

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The Varsity Match

The Spectator

The Varsity Match B By 1. P. W. MALLALIEU, M.P. B EFORE any big garne of football there are two especially exciting moments. One is when the plavers come on to the ground....

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Peking and Moscow

The Spectator

Peking and Moscow By C. P. FITZGERALD Hong Kong, November 28th C HINESE intervention in Korea has given a new urgency, and a new twist, to the much-debated problem of the I...

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[The paradoxical claim that the side which lost the Test Match...]

The Spectator

The paradoxical claim that the side which lost the Test Match at Brisbane this week was the better team seems to be justified. There can never have been a more fantastic game....

[I made some reference last week to the impending vacancy in the...]

The Spectator

I made some reference last week to the impending vacancy in the Mastership of Trinity as result of the retirement of Dr. G. M. Trevelyan. Since then I have come on an...

[I have no idea who is responsible for arranging the advertise-...]

The Spectator

I have no idea who is responsible for arranging the advertise. ments in the Festival of Britain guide, and comments on the costly mess that has been made of them have therefore...

[The last two by-elections tell the same story as their predecessors.]

The Spectator

The last two by-elections tell the same story as their predecessors. Abertillery, it is true, may be largely discounted. When a constituency is so overwhelmingly of one colour...

[PERSONS with ten shillings and a certain amount of...]

The Spectator

A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK PERSONS with ten shillings and a certain amount of time to spare might do much worse than invest in one of the Stationery Office's latest publications,...

[No public man does worse for his own reputation than Mr....]

The Spectator

No public man does worse for his own reputation than Mr. Shinwell. His virtues are many. He is able, he is immensely hard-working, he is shrewd and he is a very agreeable...

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Counterpoint. By Knudd Jeppeson.

The Spectator

Harmony or Counterpoint ? Counterpoint. By Kntidd Jeppeson. (Williams and Norgate. Ns.) DR. JEPPESON'S Counterpoint is a kind of sequel to his earlier volume, published in...

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Frontier Friction

The Spectator

Frontier Friction Although there is little danger of the present dispute between Jordan and Israel flaring up into general fighting, it is evidence of the worsening in...

A Defence of Apartheid

The Spectator

A Defence of Apartheid The explanation of the South African Government's apartheid policy given by the Minister of Native Affairs at Pretoria on Tuesday was no doubt...

Next on the List?

The Spectator

Next on the List ? Nowhere in the world is the fighting in Korea watched with more apprehension than in Indo-China. The Chinese Com. munists are known to have the power to send...

Civil Service Recruitment

The Spectator

Civil Service Recruitment The success or failure of the new techniques which have been introduced since the end of the war for recruiting to the higher grades of the Civil...

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Of Course State Education is the Ideal But...

The Spectator

Of Course State Education is the Ideal But.. . By MARGHANITA LASKI one's got to deal with things as they are not as one would like them to be they're hopelessly overcrowded...

The War in Korea

The Spectator

The War in Korea By PETER FLEMING IN the west of the peninsula the retreat of the 8th Army continues, and although minor actions have been.fought with guerrillas a long way...

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Return Ticket to Space

The Spectator

Return Ticket to Space By PETER KING WifE seem to be getting on very free-and-easy terms with the planets these days. There is an air of cheerful optimism about spatial...

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A Country Scrap-Book. By Lilias Rider Haggard.

The Spectator

A Countrywoman's Creed A Country Scrap-Book. By Lilias Rider Haggard. (Faber. 1 2S. 6d.) THIS is a collection of writings about the country, many of which have appeared...

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Too Little and Too Dear

The Spectator

Too Little and Too Dear The British Electricity Authority cannot be accused of any failure in self-justification. It presents the public with a bulky annual report full of...

Food from the Farm

The Spectator

Food from the Farm It seems a sin to introduce any note of doubt or qualification into the beatific vision, conjured up this week by.the president of the National Farmers'...

AT WESTMINSTER

The Spectator

AT WESTMINSTER A SKITTISH committee-stage on the Festival of Britain Bill; some hours' expenditure of Celtic ardour in debating Welsh affairs and a day denoted to the dreadful...

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MARGINAL COMMENT

The Spectator

MARGINAL COMMENT By HAROLD NICOLSON I CHERISH feelings of respect and gratitude for those who publish the Penguin Books. I am assured that these pocketable volumes diffuse the...

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A WORLD AT STAKE

The Spectator

A WORLD AT STAKE SO rapidly is the situation developing diplomatically in Washington and militarily in Korea that comments are apt to be overtaken by events within twenty-four...

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Writing for a Child

The Spectator

Children's Book Supplement Writing for a Child CHILDREN may be divided into those " born bookish" and those to whom books are simply the final resort, the last ditch, as it...

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"All About Eve." (Gaumont.)-"King Solomon's Mines."

The Spectator

CINEMA "All About Eve." (Gauronto.)-" King Solomon's Mines." (Empire.) MISS BETTE DAVIS, whom no one, in my opinion, has vet surpassed as a film actress, now brings her...

MUSIC

The Spectator

MUSIC THE Oxford University Opera Club have attempted nothing rnrve ambitious in their history than Berlioz's Les Troyens; and their boldness proved in the event wholly...

"Return to Tyassi." By Benn Levy.

The Spectator

CONTEMPORARY ARTS THEATRE " Rcturn to To assi." Bv Beim LcNv. (Duke of York's.) ANY' play with a modern setting, in which one gentleman says to another: "Ah! I thought Vou...

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Washington Atmosphere

The Spectator

Washington Atmosphere B) ROBERT WAITHMAN Washington M R. ATTLEE, by merely stepping out of his plane in this nation's capital, was making a not inconsiderable contribution of...

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The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone. By Tennessee Williams. A Rage to Live. By John O'Hara. Grasping the Viper. By Herve Bazin. Translated by W. J. Strachan. Dead Man Over All. By Walter Allen.

The Spectator

New Novels The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone. By Tennessee Williams. (Lehmann. 7s. 6d.) A Rage to Live. By John O'Hara. (Cresset Press. 15.) Grasping the Viper. By Herv6...

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Facts for Children

The Spectator

Facts for Children THE gap between " lesson " and " pleasure " books has narrowed in the last twenty years Lesson books have become lively and attractively produced: pleasure...

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BOOKS AND WRITERS

The Spectator

BOOKS AND WRITERS N OT long ago a distinguished scientist remarked that he did not very often see his colleagues reading poetry in the Athenaeum after lunch. It may be, of...