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Persian Honey-Pot
The SpectatorNone of the hopeful forecasts of conversations on Persian oil on the basis of the latest Anglo-American proposals has shown the slightest sign of being fulfilled. Dr. Moussadek...
MR. EDEN AND EUROPE
The SpectatorT HE latest of the frequent phases in which the countries of Western Europe concentrate on their mutual relation- ships and organisation is already beginning. The meeting of thc...
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Saar Changing Course
The SpectatorThere is no longer any doubt that changes in the status of the Saar are on the, way. Following quickly on M. Schuman's proposal to " Europeanise " the Saarland have come reports...
Religion and the Masses
The SpectatorThere is a great deal of food for thought in the address on religious broadcasts given to the Modern Churchmen's Union Conference on Tuesday by the Rev. Francis House, Director...
Copyright
The SpectatorThe universal copyright convention, signed at Geneva on Saturday by the delegates sent by forty-three States to the con- ference arranged after long preparation by U.N.E.S.C.O.,...
The Engineers Persist
The SpectatorIt might have been thought that if the engineers were going to listen to reason on the subject of their claim for an increase of £2 a week they would have listened to it...
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CLEAN-UP
The SpectatorIN EGYPT G ENERAL NEGUIB, according to a British resident in Cairo, is " a good man, a good man in every way." All the evidence confirms that estimate. The revolu- tionary...
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A Daily Express leader-writer has been expressing himself with vigour
The Spectatoron something he does not begin to understand. Trying to find a stick to beat the United Nations with, he resurrects the now half-forgotten story of the bombardment of the Greek...
What the difference is between an epigram and a wise-crack
The SpectatorI should not care to determine, or in which of the two, if there be any difference, Governor Adlai Stevenson so largely abounds. Of the selection I have seen on the whole I like...
Gremlins played some havoc with this column last week, and
The Spectatora little of the damage must be here repaired. By noting that P. B. H. May has now displaced his captain, David Sheppard, at the head of the batting averages I hope to divert...
There was a passage in a message from a Vienna
The Spectatorcorres- pondent in the Observer last Sunday which seems to deserve some attention. Giving news of a meeting of the Cominform recently held in Prague to consider future policy,'...
A SPECTATOR 'S NOTEBOOK R. ASQUITH, the centenary of whose
The Spectatorbirth falls on the date this issue of the Spectator bears, was, for all his long tenure of the Premiership, little known to the nation as a man. He was essentially the...
I am all for enriching the English language with new
The Spectatorterms, and I know that Harold Nicolson, in spite of the brilliant success of his " George V," will never die happy till he has seen " doryphore " (what it means, and why,...
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Asquith and the Welfare State
The SpectatorBy VISCOUNT SAMUEL T WENTY or thirty years after a great man has died is the time when he passes gradually from the recollection of contemporaries into the hands of history....
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Farnborough Dangers
The SpectatorBy OLIVER STEWART C RITICISMS have followed in the wake of John Derry's crash at Farnborough. Demonstrations of supersonic flight, it is suggested, should not be given near...
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Remembering the Duke
The SpectatorBy CHRISTOPHER SYKES I N September of 1852 Greville was at Doncaster for the St. Leger meeting when he heard that the Duke of Welling- ton was dead. He relates that at first...
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Overpower
The SpectatorBy J. P. W. MALLALIEU, M.P. Y EARS ago, I knew the cricket averages by heart—or at least the first twenty. It used to be a terrible shock to me when the final averages were...
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A Noble International
The SpectatorBy LUCILIO Ci HE age of old elephants is terribly old," as a poet of Punch observed some years ago, and much the same thing might be said about heraldry, if not about exist-...
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UNDERGRADUATE PAGE
The SpectatorCrawley By BRIAN WIDLAKE (Clare College, Cambridge). cc 11 I'M goin' up to 'Arry's for a shave." Such a remark from veterans of hoe and plough bespoke logic and wisdom, and...
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MARGINAL COMMENT
The SpectatorBy HAROLD NICOLSON A L WAYS whenI get the chance I listen on Friday even- ings to Mr. Alistair Cooke's " Letter from America." I still find it impressive to hear a man talking...
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CINEMA
The SpectatorMeet Me Tonight. (Odeon, Marble Arch.)-24 Hours of a Woman's Life. (Empire.) FOLLOWING on the successful conversion of Mr. Somerset Maugham's stories into film salads we now...
MUSIC
The SpectatorFUTURE historians of musical taste in this country will no doubt find an explanation of the vogue which Carl Nielsen's music enjoyed "at the turn of the century." It is true...
CONTEMPORARY ARTS
The SpectatorTHEATRE Don Juan in Hell. By Bernard Shaw. . (Arts.) THE third act of Man and Superman was Shaw's attempt at " a new Book of Genesis for the Bible of the Evolutionists," his...
Wishing Well. By E. Eynon Evans. (Comedy.) THIS astonishing comedy
The Spectatorexercises to the full the same sort of innocent emotional blackmail as may be found in the serials which trip along sweetly in some family weeklies. It is, that is to say, rich...
Emlyn Williams as Charles Dickens in Bleak House. (Ambass . adors.) Tins
The Spectatoris a virtuoso performance of an even -higher order, but it com- pares unfavourably in my opinion with Emlyn Williams's earlier appearance in the character of Charles Dickens....
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BALLET
The SpectatorSylvia. (Covent Garden.)—Reflection. (Sadler's Wells.) THE three-act ballet of Sylvia, with its well-known music by Delibes, was originally produced at the Theatre de l'Opera,...
EXHIBITION
The SpectatorTHE exhibition of Railroadiana (an unattractive word, but it was in use in 1838), which is on view at the National Book League, 7 Albemarle Street, W.1, until November, is...
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SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 132
The SpectatorReport by D. R. Peddy "It was 1752, the age of Dr. Johnson . . . the full-bottomed wig was fast disappearing . . . and Thomas Whitewash had just started manufacturing lemonade...
SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 135
The SpectatorSet by Marghanita Laski Since literary fashion will eventually praise many best-sellers which at present it denigrates, competitors are invited to offer 150 words from their...
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Snt,—In reply to. Mr. Gavin Fargus may I say that
The Spectatorthe Modern Church- men's Union does not set out to contribute to the " still Catholic thought and practice of the Established Church," but to the main- tenance of Christian...
Mr. Churchill in Cuba
The SpectatorSnt,—Mr. Wilson Harris's review of Closing the Ring is most interest- ing, but in saying Mr. Churchill saw "active service in three continents," he does him a little lessahan...
Snt,—It is a curious thing that all those people who
The Spectatorfavour marriage after divorce quote Sir John Stoddard's opinion of the Reformatio Legum Ecclesiasticarum (in which one of my predecessors Dr. ;lowland Taylor had a hand)...
The spectator, 6eptember It, 1852
The SpectatorMr. Arnold, the Westminster Magistrate, was occupied for many hours on Tuesday in hearing the charges against the Poitevins and Mr. Simpson, of cruelty to horses which were...
Siu,—Why is it that those who base their oppodition to
The Spectatordivorce on Matthew v, 32, read no further in the Sermon on the Mount ? The next verse condemns all those who, unlike Quakers and Free- thinkers, take an oath in a court of law...
Natal's Preoccupations
The SpectatorSnt,—Shongweni • is not " on the fringe of Zululand "; it is between Pietermaritzburg and Durban. " Kaffir " is no: onger used in polite speech or writing. It is resented by...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The SpectatorMarriage, Society and the Church Sm,—Prof. Sykes argues that because Christians have departed from the code of Christ at two points there is no reason why they should not do so...
Snt,—An important point which I have not seen mentioned so
The Spectatorfar in the discussion is that nowadays it is notorious that the " innocent " party to a divorce is often in fact the partner who has desired the dis- solution of the marriage,...
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Portable Harmony
The SpectatorSIR,—When my brother and I were small boys, in the 90's, 'we were given an " Orchestrianette," a hand-operated mechanical organ. Its tone was like that of portable harmoniums,...
Penn and Mead
The SpectatorSIR,—Sir Norman Birkett's review of the new edition of George Fox's Journal is very interesting, like all his writings. But if he will look at the brass tablet on a wall inside...
The Sawyer Trap
The SpectatorSIR,—With regard to rabbit snares mentioned in the Spectator of August 22nd, the R.S.P.C.A. recommends the " Sawyer Trap " as the best humane device hitherto invented for...
Composting
The SpectatorSIR,—Your contributor Ian Niall is not, I think, correct in his note on compost in the Spectator of August 22nd. By suitable management of a compost heap a temperature of some...
The Conquest of Death
The SpectatorSIR,—I wonder whether the enclosed sonnet will serve to express the feelings of a good many of your readers on the Fear of Death. It was composed twenty-five years ago while I...
SERMONS RIGHT AND WRONG In almost all discussions on the
The Spectatordecrease in Church atten- dance one reason given is the quality of the sermons and their failure to meet the spiritual needs of today. This criticism may be just or unjust. In...
Confiscation
The SpectatorSIR,—In your issue of August 29th and under the heading of " The Case of Herr Krupp" you state that "confiscation of private property in Germany has never been part of the...
Spooner and Smith -Sta,—In reviewing Lady Peck's A Little Learning,
The Spectatordoes not Mr. Cyril Ray give his Oxford a false perspective ? He writes as if Spooner belonged to an earlier generation than A. L. Smith. But A. L. was already dead when Spooner...
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Harness Brass Every country town has at least one antique
The Spectatorshop that sells bits of brass that people are pleased to call horse brast. These days it hardly matters that ninety-nine per cent. of the stuff never saw a saddler's shop, let...
Potato Harvest
The SpectatorThey are harvesting in the potato field now. The adjoining stubble is fawn. The oats are off the far hill, the bit of wheat safely under cover, and the potatoes are beginning to...
The Milk Run When the milk lorry stopped on the
The Spectatorvery steepest part of the hill, I was surprised. The driver poked his head out of the cab and offered me a lift. I was enjoying myself. The lift hardly mattered, for the day was...
Attending to Leeks Earth up leeks and trim yellowing leaves
The Spectatorthat are dragging in the soil. It is a good thing to feed the plants with liquid manure suitably diluted. Leeks develop well in the next month or two and are worth
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorAWAY ahead of me the moorland road twisted and turned, rose and jell, between banks of heather and ling and a dozen trees of rowan. The thin branches of the rowan were so laden...
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BOOKS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorA Hero and History Lord Chatham : A War Minister in the Making. By 0. A. Sherrard. (Bodley Head. 25s.) WHAT a magnet has Chatham been for the assayers, or what a blazing light...
Miss Brawne, Mrs. Lindon
The SpectatorFanny Brawne. By Joanna Richardson. (Thames and Hudson. 15s.) WHEN the son of Fanny Brawne, who became Mrs. Louis Lindon, was &Sired to sanction some publications concerning...
In next week's " Spectator " Laurence Irving discusses a
The Spectatornew book on the Lyceum Theatre; Peter Fleming reviews "Golden Earth" by Norman Lewis; Andrew Young writes on "A Book of Flowers" compiled by Edith Sitwell; and Michael Sadleir...
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The Public Corporation
The SpectatorProblems of Nationalised Industry. Edited by William A. Robson. (Allen and Unwin. 25s.) Problems of Nationalised Industry. Edited by William A. Robson. (Allen and Unwin. 25s.)...
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Near-Genius
The SpectatorMiss CARSON McCuLLEas is one of those good American writers about the South who seem to be writers of genius the first time you read them if you have never read any of the...
The Last of the Tales
The SpectatorThe Fairy Caravan. By Beatrix Potter. (Warne. 10s. 6d.) A NEW Beatrix Potter in the year 1052—even one written over twenty years ago and " never meant for print "—is an un-...
South African Complexities
The SpectatorReport on Southern Africa. By Basil Davidson. (Cape. 16s.) AFTER twenty gloomy pages Mr. Davidson pronounces that "a study of South Africa need not be a study in despair," but...
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Waugh and Hemingway
The SpectatorAT the sensitive age when Mr. Evelyn Waugh was learning to play cricket, he must have heard that the staff of Messrs. Chapman and Hall with the fatherly participation of their...
Snapshots of the Common Man
The SpectatorPortrait of England : News from Somewhere. By Laurence -Thomp- son. (Gollancz. 10s. 6d.) Tills is the age of Mass Observation ; of the common man. Writers need no longer go to...
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Shorter Notices
The SpectatorDaniel Defoe. By Francis Watson. (Long- mans. 10s. 6d.) How Defoe ever found time to write, seeing all that he did, or how he found a moment in which to do anything, seeing what...
IT is twenty-five years since this book was written in
The Spectatorthis country and published in the United States. In the meantime Blake has been accepted in his entirety, yet probably remains unread except as a lyricist. But even here he...
TO ENSURE REGULAR RECEIPT OF
The SpectatorTHE SPECTATOR readers are urged to place a firm order with their newsagent or to take out a subscription. Newsagents cannot afford to take the risk of carry- ing stock, as...
KING EDWARD'S SCHOOL, DOW 400 years old, is unusual in
The Spectatorseveral ways. It is outstanding academically ; it is associated with a notable girls' school and a number of flourishing grammar schools, and it has remained a day-school...
WORDS are fickle in their attachments, and the word "
The Spectatorballad " has grown elusive of definition. Technically speaking, because it is sung to music, the sentimental " ballad" of the Palm Court has more claim to the name than Scott's...
The Goad of Love. An unpublished trans- lation of the
The SpectatorStimulus Amoris by Walter Hilton. (Faber. 18s.) THERE is no doubt a small but growing public to whom the reading of the mystics brings satisfactions that they do not derive from...
VOLUME VI of the Oxford Junior Encyclo- paedia, which is
The Spectatorcalled Farming and Fisheries (O.U.P. 30s.), is in every way as excellent as its predecessors. One—an adult as well as a child one—could hardly fail to find pleasure and profit...
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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS Arita their late summer recovery markets appear to have entered an autumn phase of consolidation. Although there is no evidence of any real anxiety to sell, buying has...
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Solution to Crossword No. 693 CI EI U El onanot.g1:2
The Spectator110001!ILI gICCIEICEI El 0 0 El CI El 0© 001313© 0" El 0 0 splidn0000000 040 N , 1 MEMO 13000000 1300000 13 El _0 e 0 HI Ei00000 e le 011111:1 0 19 CI C A El O ME 0ItIIS MBMOU...
THE "SPECTATOR" CROSSWORD No. 695
The Spectator[A Book Token for one guinea will be awarded to the sender of the first correct solution opened after noon on Tuesday week, September 23rd, addressed Crossword, 99 Dower Street,...