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The game is up
The SpectatorIn the spring of 1915 the role of Italy in the Great War was still in the balance. Would she take the part of Germany and Austria, as her commitments to the Triple Alliance...
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Political commentary
The SpectatorDid they lose the will to live? Ferdinand Mount The government did not have to fall. The votes were there for the taking. When all the sums are done, it is hard to avoid the...
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Notebook
The SpectatorIf the confidence debate is anything to go by, the Conservatives are right to be eager that personalities should somehow be kept out of the election campaign. Having boldly...
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Another voice
The SpectatorJams tomorrow? Auberon Waugh The last time I wrote about Sir James Goldsmith at any length was on 5 June 1976, but I was inhibited on that occasion by the fact that he was...
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Canada: a country on the loose
The SpectatorPeter Nichols Montreal At whatever level you focus, the separate life is Canada's issue of the moment — as Margaret Trudeau prepares for the publication of her memoirs and the...
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Bhutto prepares to die
The SpectatorVictoria Schofield Islamabad Pakistan Day was the occasion for a splendid performance on the race course at Rawalpindi. In brilliant spring weather, hot by English standards,...
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The great peace bazaar
The SpectatorNicholas von Hoffman Washington The mosquito silhouettes of the police and a rmy helicopters could be seen hovering Ov er Washington's low skyline; their aniplified rattling...
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Good joke, bad man
The SpectatorRichard West There are two reasons why journalists should be shy of writing about Uganda. For one thing nobody knows what is happening there, whether a Tanzanian Army is...
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Family planning: the Irish solution
The SpectatorChristopher Walker Dublin As British theatrical impresarios discovered long ago, no one tells an anti-Irish joke better than an Irishman: Similarly, no country is more adept...
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The roots of disorder
The SpectatorChristopher Booker Readers of last week's Spectator may have noticed a fine candidate for Dr Koestler's Book of Coincidences in the fact that both Auberon Waugh and Thomas...
A hundred years ago
The SpectatorIt was determined by the Queen's Bench Division of the High Court of Justice, on Tuesday, in an appeal against a conviction by the magistrates at Highgate, that the Act...
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In the City
The SpectatorA Thatcher boom? Nicholas Davenport To put it mildly, the Stock Exchange would be immensely relieved if the Labour government were swept out of office. The first thanksgiving...
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Hitler and the romantic illusion
The SpectatorAlbert Speer In a passage of my Spandau — The Secret Diaries (Collins 1976), I described National-Socialist architecture as a last attempt to defend style against industrial...
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Letters
The SpectatorForum on porn Sir: Dick West's article Who Needs Pornography? (10 March) was disappointing in almost every respect. Not only did he neglect to answer the question he raised but...
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Spring Books I
The SpectatorApe, angel and essence Elisabeth Whipp Life on Earth David Attenborough (Collins £7.95) Man has always needed an explanation of why he is here on this earth. Christianity once...
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Royal Georges
The SpectatorHugh Montgomery-Massingberd Blood Royal Christopher SinclairStevenson (Cape £6.95) When the dead hand of the academic is so Prevalent in modern historical books, this...
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Parallels
The SpectatorMichael Podro Romanticism Hugh Honour (Penguin Books £8.50) Hugh Honour's Romanticism is a superb account of the art of the first half of the 19th century. The immense richness...
Bourgeois sex
The SpectatorAnthony Storr The History of Sexuality Vol 1: An Introduction Michelfoucault (Men Lane £5.95) Foucault's last book, Discipline and Punish, was concerned to show how punishment...
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Softer Ruskin
The SpectatorJonathan Keates Reflections of a Friendship: Ruskin's Letters to Pauline Trevelyan 1848– 1866 edited by Virginia Surtees (Allen & Unwin 210.00) Savage Ruskin Patrick Conner...
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Worst of times
The SpectatorDavid Benson A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century Barbara W. Tuchman (Macmillan £9.95) A university teacher of medieval literature I once knew claimed that her...
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The Praise Singer
The Spectator'Miss Renault is the only writer of our time to have made an art of the historical novel . . . she manages to lift her readers out of their own world and into whatever world her...
Foreigner
The SpectatorA Novel by NAHID RACHLIN A haunting first novel about the experiences of estrangement. Feri, a woman in her thirties, returns from America for a visit to the house of her...
The Best of Aubrey Beardsley
The SpectatorKENNETH CLARK When Aubrey Beardsley died in 1898 at the age of twenty-six, he was better known for the shock his drawings had on the public than as one of the great...
Dictionary of Subjects and Symbols in Art
The SpectatorJAMES HALL Introduction by KENNETH CLARK The enjoyment of a work of art often depends as much on the story it depicts, as on the artist's execution of it. But what were once...
Going up to Sotheby's
The SpectatorMuriel Spark This was the wine. It stained the top of the page when she knocked over the glass accidentally. A pity, she said, to lose that drop. For the wine was a treat....
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Heart of darkness
The SpectatorPeter Ackroyd A Lover's Discourse Roland Barthes, translated by Richard Howard (Cape E6.95) La Rochefoucauld penetrated the heart of the mystery : 'Some people would never have...
Baffled loves
The SpectatorEmma Fisher That Singing Mesh Terence Tiller (Chatto/Hogarth £3.00 paper) Melusine & the Nigredo Simon Lowy (Carcanet £2.00 paper) Life Before Death P.J. Kavanagh...
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Semi-fiction
The SpectatorFrancis King The Case of Mr Crump Ludwig LewlSobn (Allen Lane £5.95) The publishing of Ludwig Lewisohn's The Case of Mr Crump is quite as eventful and curious as that of either...
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Arts
The SpectatorIt don't come from Fats Benny Green Ain't MisbehavinIFIer Majesty's Theatre) In 1944 the HMV Record company issued a performance by Thomas 'Fats' Waller called 'When Somebody...
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Opera
The SpectatorMighty Hunter Rodney Milnes Turandot (WNO, Cardiff) Simon Boccanegra (Scottish Opera, Oxford) Peter Grimes (ENON, Leeds) Lilli Lehmann maintained that the role of Norma was...
Cinema
The Spectator'Real' and real Ted Whitehead I Never Promised You A Rose Garde (Classic, Haymarket) The sight of the mentally ill makes most of us queasy, and I suppose that is one reason...
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Art
The SpectatorNon Hitchens John McEwen It should not have escaped your notice that a retrospective of Ivon Hitchens's paintings is on view in the Diploma Galleries of the Royal Academy...
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Theatre
The SpectatorHolmesiana Peter Jenkins The Crucifer of Blood (Haymarket) Holmesians take their games seriously, engage in bogus scholarship and trade in relics. I have always found their...
Television
The SpectatorOvermanning Richard Ingrams The mystery of Mr Ingrams, the elusive character who flitted briefly into a recent Fawlty Towers episode has not so far been solved. Spectator...
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High life
The SpectatorOpening night New York The piece de resistance among social events during a very social and busy week was the °Pening of Claret's, the first evening wine bar of New York....
Low life
The SpectatorMoving-in day Jeffrey Bernard It 's going to get increasingly harder to write about low life now that I've moved to my residence on top of the Berkshire "owns. Last night, for...
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Last word
The SpectatorOpera nights Geoffrey Wheatcroft An English opera-lover paying his first visit to the Scala resembles an Australian cricketer going to Lord's for the first time. We have opera...
Competition
The SpectatorNo. 1058: Far behind? Spring seems to be rather delayed this year so competitors are asked to help it along with an Address to a Belated Spring. Limit , 20 lines. Entries to...
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Chess
The SpectatorFewer books David Levy I do not know whether the poor weather is responsible, but during recent weeks the crop of chess books has been more slight than normal. Strangely...