Res Nhinu2m H`m
Two Views of Bonnard Pleasure and Repose [Hous e great Bonnard exhibition at Burlington 1 . House has already established itself, and rightly so, as the most pleasurable event......
The Menace Of The 'sixties
SIR,—Your entertaining correspondent Mr. A. D. Mac Dougall was unlucky in one of his sallies against the ladies, when he asked derisively : 'Has anyone ever heard of a great......
Plays In Verse
SIR,—In your last issue your dramatic critic observes: 'It is so long since we heard a great play in modern verse on the stage that we have quite forgotten what it feels like,......
Medicine Today
SIR,—II is to be hoped, if only for the sake of his . well-being, that Nigel Lawson will fail to find a 'good doctor' while his 'medical yardstick' of good- ness continues to be......
A Painter's Proust
M EMORY is the key to Bonnard's work. Not that he worked 'from memory' in a literal sense; his paintings rather are about memory itself, in much the same way as The Remembrance......
Sir, —i Congratulate You, And Your Readers, On The Decision
to have a regular article on 'Medicine Today.' Health has been regarded as an unimportant sideline for too long, and the disastrous results are likely to keep it increasingly in......