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NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorT HERE is no satisfaction for anyone—except perhaps for Government supporters who desired to dissociate themselves from the Government and had not an opportunity of speaking— in...
Between Namsos and Narvik
The SpectatorAt the moment of going to press no reliable news had come through as to the military position north of Namsos in the direction of the long mountainous route that leads to...
Precautions in Holland
The SpectatorHolland is taking no chances, and after the stern measures she has already adopted to deal with enemies within, has now for the fourth time since the outbreak of war cancelled...
Italy's Intentions
The SpectatorItaly's attitude has not materially changed in the past week, and her intentions remain a matter of speculation. Her newspapers and some of her politicians continue to bandy...
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Swedish Critics
The SpectatorA section of the Swedish Press has endeavoured to take an objective view of the British withdrawal from central Norway, but few of the newspapers have drawn the most obvious...
Trade with Russia
The SpectatorLord Halifax received M. Maisky, the Soviet Ambassador, on Wednesday. The negotiations with Russia in regard to a trade agreement seem to have been held up since the last reply...
Losses at Sea
The SpectatorIn the recent operations in and off Norway there is one achievement at least which affords ground for nothing but satis- faction—the successful evacuation and transportation of...
Labour's Home Policy
The SpectatorThe Labour Party has issued a spirited declaration on home policy, for submission to the Party Conference in Bournemouth next week. It reasserts its belief in the creation by...
The Maker of Modern Portugal
The SpectatorIf there is any country in the world today which enjoys the advantages of being ruled by a philosopher-king it is s - crely Portugal, where for twelve years Dr. Antonio de Oli...
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The Week in Parliament
The SpectatorOur Parliamentary Correspondent writes : Wednesday was indeed a memorable day. It began quietly with a somewhat discursive speech by Mr. Herbert Morrison, who, nevertheless,...
* * It is widely felt that the key to
The Spectatorthe situation is held by the Labour leaders. They cannot form a Government by them- selves. The question is whether they will join with anyone else. It certainly seemed from Mr....
A remarkable situation has been created. The Government can still
The Spectatordepend on a bodyguard of faithful supporters who will accept anything from the hands of Mr. Chamberlain. But there is scarcely a single one of these who carries the slightest...
The Employed and the Unemployed
The SpectatorThis country will not have reached its maximum war effort until all employable men and women have been absorbed into war work of some kind, either in the fighting Services or in...
Savings—Voluntary or Compulsory ?
The SpectatorThe raising of £140,000,000 in 23 weeks by savings certifi- cates and defence bonds is undoubtedly a remarkable achieve- ment, forming a substantial contribution towards the...
Contributors are reminded that no manuscripts can lie returned unless
The Spectatoran adequately stamped envelope is vaclosed. Readers are reminded of the necessity of ordering ' The Spectator" regularly, since newsagents can no )nger be supplied on...
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THE CONDUCT OF THE WAR
The SpectatorTHE debate in the House of Commons on Tuesday and Wednesday was an inquest in two fields. Its imme- diate occasion was what has been called, with undesirable exaggeration, the...
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DIPLOMACY IN SHACKLES
The SpectatorA LETTER published in Tuesday's Daily Telegraph touches the fringe, or rather more than the fringe, of a subject of capital importance to which public attention is all too...
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As for the business, or diversion, of Cabinet-making, it is
The Spectatorbeing carried rather unnecessarily far. There are, of course, a number of administrative positions which it is important to see filled by the best men, but the matter of...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorT HE return of Sir Stafford Cripps to this country after a world-tour in which he has visited among other countries, Russia, China, India, Japan and the United States, is an...
By a lamentable oversight, for which I have done figurative
The Spectatorpenance, a Latin quotation appeared in this column last week in a flagrantly incorrect form. It should have read C/arum et venerabile nomen Gentibus, et multum nostrae quod...
A naval officer just back from Norway tells a story
The Spectatorthat throws an interesting sidelight on the speed of modern communications. At 5.30 p.m. one afternoon a Norwegian saw a submarine steaming up the coast. He ski-ed to the...
The Editor of the Daily Sketch, defending (in a letter
The Spectatorto 7 - ; e Times) the publication by his paper of a statement that Capta,n Peter Fleming had been killed in Notway, writes: "The definite statement that Captain Fleming had been...
The latest set of unemployment figures has produced, as every
The Spectatorset does produce, the explanation that in reality the situation is much better than appeors, because the figures include a number of people who have only been out of a job for a...
In awarding only moderate damages against the Daily Worker for
The Spectatorlibels on Sir Walter Citrine and other Labour leaders, Mr. Justice Stable explained on Monday that he took that course because he did not want the damages to have the effect of...
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THE WAR SURVEYED: PERSPECTIVE
The SpectatorBy STRATEGICUS T HE public post-mortem upon the evacuation of the Allied troops from southern Norway, inevitable and necessary as it was, tends to add widespread loss of morale...
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THE FUTURE OF GERMANY
The SpectatorBy OTTO STRASSER [Herr Otto Strasser joined the National Socialist Party in 1925 and left it in 1930, because he became convinced that Hitler in reality cared much less about a...
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IS HITLER AMERICA'S BUSINESS?
The SpectatorBy JOHN PERRY WOOD [The following article, headed "Is lustice 'None of Our Business ' ?" appeared in a recent issue of the "Los Angeles Times," and is an instructive indication...
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DANGEROUS ILLUSIONS: A LETTER TO MR. GANDHI
The SpectatorBy RANJEE G. SHAHANI DEAR GANDHIJI,- Your politics are not only derived from religion, but are, in essence, at one with it. No doubt about this. Religious preoccupations...
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HEALTH IN WAR-TIME
The SpectatorBy OUR MEDICAL CORRESPONDENT ESPITE the enormous advance of mechanisation, both in the preparations for war and the actual waging of it, and also of the advantages conferred by...
A SOLDIER'S ENGLAND By MA RK INGRAM W E all sat round
The Spectatorthe billiard-room in the Officers' Mess, with the billiard table shrouded in white in our midst, while the Major, a Falstaff in all things but courage, lectured us on conditions...
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A MAN OF THE PEOPLE
The SpectatorBy J. J. MALLON T HE death of George Lansbury brings a lump to the thr , at. He was always a kindly and lovable man. But in his hey-day his partisanship was often extreme. He...
IMPORTANT NOTICE DIRECT subscribers who are changing their addresses are
The Spectatorasked to notify THE SPECTATOR office BEFORE MIDDAY on MONDAY OF EACH WEEK. The name, the previous address to which the paper has been sent and receipt reference number should be...
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PEOPLE AND THINGS
The SpectatorBy HAROLD NICOLSON HAVE been reading Mr. Christopher Hollis' anthology I on Neutral War Aims, and have been distressed by the essay contributed by Daniele Vare. Signor Vare is...
It is distressing also to find a man of Signor
The SpectatorVare's intellec- tual integrity repeating the legend that Italy was badly treated by France and Great Britain (to say nothing of the United States) after the last war. This...
It is evident, of course, that Signor Vare expects us
The Spectatorto cast aside our wonted hypocrisy and to surrender the fortresses which guard our communications with our Empire. It is not quite clear whether Gibraltar, Malta, the Suez Canal...
I admit, none the less, that these concessions were made
The Spectatorgrudgingly, and that in Paris Mr. Lloyd George and Monsieur Clemenceau did not treat their Italian colleagues with the respect due to the representatives of a Great Power and a...
It is forgotten also that the major wrangle between Italy
The Spectatorand the Allied and Associated Powers arose, not over something which had been promised to Italy by the Treaty of London, but over areas which, under that Treaty, had been...
The Italian people have been taught to forget these great
The Spectatorrewards and to believe that they were promised vast colonial territories which have since been denied them by France and ourselves. They were not promised colonial territories,...
He would contend, of course, that France and Great Britain
The Spectatorfailed to carry out their promises under the Treaty of London. Yet the United States was never a party to, and indeed highly disapproved of, that Treaty, and in accepting the...
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ART
The SpectatorThe Royal Academy WHAT one has a right to expect from the Royal Academy a summary, a recapitulation, of the year's art. Such it providtd, more or less, a hundred . years ago....
STAGE AND SCREEN
The SpectatorTHE CINEMA " , It's a Date." At the Leicester Square.—“ My Son My Son!" At the Odeon. DEANNA DURBIN remains so much, and indeed so pleasantly, Deanna Durbin that one's first...
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FEDERAL UNION SI11, — The Committee of experts which Mr. Spender mentions
The Spectatorconsidered many types of Federal constitutions, and it is im- possible within the limits of a letter to detail the various alter- natives that might be adopted. It is true,...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The Spectator[In view of the paper shortage it is essential that letters on these pages should be brief. We are anxious not to reduce the number of letters, but unless they are shorter they...
Ste,—In his review in The Spectator for May 3rd last,
The Spectatorunder the caption of "That Blessed Word," Mr. Brogan poured scorn upon the majority of the " Symposium " upon "Federal Union" which it has been my privilege to edit and upon all...
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SIR,—Let us all agree with Mr. L. H. Callendar that
The Spectatorthe dis- cussing of the best books is endlessly fascinating, and add, affords a pleasure only second to the reading of them. That is, of course, provided a kindly tolerance is...
SIR,—" Tastes in reading," as Mr. Callendar has noted, do
The Spectator"notoriously differ." But many of your readers must, I fancy, have felt as astonished as I did to read his further statement, for it not even a question ; "who but a boy or...
THE BEST BOOKS IN THE WORLD
The SpectatorSIR,—The airy superiority of Mr. Callendar's letter is a little difficult to accept. Happy, indeed, but how precocious, the adolescent of is, who could fully appreciate the...
SIR,—" Federal Union" are apparently to be the blessed words
The Spectatorto be used to replace "Collective Security," to ensure that we shall again weaken ourselves after this war, and thereby make it quite certain that another war will soon take...
THE GERMAN PEOPLE
The SpectatorSIR,—I was very glad to see in your introductory news comments a reference to Mr. Duff Cooper's St. George's Day speech, deprecating his somewhat extremist and violent remarks...
BELGIUM AND EIRE •
The SpectatorSra,—Your contributor, "Janus," in a recent issue of The Spectator, informed your readers that Belgium's defensive pre- parations, according to her Prime Minister, Mr. Pierlot,...
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"THE WITCH IN THE WOOD"
The SpectatorSnt,—I am as glad to retract such injustice as, in my review of The Witch in the Wood, I appear to have done to Miss Rebecca West and other English critics, as I am reassured to...
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorThe Country Wins Three delightfully ingenuous views about country things may be recorded from three very different parts of the island. A land girl of my acquaintance reports...
The Superior Hill Gardeners who swop experiences of the losses—some
The Spectatoronly just appearing—from the hard winter, are multiplying examples of the comparative immunity of upland as opposed to valley gardens. In one lovely and well-protected valley...
THE COST OF MARRIAGE
The SpectatorSta,—Mr. G. H. Gretton says that TM let population be checked by the misery of those who raise large families" is a Malthusian precept. He errs. The precept of Malthus and the...
Gallant Robins It would appear from more than one letter
The Spectatorwhich has reached me that observers wonder at the sight of a cock robin feeding the hen. Among my robin acquaintance was a pair that used to come regularly to a window for food....
Primrose Weeds
The SpectatorAnger against the nightingale in Hertfordshire may be paralleled with an example of animosity against the primrose in Devonshire. An admirer of this sweetest of wild flowers,...
SICAGERRAK AND ICATTEGAT
The SpectatorSia,—I cannot for the life of me see why " Janus " finds the "Skagerrak and Kattegat" advertisement "astonishing." To me it looks much the same as its predecessors in this "Beer...
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Idolatry
The SpectatorHoly Images. By Edwyn Bevan. (Allen and Unwin. 7S. 6d.) Now that the Hebraic Christianity of the Puritans, which derived its inspiration almost as much from the Old as from the...
Books of the Day
The SpectatorThe Wealth of Nations The Conditions of Economic Progress. By Colin Clark. (Mac- millan. 25s.) MR. C.LARR occupies what must surely be a unique position in the apparatus of...
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Blue Pencil
The SpectatorPublic School Slang. By Morris Marples. (Constable. los.) ENGLAND, as every good Nazi knows, is a country of savages, and Mr. Marples has done a service to the invader,...
Ersatz Journals
The SpectatorAn Eighteenth Century Journal. By John Hampden. (Mac- millan. t6s.) THE appearance of Mr. John Hampden's Eighteenth Century 7ourrial is well designed to kindle expectancy....
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Fiction
The SpectatorThe Backward Son. By Stephen Spender. (Hogarth Press. 75. 6d.) Myers. (Heinemann. 8s. 6d.) MR. STEPHEN SPENDER, in his first novel, and Mr. Joyce Cary, in his sixth, offer us...
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The Thirties. By Malcolm Muggeridge. (Hamish Hamilton. 9s. 6d.) MR.
The SpectatorMUGGEIUDGE has earned his reputation as a critic ; but his latest book, The Thirties, will not enhance it. The history of the last ten years afforded almost boundless...
Shorter Notices
The SpectatorThe Seven Chars of Chelsea. By Celia Fremlin. (Methuen. IT is possible that this book's somewhat catchpenny title, toger with the comic charwoman on its dust wrapper, may cause...
Tins "Federal Tract No. " is one of the latest
The Spectatorcontributions to the voluminous literature on federal union. To those who regard that departure as a practical proposition it will be welcome as a clear and succinct statement...
A Ring at the Door. By George Sava. (Faber. 8s.
The Spectator6d.) Boom written by doctors have had a good run for their money in recent years, and generally they have more than fashion to recom- mend them. Doctors see men and women...
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Let My People Co. By Cedric Belfrage. (Gollancz. 75. 6d.)
The SpectatorGOT up like a squat and blurbless novel, this is in fact a most interesting and painful biography. There is a complete lack of documentation, but even though some of the...
Who's Who in the Wars. By Duncan Miller and Walter
The SpectatorGoetz. (Peter Davies. 6s.) Who's Who in the Wars is a collection of topical clerihews by Mr. Miller, with illustrations by Mr. Goetz. The illustrations steal the show. The...
REPORT ON COMPETITION NO. 33
The SpectatorIT was recently recorded in our columns that the first question put to a certain candidate for a commission in the Guards was "Do you hunt?" Prizes were accordingly offered for...
THE Light Brigade has now, of course, been mechanised. Prizes
The Spectatorof book tokens for £2 2S. and LI Is. are offered for a poem (of not more than 24 lines) commemorating a dashing attack by the Brigade's tanks on a strong point in the Siegfried...
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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS WE have heard a great deal since the war about closed economic systems and closed financial markets and the opportunities they afford for judicious management. We...
COMPANY MEETINGS
The SpectatorSPILLERS, LIMITED A SATISFACTORY YEAR THE CHAIRMAN'S REPORT THE Right Hon. Sir Malcolm A. Robertson, Chairman of Spillers, Ltd., presiding at the annual general meeting of the...
F. FRANCIS AND SONS
The SpectatorENCOURAGING CURRENT BUSINESS THE 39th ordinary general meeting of F. Francis and Sons, Ltd., was held on May 7th at Southern House, Cannon Street, London, E.C. Mr. John Ismay,...
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COMPANY MEETINGS
The SpectatorRIO TINTO COMPANY SITUATION IN SPAIN THE sixty-seventh ordinary general meeting of Rio Tinto Co., Ltd., was held on Friday, May 3rd, in London. Sir Francis L. Joseph, K.B.E.,...
COMPANY MEETING
The SpectatorCALCUTTA ELECTRIC CORPORATION THE 43rd annual general meeting of the Calcutta Electric Supply Cor- poration, Ltd., was held on May 6th at Victoria House, Bloomsbury Square,...