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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK M r Tony Blair, the Prime Minister,
The Spectatorfloated all kinds of schemes to counter terrorists, with legislation to be introduced in the autumn, including the amendment of the Human Rights Act in respect of the provisions...
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Women in Iraq
The SpectatorF or the dwindling band of us prepared to admit that we backed the war in Iraq, there appears to be yet more bad news from Baghdad. By next Monday the Iraqis are supposed to...
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DIARY
The SpectatorSIMON KELNER I have always thought I was allergic to the English countryside: too melancholic, too dark, too many Daily Mail readers. So it was with some misgivings that I...
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nOunCS
The SpectatorPETER OBORNE Blair’s frivolous and impractical plan is designed only to please the tabloids F or security reasons newspapers have been asked not to name the holiday...
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Don’t blame religion
The SpectatorTheo Hobson says that the suicide bombers are not inspired by a belief in an afterlife so much as by political ideology — like the kamikaze pilots of the second world war H...
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Allow Bakri Mohammed to spew out his rubbish
The SpectatorROD LIDDLE I remember a very clenched-buttocked editorial in The Spectator some years ago on the subject of homosexuality. The gist was this: leave individual homosexuals alone...
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All men are not equal
The SpectatorMark Steyn says there should be no agonised debate about whether Britishness is best: of course it is New Hampshire T here’s an abandoned town in Labrador called Davis Inlet....
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The real threat to Britain
The SpectatorAndrew Gilligan says that reducing our liberties in response to terrorism will make us less safe I n these frightening days, we must seek our consolations where we can; and one...
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Let them build nukes
The SpectatorBruce Anderson says it is dangerous to try to bully the Iranians into abandoning their nuclear ambitions I t would appear to be another August crisis. From Washington to Tel...
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Sardonic genius
The SpectatorGeoffrey Wheatcroft recalls his friendship with the writer Shiva Naipaul, who died 20 years ago O n the morning of 13 August 1985 I was at my desk at the London Evening Standard...
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Terror camps in the Lake District
The SpectatorWest Yorkshire chief constable Colin Cramphorn talks to Dean Godson about the hunt for the bombers C olin Cramphorn, the chief constable of West Yorkshire, occupies one of the...
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SHARED OPINION
The SpectatorFRANK JOHNSON How long before the police round up the Notting Hill Set? T wo of the suspects who appeared in court this week in connection with the attempted London bombings...
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CITY AND SUBURBAN
The SpectatorCHRISTOPHER FILDES Here’s a better way to run Gordon’s asylum: pay attention to the inmates T o put the lunatics in charge of the asylum makes admirable sense. They are the...
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AND ANOTHER THING
The SpectatorPAUL JOHNSON The saponaceous opera of newspaper dynasties and villainies A s a historian I am fascinated by dynastic rows, and as a journalist I am particularly devoted to the...
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Capital gains and losses
The SpectatorPhilip Hensher V ICTORIAN L ONDON : T HE L IFE OF A C ITY , 1840-1870 by Liza Picard Weidenfeld, £20, pp. 363, ISBN 0297847333 L ondon is such a Victorian city in its substance...
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One damned thing after another
The SpectatorStephen Abell L OVE IS S TRANGE by Joseph Connolly Faber, £12.99, pp. 495 ISBN 0571227082 ✆ £11.99 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 L ove is Strange is, like love, strange. It is...
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The day of the underdog
The SpectatorAnne Applebaum 1776: A MERICA AND B RITAIN AT W AR by David McCullough Allen Lane, £25, pp. 386, ISBN 0713998636 ✆ £23 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 T o a British reader who...
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Bogeyman but not bigot
The SpectatorC. D. C. Armstrong C ARSON : T HE M AN W HO D IVIDED I RELAND by Geoffrey Lewis Hambledon & London, £19.99, pp. 277, ISBN 1852854545 E dward Carson: even today, almost 70 years...
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Payment on delivery
The SpectatorAnthony Sattin P LACE OF R EEDS by Caitlin Davies Simon & Schuster, £12.99, pp. 436, ISBN 074325953X V £11.99 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 P icture this scene: in the...
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Arms and the man himself
The SpectatorChristopher Howse C OLLECTED P OEMS by John Meade Falkner John Meade Falkner Society, Greenmantle, Main Street, Kings Newton, Melbourne, Derbyshire DE73 8BX, £15, pp. 88, ISBN...
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Mid-life midsummer madness
The SpectatorP. J. Kavanagh Z IMMER M EN by Marcus Berkmann Little, Brown, £16.99, pp. 212, ISBN 0316728381 ✆ £14.99 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 M any things lead to addiction and...
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ARTS
The SpectatorUsing our imagination Selina Mills feels her way round an exhibition designed to appeal to the blind S ensory deprivation has, it would seem, become fashionable these days. As...
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The reality of things
The SpectatorAndrew Lambirth The Stuff of Life National Gallery, until 2 October The Westminster Retable National Gallery, until 4 September T he fourth in the National Gallery’s series of...
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Too many bangs
The SpectatorLloyd Evans Justice Old Red Lion The Reappearance of Christ in the East End White Bear T he Old Red Lion is a relaxed and civilised pub with an atmospheric little theatre...
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Flower power
The SpectatorUrsula Buchan T he rose has long been an international symbol of peace and reconciliation. A striking example is ‘Peace’, which was bred by Meilland in the south of France,...
Tainted love
The SpectatorMichael Tanner Otello Glyndebourne Boris Godunov Royal Opera O tello is the most simple of Verdi’s operas, from a narrative point of view, and in the motivations of its...
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Old school
The SpectatorMarcus Berkmann The Russian Tatiana Monogarova is beautiful both to see and hear, but she sang in what I take to be some kind of operatic Esperanto, and Desdemona’s pleadings,...
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Timely theme
The SpectatorMark Steyn The Island 12A, selected cinemas N o man is an island, at least according to John Donne. But I wonder if we’ll be able to make the same confident assumption the day...
Mystery man
The SpectatorMichael Vestey I t’s strange to think that John Le Mesurier has been dead for 22 years, a reminder that came in an affectionate profile of his life as a character actor, Conked...
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Crash landing
The SpectatorJames Delingpole U nfortunately I was in deepest Wales on the day when TV made me briefly famous so I missed all the phone calls from friends saying nice things. I did pop into...
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Perchance to eat
The SpectatorSimon Courtauld I have recently acquired a charming little book by Ambrose Heath called From Creel to Kitchen . Published in 1939, it offers recipes for 20 species of...
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Papa on a boat
The SpectatorTaki On board S/Y Bushido In the late summer of that year we lived in a house in a village that looked across the river and the plain and the mountains. In the bed of the...
Poor reception
The SpectatorJeremy Clarke I n summer we let half the house out to paying visitors, who generally stay for a week, from Saturday to Saturday. Before the guests arrive we always worry about...
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SPECTATOR WINE CLUB
The SpectatorSIMON HOGGART T his is an exciting selection — eight wines from six countries offered by Corney & Barrow, though it could be too exciting for the company’s MD, Adam BrettSmith....
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SPECTATOR SPORT
The SpectatorWigan’s peers FRANK KEATING P remiership soccer begins today. The poor prancing zillionaires do not get much respite from it, do they? Nor, alas, do we. Newcastle United at...
YOUR PROBLEMS SOLVED
The SpectatorQ. I am shortly to attend a wedding. My problem is that I feel uneasy about kissing the bride as she stands in the receiving line because I am very aware of the dozens, if not...