19 JANUARY 1991

Page 4

PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK

The Spectator

Dr Gorbachev and Comrade Stalin T he House of Commons voted, by a majority of 477, in effect for war against Saddam Hussein, with 57 MPs opposed to conflict and 31 abstentions....

Page 5

SP ECTAT OR 56 Doughty Street, London WC1N 2LL

The Spectator

Telephone: 071-405 1706; Telex: 27124; Fax: 071-242 0603 NO EXCUSES B udapest, Prague, Lhasa, Peking and now Vilnius. Tomorrow, perhaps Riga, Tallinn, Kiev and, who knows,...

THE SPECTATOR

The Spectator

SUBSCRIBE TODAY - Save 18% on the Cover Price! RATES 12 Months 6 Months UK 0 £66.00 0 £33.00 Europe (airmail) 0 £77.00 0 £38.50 USA Airspeed° US 899 0 $49.50 Rest of...

Page 6

POLITICS

The Spectator

The performing seals use their training to avoid debate NOEL MALCOLM I t is unthinkable that we could go to war without having a proper debate in Parliament first.' So said...

Page 7

DIARY

The Spectator

FREDERIC RAPHAEL T he proposition says some- thing" is identical with: It has a particular relation to reality, whatever this may be.' Who can fail to recognise Wittgenstein...

Page 8

ANOTHER VOICE

The Spectator

Unlikely to be quite such a field day for the punishment freaks AUBERON WAUGH B y the time this article appears I will be in Czechoslovakia on a short holiday, unless...

Page 9

GOING UP IN SMOKE

The Spectator

American is debt-ridden as it goes to war. Nicholas von Hoffman on the price which may have to be paid — in dollars, lives and foreign policy Washington FROM August to...

Page 10

Correction

The Spectator

IN LAST week's issue John Keegan, in an article entitled 'The instrument of catas- trophe', wrote that Julie Burchill opposed war in the Gulf when she appeared on an Any...

Page 11

THE RELATIONSHIP UNDER FIRE

The Spectator

Nicholas Henderson on the Gulf crisis, Nato and Britain's commitment to Europe THE GULF crisis, whatever else it has done, has given a fillip to the relationship between the...

One hundred years ago

The Spectator

A DOG'S AFFECTION AND CRAFTINESS [TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR"' Sir: While living in the sunny and friendly little town of Adelaide, near Fort Beaufort, I had gained the...

Page 12

BATTLE STATIONS

The Spectator

John Simpson waits in Iraq for the bombs to start falling Baghdad THE cars carrying the British ambassador and his staff turned the corner and dis- appeared from sight,...

THE SUITS

The Spectator

Michael Heath

Page 13

Unlettered

The Spectator

A reader received the following letter from her mortgage company: Dear Mrs Standen, Despite previous reminders your account is still overdrawn. There is a debit balance of...

Page 14

THE KING HUSSEIN CONNECTION

The Spectator

Ruth Rees talks to exiled Kuwaitis who feel betrayed by the King of Jordan LAST week I was the only woman at one of the dewaniahs held every evening in London since Iraq...

Page 15

BUSINESS AS USUAL

The Spectator

Gerda Cohen is surprised by the Israelis' apparent lack of concern as war approaches Jerusalem `WHAT war mood? There is none.' Mr Kohavi, relentless talker and grumbler, was...

Page 17

ANGLO-IRISH SURVIVORS

The Spectator

David Lovibond on the remnants of the Ascendancy Castletownshend, West Cork THE sun is setting behind Slieve Bloom mountain, and in the gloaming the whispering shades of...

A DICTIONARY OF CANT

The Spectator

SELF-ESTEEM. The cant is a cant of omission. A 'self-esteem problem' is used exclusively to mean a person's sense of worthlessness, and irrational rejection of his true worth....

Page 18

UNPLEASANT CIVILISATION

The Spectator

Simon Helfer observes that the old and the new Essex are happy to rub along together WERE one bent on suicide, an efficient way to confirm the atrociousness of exist- ance...

Page 19

If symptoms persist...

The Spectator

THE religious sometimes ask what would happen if Christ were to return to earth. In this country, at least, the answer is clear: he would be placed under a section of the Mental...

Page 20

REPORTING THE LAST CRUSADE

The Spectator

The media: Paul Johnson discusses its role in the Gulf during and after a war UNDERSTANDABLE anxiety is felt by the British and American authorities about the likely behaviour...

Page 21

Changing the guard . . .

The Spectator

ANOTHER splendid Hong Kong row, rumbling, for the most part, below the surface, involves the oldest and grandest of the trading houses, Jardine Matheson. Some years ago Jardine...

Up in the air

The Spectator

NOTHING could be more typical of Hong Kong, or of the state of play with the mainland government, than the great air- port row. Anyone who, swerving in to land at Kai Tak, has...

Bumpy ride

The Spectator

HONG KONG is the only financial centre where a run on a bank has been set off by a broken-down bus. The bus's passengers got out into pouring rain, and took shelter under the...

. . . Guarding the guards

The Spectator

I WOULD be more afraid of what could be done with the arbitrary powers of the independent Commission Against Corrup- tion. This was set up to cope with police- men who thought...

Room at the top

The Spectator

ONE of Hong Kong's new hotels got off to a poor start — so poor, indeed, that the owners, shattered by disastrous figures, decided to call in consultants. Their advice was...

CITY AND SUBURBAN

The Spectator

Hong Kong prepares for an invasion by General Montgomery CHRISTOPHER FILDES M Hong Kong y friends here are bracing them- selves for the General Montgomery marti- ni. Named...

Page 22

Sir: Whatever the limitations of Mr Gar- ston's imagination (Letters,

The Spectator

5 January) I read Candida Crewe's piece about chir- opody with great interest. I took an equal interest in Amanda Craig's article about the licensed abortionist, though I...

Abortion trauma

The Spectator

Sir: I, too, admired Amanda Craig's article on abortion. One wishes the ghastly ex- perience finished there. I work as a post- abortion counsellor and every week listen to...

From the surgeon

The Spectator

Sir: 'Poor woman, poor potential human' (5 January) — these are the emotions we all feel about abortion, but how sad that the text following this title concentrated on the...

Fancy footwork

The Spectator

Sir: Chiropodists are no doubt fair game for your wittier contributors at all times of year, but in the season of goodwill Candida Crewe (`The sour smell of chiropody', 22/29...

LETTERS Remember 1944

The Spectator

Sir: In his article on the Gulf (`The instrument of catastrophe', 12 January), John Keegan draws comparison with the Normandy battle in 1944, but I wonder if he can get away...

Sir: Amanda Craig's article raises some interesting moral and ethical

The Spectator

issues for both the medical and the journalistic pro- fessions. Did she, for instance, seek the permission of the women whose abortions she so gloatingly observed? Surely...

Page 23

Mote and beam

The Spectator

Sir: When one writer attacks another writer's style, he is taking a risk, for he is implying that he himself is not only far superior on the page, but also that he should be...

Georgia not on his mind

The Spectator

Sir: In his review of Three Sisters (15 December) Christopher Edwards finds the production remarkably unChekhovian, ' particularly since the director, Robert Sturua, is 'the...

Appeal

The Spectator

Sir: The Lithuanian Association of Great Britain supports the Republic of Lithuania in her struggle for democracy, freedom and independence. We need money and many other kinds...

Nostalgia for languages

The Spectator

Sir: I was not at Winchester but at a small (local authority) co-educational grammar school in the provinces, yet I too well remember the German songs we learned and sung. This...

Who's kidding?

The Spectator

Sir: I would have entered Jaspistos's com- petition (5 January) asking for parodies of Private Eye had you not prematurely pub- lished what I presume to be Frederic Raphael's...

School prayer

The Spectator

Sir: Driving down the main street of Midvale, New Jersey, the other day I saw an arresting notice on a board outside the local school: 'In case of War, the ban on School Prayer...

The Raphael effect

The Spectator

Sir: Your diarist called Raphael referred to me (12 January) as a 'hired assassin called Bernard' because of an article I contri- buted to the Independent Magazine about the...

Page 25

BOOKS

The Spectator

Lubricating world history Anthony Sampson THE PRIZE by Daniel Yergin Simon & Schuster, £20, pp. 826 W hen I want some oil, I'll find it at my grocer's, Clemenceau was quoted...

Page 27

The victory went to champagne

The Spectator

Richard Lamb THE DUEL: HITLER vs. CHURCHILL 10 May-31 July 1940 by John Lukacs The Bodley Head, £14.99, pp.275 P rofessor Lukacs analyses the 80 traumatic first days of...

The doubts of a master

The Spectator

Fiona Maddocks MUSIC SOUNDED OUT by Alfred Brendel Robson Books, £16.95, pp.266 W e had boarded the same London- bound train. He was alone, unremarkable in a black macintosh,...

Page 28

Retrenchment

The Spectator

Care? Of course I care! . . . Only less. Something less now. It's the same way, I would guess, with the trees, maple and oak (taking them year by year) losing their leaves. They...

Climb every mountain till you find your dream

The Spectator

Philip Glazebrook AT HOME IN THE HIMALAYAS by Christina Noble Collins, £15, pp. 210 F rom the opening pages of this book, which describe Miss Noble's first encoun- ter with the...

Page 29

A friend of a friend of the artist

The Spectator

Christopher Lloyd SEURAT: A BIOGRAPHY by John Rewald Thames & Hudson, £45, pp. 240 J ohn Rewald can fairly be described as the founder of modern Impressionist stu- dies in so...

Page 30

Transference

The Spectator

for Graham Davies A moving tableau, so to speak. On the same couch, week after week, Talking of absence, I can see Its likeness bearing down on me: The ceiling blankness. But...

Genuflection or the dirty joke

The Spectator

William Scammell JAMES JOYCE: POEMS AND SHORTER WRITINGS edited by Richard Ellmann, A. Walton Litz and John Whittier- Ferguson Faber, £14.99, pp. 300 F or he's a jolly queer...

Page 31

Not as Simple as all that

The Spectator

Charles Moore A DUBIOUS CODICIL by Michael Wharton Chatto & Windus, f15.99, pp. 261 T his is a poetical book. It deals with desire and madness and rural beauty and human...

Page 32

Skyscraper Dissuasion

The Spectator

Wavering on a ledge, Your life choked with bile, Never drop off the edge Enemies would smile! Benjamin Ivry

A Lord Cardigan for this century

The Spectator

Sidney Vines LOOPY by George Kennard Leo Cooper, £12.95, pp.144 L oopy (alias Lieutenant Colonel Sir George Kennard Bart) is elegant, witty, and courageous. He is also...

A selection of recent paperbacks

The Spectator

Fiction: Run Man Run and Cast the First Stone, by Chester Himes, Allison & Busby, £5.99 each The Cure at Troy, by Seamus Heaney, Faber, £4.99 Other People's Trades, by Primo...

Page 33

ARTS

The Spectator

Theatre 1 With eyes as big as saucers Beryl Bainbridge recalls life back- stage at the Liverpool Playhouse, now threatened with closure the Star Theatre, opened on 11...

Page 34

Exhibitions

The Spectator

Derain: the Late Work (Museum of Modern Art, Oxford, till 17 March) Oddly revered Giles Auty I have seen a great deal of painting which does not appeal to me at all. Its...

Page 35

Opera

The Spectator

Capriccio (Covent Garden) Very stylish Rupert Christiansen T his will be a year of recession for opera as much as for anything else — a year in which a much-advertised boom...

Page 36

Music

The Spectator

Time flies Peter Phillips R oger Norrington's justification for taking Beethoven's Seventh Symphony rather faster than we might have been expecting on television the other day...

Theatre 2

The Spectator

The Homecoming (Comedy) All Things Nice (Royal Court) Territorial manoeuvres Christopher Edwards H arold Pinter's The Homecoming can still generate the sense of unease that...

Page 37

Cinema

The Spectator

The Fool (`U', Curzon West End) Too many stitches in time Mark Amory A ccurate period detail is very depress- ing, which is a pity as it is something that the British are...

Page 38

Gardens

The Spectator

Going to seed Ursula Buchan A s predictable in timing and appear- ance as the travel brochure tempting us to ever more exotic holiday destinations (`This year, why not get...

Page 40

Television

The Spectator

Spoilt for choice Martyn Harris I have been watching American televi- sion all week, though I'm not sure if 'watching' is the right word. I witnessed it; it swept over me. I...

High life

The Spectator

Too quiet for comfort Taki he ladies who lunch, those social X-rays made famous by Tom Wolfe in his Bonfire novel, have been awfully quiet since the start of the new year. If...

Page 41

New life

The Spectator

Blues night Zenga Longmore W henever there is a knock on the front door, Omalara launches into what has become her 'door ritual'. She will spin around three times like a...

Low life

The Spectator

Cottage loafer Jeffrey Bernard T his is a far cry from depressing West Hampstead and I thank God for it. I'm staying in a village called Stacey in Norfolk with a friend,...

Page 42

ORDER FORM SPECTATOR WINE CLUB

The Spectator

c/o Longford Wines, Longford Farmhouse, Spithurst, Barcombe, Lewes, E. Sussex BN8 5ED. Telephone: Barcombe (0273) 400232 Fax: (0273) 400624 Price No. Value 12 bots. £51.00...

SPECTATOR WINE CLUB

The Spectator

Something of an annus mirabilis Auberon Waugh A t this time of year we need red wine which is full of taste and energy but not too expensive, as practically nobody has his...

Page 43

A GOOD ten years since the first influx of the

The Spectator

Vietnamese boat people, it seems extraordinary that there is so little culinary trace of them in this country. In the Eighties, during which time over 10,000 Vietnamese came in...

Solution to 'A Christmas Jumbo'

The Spectator

' C ' H R 1 4 S s T M ' A S 2 T I B D E 9 G ' 93 CE T 2 1 9•1 G 1 5 ='• VASH IUF H 2 PARRAKEE N 2 tV INEFAI-CO SID . ED simig i 32 1 IC 3 Y a hECE...

Page 44

CHESS

The Spectator

Battles Raymond Keene T his year ' s Foreign and Colonial tournament at Hastings has undoubtedly been the finest of the series, with a huge crop of superb fighting games. Even...

COMPETITION

The Spectator

Dirty dozen Jaspistos 12 YEAR OLD SCOTCH WHISKY I n Competition No. 1659 you were in- vited to incorporate the following words, in any order, into a plausible piece of prose:...

Page 45

No. 1662: Ursine

The Spectator

There is a stage direction in The Winter's Tale: 'Exit, pursued by a bear.' You are invited to supply (maximum 16 lines of verse or 150 words of prose) an extract from an...

CROSSWORD 992: Noteworthy, too by Jac

The Spectator

A first prize of £20 and two further prizes of £10 (or, for UK solvers, a copy of Chambers English Dictionary — ring the word `Dictionary') for the first three correct solutions...

Page 47

SPECTATOR SPORT

The Spectator

Ack-ack stopped play Frank Keating THE FRENCH have been fast to suggest it might be in bad taste to continue with the Five-Nations rugby championship if the guns start...