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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorM r John Major, the Prime Minister, made a speech in front of a portrait of King George II; he said that he hoped the words `peace comes dropping slow' came from the Irish poet...
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POLITICS
The SpectatorConservatives sense a turning point, but Mr Major should beware of a false spring BORIS JOHNSON A when the salmon somehow know the time has come to travel upstream to spawn,...
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DIARY
The SpectatorRICHARD LITTLEJOHN I t had to happen. A hospital for hypochondriacs is to open in Norway. `Hypochondriacs may only imagine they are ill, but they really do suffer,' said Dr Ing-...
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ANOTHER VOICE
The SpectatorTime for desperados to gather on the shadow line AUBERON WAUGH h e exact point at which intelligent, humane, educated people decide that our democratic system has failed will...
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FORGET MR BLAIR, LOOK AT THE RECORD
The SpectatorWhat will a Labour government be like? Just look at Labour councils, argues Leo McKinstiy. He should know: he was on one and, until publication of this article, worked for...
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ANIMAL FARM REVISITED
The SpectatorRadek Sikorski, who has recently restored a family estate in Poland, discovers that his fellow landed gently are mostly ex-communist officials Dwor Chobielin LAST MONTH, I...
Will of the week
The SpectatorMr Thomas GIRTIN, of 177 Kingston Hill, Kingston upon Thames, Surrey, formerly of 63 Church Street, Old Isle- worth, Middlesex, the writer and wit, who died on May 24th last,...
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A MAN FOR ALL REASONS
The SpectatorA profile of Lord Wyatt of Weeford, chairman of the Tote, and the News of the World's Voice of Reason LAST Sunday the News of the World devoted eight pages to the sordid revela-...
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CARNIVAL OF THE ANIMAL LIBBERS
The SpectatorAlasdair Palmer on how the provisional wing of the animal rights lobby is poised to take over from the IRA as Britain's main terrorist threat ON 16 SEPTEMBER last year, two...
One hundred years ago
The SpectatorTHE CULTURKAMPF in Germany has come to a final end, the Reichstag having voted that the Jesuits shall be readmitted into the Empire. There is some doubt whether the Federal...
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TAKEOVER OF THE TEENAGE SCRIBBLERS
The SpectatorDavid Martens is alarmed by the extreme fashionability of journalism among the bright young things: who will do the real work? ENGLAND in the year 2000 will be a nation not of...
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If symptoms
The Spectatorpersist. . . THE MORNING before my clinic in the prison last week, I was woken at three o'clock by the irruption into my dreams of the sound of my next-door neigh- bour's car...
THE SECRET KILLER OF THE MIDDLE CLASSES
The SpectatorRebecca Nicolson, whose mother, uncles and maternal grandparents were all alcoholics, wonders why drink is no longer demonised WHEN a famous figure from the arts world dies of...
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AND ANOTHER THING
The SpectatorThe mysterious, almost mystic, characteristics of a left-wing newspaper PAUL JOHNSON T he removal of Peter Preston as editor of the Guardian was inevitable and, in the...
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CITY AND SUBURBAN
The SpectatorOut on a wing with the wizard of dribble Tony Blair takes the field CHRISTOPHER FILDES F ootball clubs have a place of their own in my Bad Investment Guide. They have two...
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LETTERS No Israeli conspiracy
The SpectatorSir: In the weeks since you published my brief letter (29 October) in response to the article by William Dalrymple (`If I forget Thee, 0 Jerusalem', 22 October), which alleged a...
Darwin was right
The SpectatorSir: Most aspiring authors have their stuff turned down from time to time, and it takes a special kind of self-importance to dignify a rejection slip as a sinister intention to...
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Theatre roles
The SpectatorSir: Widespread outrage has been expressed because it was recently disclosed that a surgeon had supervised the removal of an appendix by a nurse. The most vocif- erous protests...
Whose nose?
The SpectatorSir: How dare Lord Charteris call the Duchess of York vulgar (`Saying what everyone thinks', 7 January)? She was recently here to visit a home for retarded children, was much...
Obfuscation corner
The SpectatorSir: Understandably, perhaps, in view of his background, Oleg Gordievsky (The Guardian's KGB tactics', 14 January) mis- takes reasoned criticism — commonplace in a democratic...
Vanity case
The SpectatorSir: Mr Alistair Home (Letters, 14 Jan- uary) suggests that Jeremy Paxman should follow up his article by another: to advise distinguished politicians, generals, heads of...
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CENTRE POINT
The SpectatorI claim my place in the Valhalla of feminist heroes SIMON JENKINS I have resigned from the Oxford and Cambridge club. I did so because the club does not admit women to full...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorAnother guided tour-de-force Philip Hensher THE AFTERLIFE by John Updike Hamish Hamilton, £14.99, pp. 315 U pdike (one of those competent American writers I can't really read)...
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Never mind the quality, feel the depth
The SpectatorNigel Spivey THE CORRESPONDENCE OF THOMAS HOBBES edited by Noel Malcolm OUP, 2 volumes, £60 each, pp. 586, pp. 510 T hese are not volumes for the vulgar mob. As their editor...
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Is this the union he wanted?
The SpectatorJohn Laughland JEAN MONNET: THE FIRST STATESMAN OF INDEPENDENCE by Francois Duchene, with a foreword by George W. Ball W.W. Norton, £22, pp. 478 I f ever there was an homme du...
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Hull is other people
The SpectatorTom Hiney GAGARIN & I by Stephen Blanchard Chatto, £9.99, pp. 249 My aunt and mother in the kitchen — a wet mid-week morning, the radio playing and steam lifting from the...
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Gladstone's heir apparent
The SpectatorAndrew Roberts THE LOST PRIME MINISTER: A LIFE OF SIR CHARLES DILKE by David Nicholls Hambledon Press, £25, pp. 386 S ir Charles Dilke was the Tony Benn of his day. He was the...
How they beat the miners
The SpectatorPaul Foot THE ENEMY WITHIN: MI5, MAXWELL AND THE SCARGILL AFFAIR by Seamus Milne Verso, f15.99, pp. 344 T his is a book about spies. Since its author is a journalist on the...
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Think and think and think again
The SpectatorPeter Jay CAPITALISM WITH A HUMAN FACE by Samuel Brittan Edward Elgar, £49.95, £15.95, pp. 320 S ince he was dubbed, Sir Samuel has appropriately enough moved two squares...
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Words from the Great White Shark
The SpectatorHilary Corke PATRICK WHITE: LE 1 I ERS edited by David Marr Cape, £35, pp. 677 P atrick White always attracted the most towering quotes for his dust-jackets. `Stands in the...
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ARTS
The SpectatorThe Barbican The danger of playing for money Terry Hands B aroness O'Cathain has finally left the Barbican. Not only is her desk cleared, but tickets which used to bear her...
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Exhibitions
The SpectatorNicolas Poussin (Royal Academy, till 9 April) Deepening appreciation Giles Auty ill the previous exhibition at the Royal Academy herald an interesting new trend? In the...
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Theatre
The SpectatorLeocadia (New End, Hampstead) Ain't Misbehavin' (Tricycle, Kilburn) The Secret Garden (King's Head, Islington) Mixing showbiz Sheridan Morley F ew dramatists, with the...
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Television
The SpectatorThe price of a nanny Nigella Lawson I t is possible for a gap in the market to be so yawningly obvious that when some- one fills it it's almost embarrassing. 'Of course!' one...
Cinema
The SpectatorInterview with the Vampire (`18', selected cinemas) Fangs but no fangs Mark Steyn N eil Jordan's Interview with the Vam- pire, adapted by Anne Rice from her own novel,...
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High life
The SpectatorA tacky house Taki Gstaad T he last time Gstaad had so much snow and wonderful weather was 19 years ago, a winter I also remember because my baby daughter took her first...
Low life
The SpectatorSmelling the Fifties Jeffrey Bernard I n one of the Sunday papers last week I forget which one and can only tell them apart from the slowness with which they pay contributors...
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Long life
The SpectatorGreat celebration Nigel Nicolson T he ballroom at Grosvenor House is our nearest equivalent to the 18thscentury Assembly Rooms at Bath, York and else- where. It is the perfect...
Office life
The SpectatorSay no to Newport Holly Budd cs Creaky' Bacon, chief gossip, bustled in. 'Where's Newport?' `Gwent.' `Isle of Wight,' called Debbie from the other room. 'I was born there.'...
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Imperative cooking: morals, manners and taste
The Spectator• SINCE Peter Cook's recent death, I have been puzzling over the obituaries and fea- ture articles written about him. Several make reference to his fondness for smok- ing,...
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SPECTATOR WINE CLUB
The SpectatorA striking achievement Auberon Waugh last forever in the months between. In January 1993, I also offered Roth- bury's New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc 1992 from Marlborough at...
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CHESS
The SpectatorGolden oldies Raymond Keene THE EXIGENCIES OF SPACE last week precluded publication of a second Bron- stein masterpiece, pioneering his distinc- tive dark square strategy in...
ISLE OF
The Spectator. 151%61.1 MALI 1(1,1701 WHAM URA I MSLLI %ALI SCOMI 0115111 URA COMPETITION A fête worse than . . . Jaspistos IN COMPETITION NO, 1864 you were invited to supply an...
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A first prize of £25 and a bottle of Graham's
The SpectatorMalvedos 1979 Vintage Port for the first correct solution opened on 6 February, with two runners-up prizes of £15 (or, for UK solvers, the latest edition of The Chambers...
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SPECTATOR SPORT
The SpectatorGenius is really genius Frank Keating SIR STANLEY MATTHEWS will be 80 on 1 February, and this week the Football Writers' club threw a birthday party for him at the Savoy,...
YOUR PROBLEMS SOLVED
The SpectatorDear Mary. . . Q. I would greatly value your advice on how to find a discreet solution to a pressing dilemma. If not managed with some delica- cy, the situation will bring...