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Disaster in the West
The SpectatorThe disaster which struck the village of Lynmouth last week was not of a sort. which could be foreseen or pro. vided against. In twenty-four hours parts of Exmoor had more than...
LIBRAS.
The SpectatorMOVEMENT AT MOSCOW T HE news from Moscow, if not momentous, is at any rate of the highest importance. The Congress of the Russian Communist Party is not summoned for the first...
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Farm Wages and Farm Prices
The SpectatorOn the face_of it the demand of the National Farmers' Union for a review of the guaranteed prices of farm products, as result of the increase of 5s. a week in agricultural...
Gandhi's African Heirs
The SpectatorSouth Africa, thanks to the activities of Mr. Gandhi in the early years of this century, has become the home of passive resistance as a political technique. In the end Mr....
Persian Uncertainties
The SpectatorDr. Moussadek has been obliged to reimpose martial law in Tehran only a week after it had been lifted. The interval has seen daily disorders in the streets of the capital; these...
Reforms in Egypt
The SpectatorLast week's industrial disturbances at Alexandria are still somewhat mysterious. It is understandable that the factory workers, like other sections of th6 Egyptian population,...
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A TRANSPORT HOUSE DOUBLE P UBLICATIONS of varying merit emanate from
The SpectatorTransport House, where both the Labour Party and the Trades Union Congress have their homes. Last week some attention was directed in this place to a Labour Party pamphlet,...
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Where in "London will Mr. and Mrs. Eden live ?
The SpectatorThe FOreign Secretary at present lives at 1 Carlton Gardens, and there is no reason why he should not go on living there, as Mr. and Mrs. Bevin did for a considerable time. But...
* , * * * ..6* The death of Kurt
The SpectatorSchumacher, the chairman of the Social Democratic Party in Germany, ends a life darkened by per- petual suffering. Schumacher was doubly crippled, having lost both an arm and a...
It is now more than a fortnight since Sir Jack
The SpectatorDrummond and his wife and daughter were murdered, and to all appearance the French police are as far from making an arrest as ever. Appearance may, of course, be deceptive, and...
The wills of public men are matters of legitimate public
The Spectatorinterest, but it has always to be remembered that dispositions made some years before death may have considerably diminished the amounts returned for probate. Scholars do not...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorI NTO – the controversies aroused by the comments of the Church Times on Mr. Eden's marriage I do not feel it partic- ularly profitable to enter, except to observe that the...
The case in which two young gentlemen, aged seven and
The Spectatoreight, were charged on Tuesday with abstracting mail-bags and their contents from a train at Portsmouth has been adjourned. I there- fore make no comment on the legal aspect of...
Senator Benton, of Connecticut, is worried about monopolies . in Great
The SpectatorBritain, and has a suggestion to make in regard to them. Why he is so worried I am not clear; my impression is that it is difficult to discover enough alleged monopolies to keep...
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The Southern Sudan and its Future
The SpectatorBy EDWARD ATIYAH T HE air passenger from Khartoum to Juba—making today in five hours the one-thousand-mile journey which used to take fourteen days by Nile steamer—can see at a...
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Max at 80
The SpectatorBy MICHAEL SWAN N EXT Sunday, in his villino at Rapallo, Sir Max Beerbohm will welcome, perhaps with courteous surprise, the arrival of his 81st year; but the youthfulness...
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Delkaria ?
The SpectatorByIAN STEPHENS* I NDIA is not what she was. I mean this in no loose conversational sense, nor (still less) disparagingly; but as a statement of geographical fact. Large bits of...
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At the Coast
The SpectatorBy D. W. BROGAN W E are " at the Coast," which, it is probably necessary to explain, is not the same as being "doon the Water." For going " doon the Water " is a journey,...
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Life Without Papers
The SpectatorBy BRIAN INGLIS T HE earliest sufferer from a printers' strike is the man who likes to read his morning newspaper at the breakfast- table. Since mid-July Dubliners have had no...
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MARGINAL COMMENT
The SpectatorBy HAROLD NICOLSON I N every age and every clime writers have grumbled about the small vocabulary of their native language and have denounced the patrii sermons egestas. In...
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MUSIC
The SpectatorA RECENT Third Programme talk on contemporary poetry, entitled " The Petrified Muse," developed an argument whose relevance to the sister art of music was often striking. Poetry...
CONTEMPORARY ARTS
The SpectatorCINEMA OCR great-grandchildren, I suppose, will look back on the days when men were sent underground to hack out coal with much the same scandalised amazement as we view the...
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Snare-Setters
The SpectatorWhen a countryman has no gun and little time to go out with a ferret and nets, he often puts down a snare. This is not the best time for snaring because - the grass is high,...
Tall Corn
The SpectatorTo a man who works on the land the signs of good husbandry *re plain. He looks at a field, the height, colour and richness of its grass, the absence of weed, neatness of its...
Road Casualties
The SpectatorCasualties on the road'are not confined to human beings. The toll of birds, rabbits, hedgehogs and frogs is considerable. No one makes a return of the rabbits killed by cars at...
COUNTRY -LIFE
The SpectatorFEW people seem to gather meadowsweet, probably because, although its scent on the evening air can be wonderful, like the honeysuckle it can be too much. The sun was going down...
The Poet
The SpectatorEach instant of his life a task, he never rests, And works most when he appears to be doing nothing. The least of it is putting down in words What usually remains unwritten and...
Composting It is well to remember that compost can be
The Spectatora breeding-ground for 17= flies and other insects harmful to the garden, unless the heap is
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AN IDEAL BIRTHDAY GIFT
The SpectatorWe will post the SPECTATOR to any of your friends residing in any part of the world at the following rates :— 52 weeks, 35s. ; 26 weeks, 17s. 6d. In addition a Birthday...
SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 132
The SpectatorSet by D. R. Peddy The practice is increasing of advertising certain products with " educational " (historical, geographical or scientific, &c.) copy, e.g. " It was 1752, the...
SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 129 Report by R. Kennard Davis A
The Spectatorprize of £5 was offered for a poem entitled " Disillusionment," based on and including the following lines from Wordsworth's poem :- She was a phantom of delight When first she...
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Clubs for the Professions
The SpectatorSim,—The problem posed by your correspondent Mrs. J. Lindsay can be solved in this, and to the best of my knowledge, many other towns, through enquiries to the local Education...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The SpectatorThe Conquest of Death Ste,—To read the Spectator is one of the pleasures of life, but I doubt if the consideration of these two articles by the learned doctor would give me...
SIR,—I am sure I am only one of many who
The Spectatormust appreciate the vigour with which Mrs. Lindsay has presented our predicament. The professional class retains the social conventions which make it impos- sible for its young...
British Composers
The SpectatorSIR, —In your issue of August 8th your music critic comments on Dr. Vaughan Williams's statement at the International Folk Music Conference that England gets her painting from...
SIR.—I read with much interest Dr. Geiringer's articles on The
The SpectatorCon- quest of Death. Having nearly lost my life by drowning during the late war, I can attest further, if it were necessary, that dying is very much like falling into a deep...
SiR,—Twice in his first article Dr. Geiringer refers to "
The Spectatorreligion," and once in the second to " those who believe in the existence of a soul." These references invite a comment from this other angle. To the doctor human " personality...
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Books for Davos
The SpectatorSue,—As the librarian for the Ministry of Health sanatoria in Davos, I wonder if it would be possible to make a request for books through your journal. There are 130 patients...
Ebe aPpertator, Zuguist 24th, 1652
The SpectatorThe overwhelming ambition of the French President appears to shoot beyond the setting up of a mere temporal kingdom for himself, to the establishment of a theocracy. Louis...
SIR.—The suggestion of your Girton correspondent is dramatically opposed to
The Spectatorthe needs of today. The necessity for specialisation com- pels study along narrow lines, and a balance is needed by regular attendance at places where we shall of necessity meet...
Prunophiles, Prunophobes
The SpectatorSIR,—As one who has been a cook in schools for several years, I should like to express the wish that on no account should any ban be placed on the use of the prune. Often, when...
Home Thoughts from Abroad
The SpectatorSnt,—Many years ago a small band of brothers, persecuted and hounded beyond endurance, sailed in the Mayflower' from Plymouth to seek the freedom of a new world. With the...
Both Sides of the Street
The SpectatorSnt,—Janus seems to have a curious notion that some kind of rivalry exists between Peterhouse and Pembroke in relation to Thomas Gray. Perhaps a little chronology may serve to...
The Incurables
The SpectatorSIR,—In his good-causf.appeal on August 11th Gilbert Harding stated that the hostel for incurables at Clapham Common did not receive help from the Government. Two days later a...
SIR, — I think Janus is quite right about prunes. Whatever those
The Spectatorletter writers say, I know a fat wrinkled prune who is none the better for being soaked in gin or in port-wine either, and as for getting bottled I would rather not say. I can't...
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BOOKS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorOld Man Thames Time on the Thames. By Eric de Mare. (Architectural Press. 21s.) A RECENT American film celebrating the work of the Tennessee Valley Authority presented us with...
In next week's " Spectator" Lord Pakenham will review "
The SpectatorThe -k Critical Years " by General Baron Geyr von Schweppenburg, the Bishop of- Southwell " The Christian Society ' 2 by Bishop- Stephen Neill, Sir Norman Birkett a new edition...
Half a Century of India
The SpectatorIN a book about India, by a writer whose connection with that country extends over fifty years, one half expects to find nostalgia and sentimental regret as the dominant note....
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Garden Anthology
The SpectatorGardens. By Sir William Beach Thomas. (Burke. 21s.) IT is safe to prophesy popularity for this book. Sir William's name alone commands the adherence of many faithful, and both...
Kepler and Astrology •
The SpectatorKEPLER'S three laws of planetary motion are fundamental to modern astro-physics ; it wet - he who first stated that the motion of the planets around the sun is elliptical and...
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Anglo-Saxon Art
The SpectatorFts - ry years ago Anglo-Saxon art was known to few save archaeo- logists ; though it has now been made familiar to us by Baldwin Brown, Clapham, Sir T. D. Kendrick, Professor...
Humour
The SpectatorSweet Corn. (Granta. 5s.) THERE was a time when I used to spend at least one day each summer trying to explain and justify cricket to foreigners. I should have known better ;...
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THE "SPECTATOR" CROSSWORD No. 692
The SpectatorIA Book Token for one guinea will be awarded to the sender of the first correct solution opened after noon on Tuesday week, September - 2nd, addressed Crossword, 99 Gower...
Solution to Crossword No. 690
The Spectatorhrrania! mninilP11111:1 ri CI El In 13 PI ta 0113•1101351 VarlEirinnal 13 El El ra El El El 013H3E111111TInEJ M11:11171 aQ� Nana ° Li - 11 El fa' CI 000ea©n owl -El ri...
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Fiction
The SpectatorThe Frontiers. By John Strachey. (Gollancz. 10s. 6d.) IN these days of restricted space the choice often lies between giving a novel an inadequate notice or none at all. On the...
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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT By CUSTOS Gicr-edged are still setting the
The Spectatortone in the stock markets and, in spite of the resumption of trustee borrowing on a modest scale, are making good progress. At last, it seems, \ the big institutional buyers who...