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SIR OSBERT SITWELL: Queen Mary C. H. BLACKER : Aintree
The SpectatorAdventure GEOFFREY FABER : Critical ,Times for Publishing IAIN HAMILTON: Sicily in Spring JACQUETTA HAWKES : The Human Roundabout CECIL DAY LEWIS : A New Poem PHILIP NOEL-BAKER,...
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A VERY GALLANT LADY
The Spectator⪠HAT is the aspect of Queen Mary's personality which strikes us most as we think, naturally, of these latest and nearest years in which the youngest at any rate of her...
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Towards the E.D.C.' Treaty All at the moment is going
The Spectatorwell with the European Defence Treaty. Its ratification by the Bundestag by the unexpectedly large majority of 224 votes to 165 must have the effect of strong moral pressure on...
Justice for Judges It is intelligible that the Government should
The Spectatorwant to give itself more time to consider the question of the Judges' salarirs , 1 but it is doubtful whether the problem will prove any more l tractable after Easter than...
Deviating Into Sense ?
The SpectatorThe Soviet Union's devotion to the cause of peace has for a long time been expressed in words utterly unrelated to. and indeed frequently contradicted by, its deeds. The...
Freer International Trade
The SpectatorNobody need blame the Continental members of the Organisation for European Co-operation for the fears, .which they were expressing only a week ago, lest the British Govern- ment...
French Leave
The SpectatorThat a Prime Minister of France should leave Paris. for the United States immediately after securing, by a mere thirty-one votes, the support of the Assembly for a measure to...
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Calm After Floods
The SpectatorThe danger that, after flood and tempest, the miseries of a Political storm might be-inflicted on a still suffering country, seems at last to have been removed. 'When the Prime...
An Ultimatum from Austin's
The SpectatorThe strike at Austin's Longbridge motor works has dragged itself out for nearly five weeks. The net results have been considerable hardship for, ten thousand men and their...
AT WESTMINSTER
The Spectatorp ARLIAMENT paid its last tributes to Queen Mary on Wednesday, and having done so adjourned for the rest of the day as a mark of respect. The address which the House sent to the...
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THE FEDERATION VOTE
The SpectatorW ITH the division on Central African Federation in the House of Commons on Tuesday the die is cast. It is true that the project could still be brought to nothing by an adverse...
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What is known as the pottery trial reached its 33rd
The Spectatorday on Monday. How much longer it is likely to continue I have no knowledge; no end appears to be in sight yet. But this is a jury case, and twelve jurymen have so far been...
The attacks by fanatical Scots on pillar-boxes, public vehicles and
The SpectatorCoronation souvenirs bearing the legend E II R are petulant, childish and inexcusable. All the same, and altogether irrespective of that, I feel increasingly that the intrusion...
After hearing a singularly interesting lecture on Tennyson by Lord
The SpectatorEsher a week ago 1 took down from the shelf (because it happened to be the nearest book on the subject at hand) Stopford Brooke's Tennysonâpart of a college prize quite a few...
In case anyone has missed the latest achievement of the
The SpectatorChurch Militant I reproduce the essence of the story as it appeared in one or two of Tuesday's papers.' It concerns the Rev. Richard Tydeman, vicar of St. John's, Woodbridge,...
Mr. Dalton, I gather, is writing his memoirs on a
The Spectatormajestic scale. The first volume, indeed, is written and will be out in ⢠a few weeks. There are said to be two more to follow. H. G. Wells covered the history of the world in...
When the Princess Victoria' car-ferry sank in the Irish Sea
The Spectator1 suggested that the disaster might possibly have been due to the car-doors in the stern being more vulnerable to heavy seas than the solid stern of an ordinary vessel. That...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorHE Royal Commission on the Press was invited by some of the more strident critics of the " capitalist " newspapers to find that those organs were improperly influenced in their...
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QUEEN MARY
The SpectatorBy SIR OSBERT SITWELL seems to have passed away, though in reality Her Majesty's long life covered several epochs, each very full for her of events and changes, of sorrows and...
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Budgeting for Peace
The SpectatorBy The Rt. Hon. PHILIP NOEL-BAKER, M.P. . OW that the heat of controversy is over, it may be useful to consider the proposal of the British Minister of Education at the last...
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Better Family Doctors
The SpectatorThis is the winning entry in the " Spectator" competition for articles on this subject. The writer is compelled for professional reasons to remain anonymous. W HAT do people...
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The Human Roundabout
The SpectatorBy JACQUETTA HAWKES , W E all have a rueful familiarity with the fact that man has a genius for frustrating his own endeavour. He builds cities for their amenity, and makes them...
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Dean Farrar : 1831-1903
The SpectatorBy CANON CHARLES SMYTH T HERE is a story of F. W. Farrar who died fifty years ago this week at a dinner-party shortly after his coming to Westminster, when he was preparing to...
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Sicily in Spring
The Spectatorny lAIN HAMILTON T the end of an uncomfortable winter and the beginning of a peevish spring which seemed until the other day little better than a continuation of discomfort,...
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Aintree Adventure
The SpectatorBy C. H. BLACKER O NE of the most enjoyable parts of a ride at Aintree is talking about it afterwards.- In fact, I am inclined to think that the pleasure of riding over those...
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CONTEMPORARY ARTS
The SpectatorTHEATRE THE stage, when the curtain rises, is seen to be dominated by an enormous gilt pergola : the sort of thing that, if you were a wealthy eccentric and had plenty of wire...
CINEMA
The SpectatorThe Cruel Sea. (Leicester Square.)âThe Medium. (Academy.) âBwana Devil. (Odeon, Marble Arch.) The Cruel Sea, adapted by Mr. Eric Ambler from Mr. Nicholas Monsarrat's...
The House where I was Born
The SpectatorAn elegant, shabby, whitewashed house With a slate roof. Two rows Of tall sash-windows. Below the porch, at the foot of The steps, my father, posed In his pony trap and round...
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Raoul Dufy
The SpectatorSo Dufy, who was among the first six or eight of that great and long-lived generation of Parisians, has goneâa few short months after receiving the grand painting prize at...
MUSIC
The SpectatorBoccherini SUPERLATIVE quality is, by definition, rare, and it is only when we meet itâin a person, a horse, a steak, or a work of artâthat there is borne in upon the mind...
ART
The SpectatorThe Human Head As though to compensate for a deficiency of humanism in its inter- national sculpture competition, the Institute of Contemporary Arts' current show at its own...
BALLET
The SpectatorApparitions. (Covent Garden.) THE welcome given to Margot Fonteyn when she returned to Covent Garden after a six-months illness was one of the most touching ex- pressions of...
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Kew Gardens
The SpectatorPeople, scattered on the ground like bulbs, grown here complete in coloured scarf and coat, borne on a tide of blue-veined crocus float through the lawns, swirling about the...
Spring Legend
The SpectatorCrocus was legend then, primrose hearsay like talk of old women, the gossip at winter's gate. Sun is a new age now, a golden tale of explorers and kings, the leaf in stone and...
SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 163
The SpectatorSet by Lucilio The usual prizes are offered for an address by a postman to the much-bombed E II R pillar-box in Edinburgh, or for a⢠complaint by that unfortunate pillar-box...
SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 16o
The SpectatorReport by Joyce Johnson Prizes were o f fered for a soliloquy by any well-known statue in a public place. A good entry, both in quality and quantity. Numerically, Nelson beat...
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Sporting Aspects
The SpectatorFreedom of Choice By J. P. W. MALLALIEU I N one of his booksâwas it The Economic Consequences...? âKeynes etches the 1913 world as it might have been for . those who had...
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The McCarran Act
The SpectatorSIR,âThe naïveté of Mr. J. W. S. Hearle's exculpation of the McCarran Act, which only epitomises the routine contempt for cultural and diplomatic traditions endemic on this...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The SpectatorCentral African Federation SIR,âCould I be permitted to make a few belated remarks after reading Mr. Vernon Bartlett's excellent and well-balanced article on Federation? To...
Kaffirs
The SpectatorSik,âThe contributor of a book-review which appears in your issue 0 1 March 13th states that the streets of Scottish cities in the eighteenth- century were as filthy as a...
Social Credit
The SpectatorSta,âIn criticising my description of the Alberta Social Credit Govern- ment as " a form of experimental Socialism," your correspondent, Mr. Eugene Forsey, is merely...
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Blue-green, not Black
The SpectatorSIR,âIn your edition of 20th March, your critic, Mr. Martin Cooper, writing of.Sutermeister's Romeo and Juliet, asks why Juliet was dressed in " funeral black " on the...
Trouble' at the Tate ,
The SpectatorSIR,-1 should like to try to express what I believe are the feelings of the . " average man," making little claim to art-education, but forming the great 'bulk of the population...
A Cure for Verjuice
The SpectatorSIR,âJanus hopes Granta will issue an anti-Coronation number. I am glad to think that few of us would agree; but many would agree that a ducking in Granta might wash some of...
SIR,âMr. M. H Middleton, in his well reasoned and admirably
The Spectatorbalanced article on the protest at the Tate, remains like most unprejudiced lovers of contemporary sculpture, I imagine, frankly bewildered, if not a trifle dismayed by the...
The Polygon
The SpectatorSIR,âMay I ask the help of the Spectator or of its readers in the following trouble ? One of my friends here is working on a new Czech translation of The Pickwick Club. He...
i§pettator, liatirrb 2Gtb, t853
The SpectatorCamberwell, 16th March, 1853, SIR,âThe Income-tax is just now a topic of sufficient interest and importance to excuse my troubling you with another short communi- cation on...
Miss Quigly
The SpectatorSIR,âIt has been pointed out to me that there is a danger that a Miss Quigly, at present employed by. the American Command in Florence, may be confused with me as the author...
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COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorWE came through the village slowly and quietly, Impressed with the sleepiness of the place. A ewe and her lamb came down a side-street. A second ewe wandered along the middle of...
Frog Nuisance
The SpectatorWhy do frogs select a particular pond for spawning and avoid others ? Do the water and mud contain weed or some special ingredient that makes them particularly suitable for the...
A Dish of Puffballs
The SpectatorA correspondent in America, writing to me about the reluctance of people in this country to eat our native funguses other than the mush- room expresses surprise that puffballs...
Peaches and Nectarines
The SpectatorA lime-sulphur spray should be given to prevent leaf curl on peaches, nectarines and almonds. It will soon be time to disbud peaches and nectarines, and the process should be a...
Village Policemen
The SpectatorThe good old-fashioned village policeman had to be an exceptional man. He was slow and red-faced and perhaps not over-alert, but he maintained law and order in his own way,...
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Spring Books
The SpectatorCRITICAL TIMES FOR PUBLISHING By GEOFFREY FABER H AS there, I wonder, ever been so much anxious, public speculation about the future of books as during the past three or four...
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In next week's "Spectator " Rex Warner will review "
The SpectatorDivided Image " by Margaret Rudd, and Edmund Ulunden "Shelley: The Last Phase " by Ivan Roe.
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The Poetry of Wales
The SpectatorAn Introduction to Welsh Poetry. By Gwyn Williams. (Faber. 25s.) WELSH poetry has a history which goes back to the sixth century, and it remains a part of Welsh life today....
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A Writer of Quality
The SpectatorThe House of Mirth. The Age of Innocence. By Edith Wharton. (John Lehmann. 12s. 6d. each.) Two things have been chiefly responsible for the dimming of the reputation of Edith...
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Alfred de Vigny
The SpectatorHERE is an admirable translation of one of the great books of French literature. Vigny's passionate and clear prose offers a challenge to translators in exacting measure. In the...
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A Great Physician
The SpectatorThe Stranger's Son. By John Keevil. (Geoffrey Bles. 21s.) DR. KEEVIL has chosen for this fine book an awkward and allusive title which cannot be understood without explanation....
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In Praise of the Lily
The SpectatorLilies in Their Homes. By Alice C. Maxwell. (Collins. 16s.) MANY books have been written about lilies, but within my reading experience none with a more richly compact...
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A Vast Parable
The SpectatorEvolution in Action. By Julian Huxley. (Chatto & Windus. 9s.) THE role of populariser is often despised. But reading this book one sees how Dr. Huxley brings qualities of...
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The Small Hill-Farms
The SpectatorMarginal Land in Britain. By W. Ellison. (Bles. 25s.) Tins is not an easy book to read. Many of those who, perforce, are interested in its subject will find it necessary often...
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Experience and Wisdom
The SpectatorEVER since the late H. J. Massingham told me that it was his favourite book, I have been eager to read The Private Papers of Henry Rye- croft by George Gissing, and so I was...
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Man into Fish
The SpectatorCAPTAIN COUSTEAU is a pioneer who may perhaps prove as important as the Wri g ht brothers or Anthony van Leeuwenhoek. His tech- nique of free divin g , as independently as a...
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The Playing of Bach
The SpectatorThe Lost Tradition in Music. By Fritz Rothschild. (Black. 63s.) EACH year that carries us further from the nineteenth century carries us also further from the nineteenth...
Pale Ghost
The SpectatorIT is scarcely conceivable that the poets of the 'nineties will ever find readers again; not because of their sordid lives, their sexual perversions, their drink, their...
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Fiction
The SpectatorThe Spectacle. By Rayne Kruger. (Longmans. 10s. 6d.) M. PEYREFITTE'S novel has been widely reviewed and is being widely talked about. One can easily see why. The story of a...
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Spring Books
The SpectatorNUMBERS of books inspired by the Coronation are appearing this spring. Members of the. Royal family, Royal homes, and Royal gardens, the British Court and character studies of "...
Old Men at Peking
The SpectatorGraybeards their long faded gowns worn lightly Take the air of early evening as it cools The foot of the Tartar Wall. A few climb To stand among the rubble where ten men have...
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Shorter Notices
The SpectatorA FIRST-CLASS production of such a play as A Doll's House or The Lady from the Sea reveals many " moments of truth "âthose deep and rewarding flashes of insight which both...
THE personalities in this first German Romantic movement were a
The Spectatormixed company of young middle-class intellectuals, in rebellion against the formalism of eighteenth- century culture. The usual source for our knowledge of them is Goethe's...
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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS Some hesitancy has been seen in the stock markets this week. The approach of the Budget and the Easter holiday; the weekly revenue figures showing an overall deficit...
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THE " SPECTATOR" CROSSWORD No. 723
The SpectatorIA Book Token for one guinea will be awarded to the sender of the first correct solution opened after noon on Tuesday week, April 7th, addresses! Crossword. 99 Gower Street,...
Solution to Crossword No. 721
The Spectatorkm AIM RA In CI In n_ ⢠N n erg rg3 IEICHWIll Marin Solution on April 3 The winner of Crossword No.. 721 is: Miss E. M. Ausi km, 217, Aylesbury Road, Wcndover, Bucks.