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NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorT HE war in France has endedâsignificantly enough the last military communiqué to be issued recorded French suc- cesses in the Alps against the uniformly unsuccessful...
The Republicans' Choice
The SpectatorTo attempt a synthesis of American opinion at the present moment is as absorbingly interesting as it is bafflingly difficult. With the Presidential campaign now well under weigh...
Mr. Roosevelt in Action
The SpectatorMeanwhile the President is displaying both reticence, dexterity and resolution. He has let it be known, or rather recalled, that the United States does not propose to recognise...
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Russia in the Background
The SpectatorIn the changed situation in the European Continent Russia remains an inscrutable force in the background. It is certain that she does not regard with equanimity the rise of...
Turkey's Preparations
The SpectatorTurkey continues her mobilisation. She is still a " non- belligerent," as Dr. Saydam, the Prime Minister, emphasised on Wednesday, but is fully conscious of her...
Ireland's Opportunity
The SpectatorOpinion is moving in Northern Irelandâas illustrated in the debate in the Belfast Parliament last Mondayâtowards an attempt to heal the differences between North and South...
Anxiety in the Balkans
The SpectatorThe capitulation of France has produced two immedi, reftilts in the Balkans. The spectacle of Europe in the meltir pot has made the dissatisfied countries hasten to stake out fl...
A United Front in Egypt
The SpectatorItalian propagandists in Egypt last week were trying to stir up mischief by a rumour, reported in the Press, that the British were urging Egypt to declare war on Italy. That...
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Sir Walter Womersley, the Minister of Pensions, is the right
The Spectatorman in the right place. He talks in plain English and is not tainted with the aloofness which too often surrounds junior Conservative Ministers. He is well supported by Miss...
As I write the House is listening to a series
The Spectatorof small debates on Bills from different Departments. There are ten junior Ministers on the Front Bench, fifteen other Members in the House, and nine visitors in the...
Sending Children Overseas
The SpectatorThe offers from the United States and the Dominions to receive British children for the duration of the war have been gratefully accepted by the British Government, which has...
Next week we shall have more important statements and debates
The Spectatoron the new Overseas Reception Board and on Agricul- ture, nor is there any serious diminution in the number of questions put to Ministers. In a word, Parliament is essential ;...
Japan Presents Demands
The SpectatorThe disaster in France has had immediate repercussions in Cie Far East. Just before the surrender of the Bordeaux Government the French Ambassador in Tokyo accepted Japan's...
The Week in Parliament
The SpectatorOur Parliamentary Correspondent writes : âThese lines are written between two secret sessions, one on Home Defence held last Thursday and one on the Ministry of Supply, which...
Air-Raids on Britain
The SpectatorThe civilian population of this country is now keyed up to await whatever attempts the enemy may make to attack our homeland from the air. Already last week preliminary raids in...
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THE CONTINUING CONFLICT
The SpectatorT HE capitulation of France is complete. There is no room for illusion about that. Nothing would be gained, and a great deal would be lost, by resort to any kind of...
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Cornish fanners are getting some useful new light on natural
The Spectatorhistory from evacuee children. For example: " Coo, no wonder the old sow's so big, with all those little ones blowing
For a year or two before last September a well-known
The SpectatorAmerican business man (whose wife happens to be English) was settled very happily in a Home Counties village. When the war broke out he offered the village a field for the...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorEPLORABLE though the decisions taken by the Govern- ment of Marshal Petain are, there would seem to be no justification for the suggestions rather freely made in this country...
Mr. Bevinânow satisfactorily an M.P.âis a considerable acquisition to the
The SpectatorGovernment as a broadcaster. He may drop some of his final g'sâdo not many of the bluest-blooded do the same?âand accentuate personnel in the second syllableâbut why not?...
Philatelists will find an interesting stamp story in M. Andre
The SpectatorSiegfried's new book on the Suez and Panama Canals. In 19o2, when the American Senate was sharply divided on the vital question of whether the projected Atlantic-Pacific water-...
One question of some importance must have presented itself to
The Spectatora good many parents in connexion with the possibility of the migration of children to the Dominions or the United States. Only this week I had a letter from a frequent con-...
The Ministry of Information leaflet describing the deport- ment to
The Spectatorbe observed " If the Invader Comes " is admirable except for one paragraph which has started a note of query in other minds than mine. It is the one on parachutists. "...
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THE WAR SURVEYED : PRESCRIPTION FOR VICTOR
The SpectatorBy STRATEGICUS HE gravest item in the settlement which, in Marshal T Petain's words, was made " in honour as between soldiers " and which General Keitel suggested 'shows that...
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INVASION AND TANKS
The SpectatorBy MAJOR-GENERAL J. F. C. FULLER T HOUGH it may seem strange, nevertheless it is a fact that the first tank operation ever planned was naval in character: it was to use the...
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AIR-RAIDS AND SHOCK
The SpectatorBy OUR MEDICAL CORRESPONDENT I T must be expected that the condition known as shock will be present, in a greater or less degree, in a very consider- able proportion of...
PERIL AND FAITH
The SpectatorBy KENNETH INGRAM O NE of the more valuable experiences which the war has given us is that, particularly in these latter weeks, it has forced us to live by faith, or at least...
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THE HUNTING-CRY
The SpectatorBy H. R. JUKES I BOUGHT three things newâa house, a dog, and a whistle. I had to have a dog. In our village, unless you own a dog you are not quiteâwell, quite. The whistle...
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The End of the Tunnel
The SpectatorTHE UNITED POWERS By CHARLES MORGAN N EARLY a fortnight has gone by since the British Govern- ment offered to the French a Pact of Union with ourselves. Paris had fallen. In...
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COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorThe Importance of Ensilage Here in England, apparently in contrast to the rest of Europe, the grain harvest promises to be excellent. But hay will be thin and of poor quality....
In the Garden The culture of large-flowered hydrangeas for pots
The Spectatoris extremely simple. Soft cuttings of unflowered shoots, four or five inches long, should be potted now. Well syringed, they will root in a light compost in three or four weeks....
An Indiscreet Soldier A Local Defence Volunteer, while on duty,
The Spectatoris under the same obli g ations and has the same powers as a member of His Majesty's Forces ; when off duty these powers relapse. Recently I gave a lift to a private soldier in...
Ensilaged Grain
The SpectatorOne of the most interesting materials for ensilage is brewers' grain. Unlike green forage, which may be ensilaged in small quantities day by day, g rain must be ti g ht-packed...
A White Squirrel
The SpectatorWhite squirrels had often been reported in the neighbourhood ; in one copse, many years ago, they were said to have made a colony. It was not until these notes were about to be...
Primrose Path." At the Gatunont.--â , Dr. Cyclops." At the Carlton.
The SpectatorTHEit⬠is a nice distinction between the " primrose path of dalliance " and the " primrose way to the everlasting bonfire." The former phrase, though disapproving, allows for...
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ANGLO-FRENCH UNION
The SpectatorSm,âThe offer of Union to France came too late for adequate com- ment in your last issue. Already it has faded into the background. I should like, however, to make one point....
Snt,âYour article dealing with the chances of an invasion of
The SpectatorBritain is concerned exclusively with two possible attacks from the East. Although a short reference to a thrust from the Westâvid Irelandâ is mentioned no account is taken...
THE SIEGE OF BRITAIN
The SpectatorSta,âWe are now living in a beleaguered fortress, against which an opponent flushed with victory on the fields of France is free to con- centrate all his destructive energies....
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The Spectator[in view of the paper shortage it is essential that letters on these pages should be brief. We are anxious not to reduce the number of letters, but unless they are shorter they...
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THESE LOST LEADERS " Sta,âSome intellectuals are extremely excited because
The Spectatorother intellec- tuals have seen fit to go to America. They say so, in well-managed words strongly scented with self-righteousness and rationalised malice. In my village women...
CLEAR FOR ACTION SIR, âThe leaflet distributed by the Government this
The Spectatorweek emphasises the way in which the civilian populations of Holland and Belgium unwittingly helped the enemy by taking to the roads, flying from their shattered towns, seeking...
FILMS AND THE GOVERNMENT SIR,âI should like to endorse heartily
The Spectatorthe views expressed in Mr. Basil Wright's excellent article on the film situation in your last week's issue. Without losing heart at the almost skilful evasion of simple...
Sta,â" Even a War Cabinet, even at such a crisis,
The Spectatorcould hardly commit us to so revolutionary and incalculable an arrangement for all time "âso you refer with a disdainful shudder to the proposal of an immediate Anglo-French...
OLIVER CROMWELL SIR, âSurely Mr. Isaac Foot, in his article on
The SpectatorOliver Cromwell in your issue of June 14th, does less than justice to the Protector's social position. He calls him a fanner. As a fact the Cromwells were one of the great...
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PAPER SHORTAGE AND " THE SPECTATOR "
The SpectatorSIR,âYou need have no fear of the loyalty and support of your readers, nor any doubt of their appreciation of your difficulties. It is not the size or appearance of the plate...
OPERA
The Spectator" The Magic Flute " at Sadler's Wells THE revival of Mozart's The Magic Flute last week brought back into the repertory of the Sadler's Wells Opera a great masterpiece and one...
EARNINGS OF CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTORS
The SpectatorSIR,âMy attention has just been directed to your suggestion that conscientious objectors might well be asked to hand over to some good cause such as the Red Cross any excess...
VICTORY AND SACRIFICE
The SpectatorSIR,âThe issues before the British people seem clear, and can be put in few words. r. Defensive warfare will not bring victory. No doubt British morale under air bombing will...
CC TOO FEW CHILDREN" Sta,âAre we expressing, as we could,
The Spectatorwhat we feel towards the Dominions' troops now amongst us? Also about the offers of hos- pitality and care for British rhiltiren made by the Governments of the Dominions and the...
LEADERSHIP IN INDIA
The SpectatorSIR,âWhen I heard that Mr. L. S. Amery had become Secretary of State for India and Burma, I was at first afraid that his attitude to the country of his birth would be...
THE PREDICTIONS OF NOSTRADAMUS
The SpectatorSIR,âHaving studied La Fin de notre Slide d'apres Nostradamus, by Maurice Privat, published last year, I was interested in the article by James Laver which appeared in your...
Sm,âI just want to express my sympathy with you in
The Spectatorthe difficulties created by the paper shortage and to say that I should continue my grateful enjoyment of The Spectator even if it became reduced to two pages. With all good...
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Agricultural Marketing
The SpectatorFeeding the Nation in Peace and War. By George Walworth. (Allen and Unwin. 18s.) THE history of Britain's Agricultural Marketing Schemes provides one of the most instructive...
Books of the Day
The SpectatorPictures of the East A Winter in Arabia. By Freya Stark. (Murray. i6s.) ONCE again the rapidly growing British "Oriental " public is placed in debt to Faraya, who by A Winter...
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A Year of Crisis
The SpectatorTHIS book consists of a series of impressions of the year 1936, the last of the years previously surveyed by Mr. Guedalla in The Hundred Years. It is a little unfortunate for...
Is Machiavelli a Modern ?
The SpectatorThe Statecraft of Machiavelli. By H. Butterfield. (Bell. 6s.) IN common with most influential political thinkers, Machiavelli failed to evolve a political philosophy which was...
" Nous n'irons plus au Bois . . ."
The SpectatorTHE American of the title is neither a mere expatriate nor a simple tourist ; she is a New Yorker correspondent of long stand- ing and experience, as witty, well-informed and...
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The Sino-Japanese War
The SpectatorJapan in China. By W. H. Chamberlin. (Duckworth. 38. 6c1.) THIS is a masterly little book, embracing in less than 1so pages grouped into five chapters nearly all the main facts...
New Novels
The SpectatorMakeshift. By Sarah Campion. (Peter Davies. 8s. 6d.) Untimely Ulysses. By Vincent Brun. (Cape. 8s.) Embezzled Heaven. By Franz Werfel. (Hamish Hamilton. 88.6(1.) The Last Man....
My Lovely Burney
The SpectatorThe Diary of Fanny Burney. Selected and edited by Lewis Gibbs. (Everyman's Library. 28. 6c1.) MAc.Autivy, deluded by an effect of candour and of startled innocence, thought of...
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Exit Prussia : A Plan for Europe. (Duckworth. 6s.)
The SpectatorIN Exit Prussia: A Plan for Europe, Dr. Stern-Rubarth revives a practice popular during the last War of dividing Germans into two categories : the " good " Saxons, Bavarians,...
Shorter Notices
The SpectatorD. H. Lawrence and Susan His Cow. By William York Tindall. (Columbia : Oxford University Press. 18s. 6d.) SUSAN was a cow which D. H. Lawrence owned in Taos and to which he...
Recent Revelations of European Diplomacy. By G. P. Gooch. Fourth
The Spectatoredition. (Longmans. cos.) THE first edition (5927) of Dr. Gooch's invaluable guide to the literature of the last War contained 214 pages. The fourth edition now issued runs to...
British Foreign Policy since Versailles, 1919-1939. By W. N. Medlicott.
The Spectator(Methuen. 8s. 6d.) MR. MEDLICOTT'S review of twenty very troubled years is lucid, accurate, and commendably free from bias. Unlike some writers on the subject, he takes account...
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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS ONCE again the Treasury has launched a large-scale borrowing operation with remarkably little fuss. In a happier environ- ment I should have expected another issue of...
COMPETITORS were to imagine any four of six celebrities or
The SpectatornotorietiesâDr. Johnson, Swinburne, President Roosevelt, Mr. Churchill, Dr. Goebbels and Signor Gaydaâchoosing an appro- priate pet and justifying their choice of each in a...
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ZINC CORPORATION
The SpectatorTHE twenty-ninth ordinary general meeting of The Zinc Corporation, Ltd., was held on June 25th in London. Viscount Home (the chairman) said that while the outbreak of war...
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 68 SOLUTION NEXT WEEK
The SpectatorThe winner of Crossword No. 68 is the Rev. R. W. Lowry, 84 Storeton Road, Prenton, Birkenhead.
" THE SPECTATOR " CROSSWORD No. 69 COMPANY MEETING [A
The Spectatorprize of a Book Token for one guinea will be given to the sender of the first correct solution of this week's crossword puzzle to be opened. Envelopes should be narked...