Page 4
STRIFE FOR STRIFE'S SAKE
The SpectatorIs the nation divided, and if so who or what is dividing it? Mr Harold Wilson has now accepted that Mr Heath is, as a matter of fact, conduct- ing that 'radical change in the...
Page 6
POLITICAL COMMENTARY
The SpectatorJOHN MACKINTOSH, MP To sit through Mr Rippon being questioned in the Commons is a curious experience. One can understand the reactions of the wogs- begin-at-Calais type of Tory...
Page 7
THE SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorThe overweening demands of television were never more tastelessly satisfied than when the Bolivian painter Benjamin Mendoza was publicly__guestiOned not only in front of the...
Page 8
In Persia the Shah drove to the airport with full
The Spectatorceremony to meet him for a few minutes, in Australia men waved mugs of beer at him with a cheery 'good on you, mate'. In Hong Kong clerics pondered how to persuade him not to...
About our contributors:
The SpectatorRENFORD BA M BROUGH - - Went to St John's, Cambridge, as an and graduate, and,has been there almost contin ously ever since, except for a spell as a co miner in the Sunderland...
Page 9
ur foreign correspondence
The SpectatorAMERICA The China lobby JOHN-GRAHAM Washington, DC 'We need someone to negotiate with the Chinese. Do you speak Polish?' So ran the caption to a cartoon recently in the...
MIDDLE EAST
The SpectatorControlling an epidemic STANLEY JOHNSON It is ironic that by far the most sensational - outtsreak of cholera, at least up until the time of the Pakistan disaster, should have...
Page 10
EMPIRE
The SpectatorMinerva's owl DENIS BROGAN `Minerva's owl flies only in the dusk.' This phrase, obscure to the Anglo-Saxon mind, is in fact a lot clearer than many of the dicta of Georg...
Page 11
`Moving to the Right'?
The SpectatorBy 'a Conservative' About newspaper claims to know who we are, we propose to say nothing except that there has been as much misunderstanding of our identity as of our opinions....
Page 12
COMMUNISM
The SpectatorLooking eastwards MICHAEL STEWART Three major facts dominate world politics today: First, the existence of two enormous power blocs, the chief of one being the United States,...
Page 13
PATRONAGE AND PREJUDICE
The SpectatorThere were ten green bottles And great and noisy have been the falls thereof. Lord Hall gone, with much noise and fury from himself, from the Post Office workers, from parts of...
Page 16
ASI SAW IT
The SpectatorOnce more on the campus trek A. LROWSE 'Working one's passage' in America for me means lecturing my way from campus to campusâa very good way of getting round the United...
Page 17
PERSONAL COLUMN
The SpectatorThe stuff of dreams and nightmares PEREGRINE WORSTHORNE Journalists have a rather contemptuous at- titude to advertisements..They recognise, of course, that these large blocks...
Page 18
EDUCATION
The SpectatorGrants to stay RHODES BOYSON The very day that a conference was being held on the progress of the Independent University Mrs Thatcher announced, to the disappointment of many...
MEDICINE
The SpectatorVowel functionS JOHN ROWAN WILSO\ There has been alarm expressed about the number of doctors now working in our hos. pitals with a less than perfect command of the English...
THOMAS HARDY
The SpectatorForty years later the pain of love Suddenly pressed upon him; Breaking the long silence, then the words He used for passion were harsh and dry as strings. Wryly, not to be...
Page 19
A hundred years ago
The SpectatorFrom the 'Spectator,' 3 December 1870â Science has done a great deal for the beseiged French, not only in the way of balloons, but in the way of photography. We understand...
Page 20
War guilt
The SpectatorSir: Your article on 'War Guilt' makes saddening reading to anyone who remembers that the same arguments were paraded out to de- fend paeificism and appeasement in the...
The right to strike
The SpectatorSir: It seems to me that, in your leading article 'The Right to Strike you have given words to a very common confusion of thought. Fundamental liberties, if r u . analyse them,...
After Wittgenstein
The SpectatorSir: Roger Scruton's review of two recent critiques of linguistic philo- sophy in the SPECTATOR (26 No- vember) - is scathing but his defence of linguistic philosophy is not ef-...
Beauty and the flour bombs
The SpectatorSir: The fact that more people watch the televising of the so-called Miss World competition than al- most any other tele-event tells us a lot about ourselves. I use the word...
Palmer v Tynan
The SpectatorSir: Statement 1 of Tynan's reply to my reply to his reply, agrees with me. Thank God for that. Statement 2. Is this a casual mis- take or a deliberate lie? Statement 3. I am...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The SpectatorLetters from Dr A. L. Rowse, G. W. Mackworth-Young, C. H. Sis- son, Peter Paterson, Tony Palmer, Martyn Snow, Katharine Kenyon, David Cohen and others. Shades of blue Sir: My...
Open and shut
The SpectatorDear Mr Jay: There is always special reason for one's own Opcn Letter. A. E. Jenkins 10 Worcester Road, Sutton, Surrey
Page 21
`Israel Amos' Sir: 'Israel Amos (31 October) protests against the
The Spectatoruse of British defence regulations in Israel and the West Bank. A point that seems to have escaped his notice is that there happens to be a war going on in the area. and defence...
Dear readers
The SpectatorSir: This is an old Welshman writing. He has just celebrated his ninetieth birthday. I claim to be the very oldest subscriber of the SPECTATOR-a regular reader since 1899 when...
Civil servants
The SpectatorSir: Sir William Armstrong says that 'the chief danger to which politicians and Ministers are ex- posed is not, as is often supposed, that obstructive bureaucrats will drag...
Bermuda shorts
The SpectatorSir: Mr Keevil. in his letter about my article on Bermuda (24 Octo- ber), mangles logic wonderfully. I don't see why the fact that so many black Bermudians are self- employed...
Respectable man
The SpectatorSir: It is interesting to note that even at the age of fifteen, Jane Austen was paving the way for one of the great achievements attributed to the 'present gener- ation' by Mr...
Stone deaf
The SpectatorSir: Speaking as a stone-deaf and retarded adolescent, I object strongly to Clement Crisp's patron- ising cynicism, puerile bigotry, and arrogant snobbery in his condem- nation...
Bad taste
The SpectatorSir: Roger Barnard in his article `Bad taste' (7 November) uses such difficult words in such dreadfully long sentences that I daresay I am mistaken in thinking he wants us to...
Page 22
Shakespeare and Dr Rowse
The SpectatorSir: Absence in America prevented me from replying to the various letters about my Address as Presi- dent of the Shakespeare Club at Stratford, but really there was nothing to...
COMPETITION
The SpectatorNo. 633: Broadcast Most readers will see or hear the Queen delivering her annual mes- sage on Christmas Day. Many will have their own ideas of the sort of message they would...
Page 23
Diabolical liberty
The SpectatorRENFORD BAMBROUGH The Devil himself was the first existentialist. By his fall he denied his own knowledge of good and evil, and elevated the un- conquerable will into an...
Page 24
White Africa
The SpectatorERIC STOKES Colonialism in Africa 1870-1960: Vol 11 The History and Politics of Colonialism 1914- 1960 edited by L. H. Gann and Peter Duignan (cut. £5) Colonialism in Africa,...
New linguistics
The SpectatorGEOFFREY SAMPSON New Horizons in Linguistics edited by John Lyons (Pelican Original 10s) Until recently, modern theoretical linguistics was the preserve of small groups of...
Page 25
Panoptic vision
The SpectatorGRAHAM HOUGH The Stubborn Structure: Essays on Criticism and Society Northrop Frye (Methuen 60s) Since the Eliot-Richards-Leavis-Empson explosion in the earlier part of the...
Simplicities
The SpectatorCHRISTOPHER HUDSON Tides John Montague (Dolmen Press 22s) Poems from an Island Michael Shayer (Fulcrum Press 21s) The Visitors Barry Cole (Methuen 25s) Lucidities Elizabeth...
Page 26
Central figure
The SpectatorNORMAN GASH Palmerston Jasper Ridley (Constable 63s) -or Mr Ridley's new biography of Palmerston has two great merits. It is the first to make systematic use of the Broadlands...
Myrdal's end
The SpectatorJOHN WOOD The Challenge of World Poverty Gunnar Myrdal (Allen Lane The Penguin Press 84s) Unable to express himself fully in his mam- moth three volume 11 million word Asian...
Page 27
Spokesman for the in-betweens
The SpectatorAUBERON WAUGH Play t Man an Peter Forster (Eyre and Spot- tiswoode 35s) ⢠There is a whole generation tucked away between those writers like Hugo Charteris, Patrick...
Page 28
MUSIC
The SpectatorFirst fiddle? GILLIAN WIDDICOMBE Marching towards 0 Level Music, I was indelibly instructed that the two greatest violinists in the world were Jascha Heifetz, for his wizardly...
CINEMA
The SpectatorCashing in on Christmas CHRISTOPHER HUDSON It is difficult to be miserly about Scrooge (Dominion) which will give a lot of pleasure to countless children and a lot of money to...
Page 29
THEATRE
The SpectatorFashion's favour KENNETH HURREN London's 'first night scene' moved down river last week to the Greenwich Theatre, where a full complement of critics (includ-⢠ing a few who...
TELEVISION
The SpectatorCrink'm-crank'm Patrick Skene CATLING Crinkum-crankum? Just in case the meanings of the word have slipped your mind, and the meanings are certainly slippery, allow Me to be of...
Page 30
ART
The SpectatorLeger domain EVAN ANTHONY To those who go througli the motion without the necessary conviction, genuflection may place a strain upon the knee; and uninspired reverence can...
BALLET
The SpectatorOut and about CLEMENT CRISP The Manchester premiere of Kenneth Mac- Millan's new ballet, Checkpoint, was one of those occasions calculated to, give a stage manager nightmares...
Page 31
RECORDS
The SpectatorAgainst the odds RODNEY MILNES Anyone concocting a parody of nineteenth- century opera would have to turn for inspira- tion to Donizetti's Anna Bolena. It has got the lot. The...
Page 32
MONEY More⢠investing under the Tories
The SpectatorNICHOLAS DAVENPORT It is nice to know, said a correspondent Investing under the Tories', that you an- ticipate a return of the bull market in equities in late 1971-1972 but how...
Page 33
TTTT ,TRIPPOS Although I learn that Lord W;EQ was generally
The Spectatoroptimistic about the future of FI- 4 "-h racing last week in view of his pessimism over the raising of prize money until well into the 'seventies, we should be grateful for the...
SKINFLINT'S CITY DIARY
The SpectatorI was delighted when that hard-working nice chap Christopher Chataway became Minister of Posts and Telecommunications on the formation of the Conservative Government, and I am...
Page 34
lI SPOR TING
The SpectatorCLIVE GAMMON No sport could ever have stood a better chance of being strangled at birth than surf- board riding. Maybe it's gone on for centur- ies in Hawaii or wherever, but...
Page 35
COUNTRY LIFE PETER QUINCE
The SpectatorI came across an old country guide the other day. It listed all the tradesmen in each village in my part of the country, and it seas impressive to see the great variety of...
BENNY GREEN
The SpectatorA few days ago, while performing the desper- ately vital act of putting as much space as possible between me and what is sometimes a feu years ago; ,be. was4 massive,--...
Page 36
TONY PALMER
The SpectatorThere is a growing suspicion that students should be seen but not heard, that somehow they have overstepped the limits of their participation in university life and have got to...
THE GOOD LIFE Pamela VANDYKE PRICE
The SpectatorThe Chaine des Rotisseurs was founded in 1248 and, when you think of it, the man who turned a nifty spit must have wielded con- siderable influence in those pre-cookery class...
Page 40
Prize Crossword
The SpectatorNo. 1458 DAEDAUS A prize of three guineas will be awarded for the first correct solution opened on 14 December. Address solutions: Crossword 1458, The Specs tator,' 99 Gower...
Page 43
Choosing for children
The SpectatorMARY NORTON How best to choose books for children? The uestion is: can we? Or rather, should we? hould we not perhapsâfor the older hildrenâavail ourselves of book tokens?...
Page 45
Two from Italy
The SpectatorCAROLA OMAN The King's Room Eilis Dillon. illustrated by Richard Kennedy (Hamish Hamilton 12s) The Befana's Toyshop Gianni Rodari, translated by Patrick Creagh illustrated by...
Page 47
Not for infants
The SpectatorTOM HUTCHINSON The God Beneath the Sea Leon Garfield and Edward Blishen (Longmans Young Books 35s) The House on the Brink John Gordon (Hutchinson Junior Books 18s) Good-Night,...
Page 48
Talented brats
The SpectatorISABEL QUIGLY Thursday's Child Noel Streatfeild (Collins 25s) , Some writers deal with a fantasy world in terms of realism, and get labelled realists forever, no matter how...
Page 49
Perfect gifts
The SpectatorMOLLY LEFEBURE The Prince in Waiting John Christopher (Hamish Hamilton . 25s) To Sunset and Beyond Alec Lea (Hamish Hamilton 25s) Telford and the American Visitor Ray Pope...
Page 52
Artistic licence
The SpectatorK. CROSSLEY-HOLLAND Through the Window Charles Keeping (Oxford University Press 20s) A Brother for Momoko Chihiro Iwasaki (Bodley Head 18s) Where the Wild Apples Grow John...
Page 54
Book guide to Christmas fiction
The SpectatorBOOKS FOR YOUNGER CHILDREN The Apple and the Butterfly and The Egg and the Chicken Iela and Enzo Mari (A. and C. Black, each 15s). Two picture books without words. A...
Page 55
I would be hesitant about buying books for children over
The Spectatorthe age of five without first consulting them, or knowing them well. They have already developed certain literary tastes and few books can appeal universally. The books below...
Page 59
BOOKS FOR OLDER CHILDREN
The SpectatorIt was a bit of luck for me that on the day that the post brought the parcel of twenty- three Books for Christmas there arrived also Mark, to spend the weekend with his...
Page 60
A number of old friends are back this sea- son
The Spectator: Himself, the darlin' talking dog, Kenneth Bird's most happy creation, returns in Stardom For Himself Kenneth Bird (Macdonald 18s) and results in a darlin' book which I read...
Page 61
Rosemary Sutcliff. who has made a quiet corner in the
The Spectatorretelling of things past, snatches- us back to Norman England with . The Witch's Brat (Oxford University Press 16s), which tells how a humpbacked boy helps to found the hospital...
Page 62
The Thief - Takers Peter John Stephens (Harrap Historical Novels For Young
The SpectatorRead- ers 30s) drops us back into the past: eight- eenth-century London and all that: crooked bounty-hunters and some real historical names like Sir John Fielding to plug the...