The Spectator
12 April 2014 Aus
Voice of Britain
Shakespeare defined our united national culture – and now he can help save it
Australia
A royal welcome
Australia prides itself on being a young country. For generations after independence in 1901, we still saw ourselves as essentially…
Australian Columnists
Australian Notes
My modest proposal for the reform of the Labor party is to relieve Billy Shorten of his duties and make…
Brown study
I was thrilled to see the implacable enthusiasm of Afghani voters as they lined up in their thousands for hours…
Diary
A lamentable by-product of the media in the digital age is its frequent lack of good manners. Ridiculing opponents rather…
Australian Features
Features Australia, New Zealand
Ditch the Union Jack
There is no groundswell of support in favour of a new flag, so why does New Zealand’s centre-right PM support change?
Windswept in Wellington
If only the media would give us something, anything, which provides a glimpse of the real Kate’s personality
A strange evening of classic local theatre
Robyn Nevin shines in Neighbourhood Watch
Labor pain
Memo to my old party: ditch the carbon tax and keep faith in the Hawke free-market reforms
Features
Gone with the wind turbine
In cities, changes to the skyline are subject to careful planning. Not so here
Rise of the mayors
The power to effect real change may lie with dynamic city halls rather than ossified national governments
Book clubs
Everyone knows somebody who belongs to a book club. From informal gatherings of bookish friends in living rooms and cafés…
The Week
Blundering on
The handling of Maria Miller's expenses demonstrated yet again why Ed Miliband is the luckiest political leader alive
Portrait of the week
Home Maria Miller resigned as Culture Secretary after a week of being the centre of a game of hunt-the-issue. She…
Socrates on Maria Miller
An ancient philosopher had the former culture secretary’s mindset pinned
Columnists
Could Jeremy Browne be the anti-Nigel Farage?
The ex-minister is seeking outsider appeal on the basis of unrepentant liberalism
The Spectator’s Notes
Plus: The need for real contrarians, and the sad fate of Lord Irvine’s wallpaper
I’m sick of weak women being praised as ‘strong’
Why are we supposed to admire ‘brave’ Kelly Osbourne checking into a clinic because of her weight gain?
Theresa May’s right: the police need radical reform. Here’s why
Maybe it's because they don't like us, either
How the Delingpoles triumphed over the Vikings
But here is why it was worth it anyway
The moral of Royal Mail: markets are capricious and bankers aren’t worth their fees
Plus: From golf courses back to farming in County Kerry
Books
Power to the people
A review of Selina Todd’s ‘The People: The Rise and Fall of the Working Class, 1910–2010’. The working class may disappoint radicals, says Alan Johnson, but that doesn't mean their best days are over
Scones and Bloomsberries for tea
A review of Jan Ondaatje Rolls’ ‘The Bloomsbury Cookbook: Recipes for Life, Love and Art’. How to make Dora Carrington’s nectar of cowslip wine, Vanessa Bells’s scones or William Cobbett’s loaf
Jokes? Prayers? Fables?
A review of Lydia Davis’ ‘Can’t and Won’t’. Susan Hill finds flashes of genius in Davis’ latest collection of short stories but she’s not sure everyone will
An expert castle-squatter
A review of Nick Hunt’s ‘Walking the Woods and the Water’. Hunt retraces the footsteps of Patrick Leigh Fermor across the suburban wastelands of Holland to the woods of Transylvania
A stranger in his own land
A review of Michael Oakeshott’s ‘Selected Writings, Vol VI: Notebooks, 1922-86’. Other nations know how to honour their philosophers – and this was a major philosopher
Noble cities of the dead
A review of Ingrid D. Rowland’s ‘From Pompeii: The Afterlife of a Roman Town’. The dead city is still capable of changing lives – Ingrid Rowland proves it
A powerful inspiration
A review of Jeremy Treglown’s Franco’s ‘Crypt: Spanish Culture and Memory Since 1936’. A lot of the great art and film made under Franco’s regime has been unfairly tainted by association
The little dictator
A review of Peter Ackroyd’s Charlie Chaplin. His films may have been all sweetness and light – but Chaplin's ego had few limits
Don’t do as I do, do as I say
A review of Arianna Huffington’s ‘Thrive: The Third Metric to Redefining Success and Creating a Happier Life’. You've seen the advice a thousand times. But the person giving it is something else...
Don Quixote of Kaszubia
A review of John Borrell’s ‘The White Lake’. An escape to the country for Borrell turned out to be a struggle for the soul of Poland
The fag-end rescued from the bin
A review of Samuel Beckett’s ‘Echo’s Bones’. Considered too Beckettian for 1933, this recovered short-story is an allusive riot
Officers, no gentlemen
A review of Anthony Seldon and David Walsh’s ‘Public Schools and the Great War’ and ‘Private Lord Crawford’s Great War Diaries’. Crawford’s entries undermine Seldon and Walsh’s rose-tinted view of public school conscripts
Culture and horticulture
A review of Peyton Skipwith and Brian Webb’s ‘Edward Bawden’s Kew Gardens’. A beautiful book is somewhat weighed down by its scholarship
Another secret garden
Rumer Godden’s An Episode of Sparrows, first published in 1955, focuses on the roaming children — the ‘sparrows’ — of a shabby street in bomb-torn London. When ten-year-old Lovejoy Mason finds a packet of cornflower seeds and decides to create an ‘Italian’ garden hidden in a rubble-strewn churchyard, the consequences are life-changing for all who become involved. Below is the foreword to a recent reissue of the novel (Virago Modern Classics, £7.99, Spectator Bookshop, £7.49).
A sober critic
Let’s get one thing straight: gullibility is not a virtue. This simple principle appears to be difficult to grasp for…
Arts
Coming out of the shadows
Whether it’s Bridget Riley or Richard Hamilton, Francis Newton Souza or Bob Law, the quiet radicals of the 60s and 70s are experiencing an overdue revival
Old man’s game
KLF were right all along when they left the music industry, went to a deserted boathouse and burned a million quid
Hard lessons
Theatre Royal’s 'Kingston 14' offers no pick-me-up (Goldie’s slim cameo doesn’t count), while the Arcola’s 'Banksy: The Room in the Elephant' offers no solace to the man the artist made homeless
The gardens of Kent
Visit Kent’s great gardens rather than this V&A exhibition if you want a more accurate impression of this ‘father of modern gardening’
Going places
A trip to the Globe brings out the best in Royal Opera House’s Kasper Holten while a tick-boxing visit to Ambika P3 for Thomas Ades’ Powder Her Face doesn’t do the ENO any favours
Road to redemption
If you're not hooked by Calvary from the start, there's probably something wrong with you, writes Deborah Ross
Women at war
The Crimson Field may be set during the First World War but the battlefields it focuses on are mental health and gender equality
The way we were
Plus: Alan Dein and Fi Glover uncover extraordinary stories from several ordinary-seeming lives
Transformations
Children will love this butterfly exhibition at the Natural History Museum
Life
Vishy regime
The Candidates tournament has been won by Vishy Anand who adopted the safety-first policy of winning two of his first…
No. 309
White to play. This position is from Mamedyarov-Aronian, Khanty-Mansisk 2014. White’s next was an ingenious way to demonstrate that his…
Putdownable
In Competition 2842 you were invited to compose the most off-putting book blurb that you could muster. There’s just space…
2157: Song X
Round the perimeter clockwise from 1 run six lights of a kind (7,9,10,9,9,8): if the grid were a 13/12, they…
to 2154: Clickety click
The MUSICAL (33) BARON (29) Lloyd-Webber’s BIRTHDAY (40) was on 22nd March; he was 66 (hence the title). His works…



































































