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The Spectator

15 February 2020 Aus

Dog of a fight

Barnaby takes on the Pinkish-Green Baron

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Will Morrison fight?

To ‘culturally appropriate’ General George S. Patton: No bastard ever won a war by refusing to fight the battle. Slowly,…

Australian Columnists

Australian Notes

Fighting fires

The richest man in Rome at the time of Julius Caesar was Marcus Licinius Crassus. Crassus made his fortune through…

Simon Collins

Simon Collins

‘A very merry Christmas,’ sang John Lennon in 1971, ‘and a Happy New Year; let’s hope it’s a good one,…

Brown Study

Brown Study

STOP PRESS We have just had to stop the presses that were printing the new edition of Brown’s Political Dictionary…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Entebbe: the sequel

Arab reaction to Trump’s plan strengthens Israel and further isolates the Palestinians

Features Australia

Go slow ScoMo

What has this government actually achieved?

Features Australia

Beagle love

70 years of unrequited cartoon lust

Features Australia

Dog of a fight

Barnaby takes on the Pinkish-Green Baron

Features Australia

Thought control through fear

Let therapists be free of ideological interference

Features Australia

Aux Bien Pensants

Media sacrifices independence and prestige

Features

Features

Europe’s shrinking centre

What happens when times change, but parties don’t?

Features

Viral hit

How prepared is the UK for a pandemic?

Features

The Shia Krays

The whole of Iraq is being held to ransom

Features

Tart gallery

The rise of the museum café

Features

Korea high

Seoul’s culture has become a global phenomenon

Features

A dish served cold

Is the pangolin having its revenge?

Features

Coming up roses

Will Brexit make Valentine’s Day less expensive?

Notes on...

Chesterton’s homes

It’s a quiet Wednesday afternoon in Britain’s most expensive market town, and there’s a sense of foreboding in the air.…

The Week

Leading article

Borrowed time

The nature of the Johnson government is still not clear, but has become more so with the announcement this week…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the Week

Home The Department of Health classified the novel coronavirus (named by the World Health Organization Covid-19) as a ‘serious and imminent…

Diary

Diary

Exactly 50 years ago I drove, for the first visit of many, across country to Aldeburgh in Suffolk, following the…

Barometer

Barometer

Going viral A few of the businesses which chose ‘Corona’ as a brand name and now have a bit of…

Ancient and modern

Beyond impeachment

An impeachment trial is overseen by Congress and Senate, who both make the law and (in this case) sit in…

Letters

Letters

A green and poor land? Sir: Your editorial (8 February) is a timely warning about what the government’s headlong drive…

Columnists

The Spectator's Notes

The Spectator’s Notes

How depressed should one be about the HS2 go-ahead? The cost is stupefying. The offering to the north — considered…

World Politics

Boris and the ticking clocks

‘The clock is ticking.’ It is surely only a matter of time before Michel Barnier returns to his notorious catchphrase…

Rod Liddle

Citizenship is a privilege, not a right

A couple of people in the Hornsey and Wood Green Labour party have come up with a fascinating suggestion —…

Freddy Gray

Can Bernie go the distance?

 Manchester, New Hampshire Democrats almost all agree that Donald Trump is ruining America and must be removed from the White…

Douglas Murray

Why I’ll never become an MP

Every now and then someone asks me if I have ever thought of becoming an MP. My response tends to…

Any other business

Never mind the numbers – the gender battle has barely begun

It’s the way the world’s going, but still it looks quite impressive that the number of women directors of FTSE100…

Books

Lead book review

Out of order

In his autobiography, John Bercow takes his peerage as a given. But that might be scuppered by accusations of bullying, says Lynn Barber

Books

Escape into war

What compelled three well-known British writers to leave their homes and travel 6,000 miles to participate in a nasty late-19th-century…

Books

Cooking up miracles

Georgina Landemare cooked for the Churchill family in all their kitchens, during the 1930s and 1940s. She got as close…

Books

Crowning glories

When an American describes a woman as wearing a ‘Park Avenue Helmet’ you know exactly what is meant. This is…

Books

A matter of detail

This is a very nuanced and subtle novel by Philip Hensher, which manages the highwire act of treating its characters…

Books

Acting the part

Actress is the novel Anne Enright has been rehearsing since her first collection of stories, The Portable Virgin (1991). It…

Books

He who dared

Of the many bleak moments that have lodged in my mind since reading this extraordinary book the most unshakeable is…

Books

Homage to Pieter the great

There is a vogue at the moment for books which use art as a vehicle for examining the writer’s wider…

Books

From the lake of dreams…

Kapka Kassabova’s previous travel book, Border, was rightly acclaimed and won several prizes. The author travelled to the edge of…

Books

… to endless wakefulness

The insomniac may come to dread the night’s solitude, but the next day poses the greater challenge. That’s when you…

Arts

Arts feature

Lost in translation

You won’t find much Jane Austen in the myriad adaptations of her novels, says Claire Harman

Television

Vol-au-vent horror

Not much was clear in the opening scenes of The Pale Horse (BBC1, Sunday), which even by current TV standards…

Theatre

Family matters

History will record Leopoldstadt as Tom Stoppard’s Schindler’s List. His brilliant tragic-comic play opens in the Jewish quarter of Vienna…

Theatre

Local hero

Blood Wedding, by the Spanish dramatist Federico Garcia Lorca, is one of those heavyweight tragedies that risks looking a bit…

Exhibitions

Wigging out

British Baroque: it was never going to fly. Les rosbifs emulating the splendour of le Roi Soleil? Pas possible. Still,…

Opera

Fellatio-free

Calixto Bieito’s Carmen: three words to make an opera critic’s heart leap. Until quite recently, Bieito was the operatic provocateur…

Cinema

Tinkerbell Regency

‘Too pretty,’ blithers Miss Bates in the Highbury haberdasher as she plucks at a silken tassel. ‘Too pretty’ goes for…

Culture Buff

No Pay? No Way!

As a sort of protest, I am not going to the opening of No Pay? No Way! at the Sydney…

Life

High life

High Life

Gstaad Lenin Moreno is in trouble, despite his very unchristian first name. For any of you unfamiliar with the name,…

Low life

Low life

Last Tuesday a Mistral wind blowing across the Bay of Angels jerked the plane all over the shop as it…

Real life

Real life

Being told I am now both short-sighted and long-sighted feels like someone is playing a very bad joke on me.…

Wild life

Wild life

Death and failure are more integral to farming than any other experience that I’ve witnessed in my life. Some things…

Bridge

Bridge

The annual Icelandic bridge tournament, held in Reykjavik at the end of January, is one of the best on the…

Chess

Beasts of the board

The Dutch artist Theo Jansen has a unique speciality. His ‘Strandbeest’ (beach animals) are kinetic sculptures, which he likes to…

Chess puzzle

no. 591

White to play, Dubov–Artemiev, Wijk aan Zee 2020. White is pressing here, but Black seems to have everything covered. Which…

Competition

Just the job

In Competition No. 3135 you were invited to submit an application letter for a job at No. 10 from a fictional…

Crossword

2444: Ones in the country

The unclued entries (three of two words, and two hyphened) share an origin   Across 1    Put an end to…

Crossword solution

to 2441: To and Fro

FRANCIS THOMPSON, born in PRESTON, wrote THE HOUND OF HEAVEN and a poem, AT LORD’S, remembering the run-stealers that flicker…

No sacred cows

Even the Oscars parties have lost their shine

Reading about the Oscars this week, I couldn’t help thinking back to a time when they actually meant something. When…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary

Q. I am having a drinks party to celebrate the publication of my latest book. I sent out invitations (to…

Spectator sport

Eight lessons from the world of sport

What we have learned in the past few weeks: 1) Don’t play rugby in a howling gale, even though for…

Food

Criminally good

The Yard is a defiantly themed restaurant in Hyatt’s new Great Scotland Yard Hotel, an Edwardian red-brick block which once…

Mind your language

At pace

In Arnold Bennett’s Tales of the Five Towns, a young dog called Ellis Carter takes a girl for a drive…