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The Spectator

16 February 2019 Aus

The Lion, the Witch & the Closet

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Power without responsibility

Stanley Baldwin is remembered for saying ‘power without responsibility – the prerogative of the harlot through the ages’. Baldwin meant…

Australian Columnists

Brown Study

Brown study

The iconic Australian company, Bradbury’s Chocolates, has just concluded its search for the sensible centre. But the dismal results obtained…

Diary Australia

Australian diary

Although it is a winter of discontent in Europe, there was little overt evidence of it in Vienna.  It was…

Australian Features

Features Australia

The man the Left fears most

The seat of Warringah, on Sydney’s northern beaches, has never been marginal and has always been held for the conservative…

Features Australia

Aux bien pensants

After the dry comes the wet ‘Remember, after the big dry comes the big wet,’ presciently warned  salt-of-the-earth South Australian…

Features Australia

Secularism – the new firebrand religion

The Australian Senate is currently considering a bill sponsored by the ALP’s Senator Wong that, if accepted, will amend the…

Features Australia

Fall of the House of Adler

‘Look here, what’s this book on my desk about Al Capone?’ ‘Why, Vice-Chancellor, it’s one of our flagship publications from…

Features Australia

Ramsay versus the Kaiser

Politically active people don’t see eye-to-eye on many issues these days, but something they all seem to agree on is…

Features Australia

Business/Robbery etc

Who needs parliament to make laws when there are clever judges who reckon they can do a far better job…

Features Australia

The Lion, the Witch & the Closet

With impeccable timing, increasingly-eccentric Defence Minister Christopher Pyne this week leapt out of some bizarre theological closet to declare that…

Features

Features

The Corbyn crack-up

To say that the May administration is ‘the worst government anyone can remember’ is to abuse the English language. It…

Features

Jeff Bezos isn’t a resistance hero – he’s a ruthless monopolist

It is tempting to view the blow-up between Amazon’s billionaire owner Jeff Bezos and David Pecker, publisher of the tabloid…

Features

Europe’s culture clash: Macron vs Salvini is a battle over a continent’s soul

Two weeks ago Luigi Di Maio, Italy’s vice-premier and Labour Minister and the top politician of the Five Star Movement…

[GETTY IMAGES]

Features

I was forced to wear a hijab. It wasn’t liberating

It was World Hijab Day earlier this month. You probably missed it, but you can imagine the idea: ‘global citizens’…

Features

How the cult of victimhood took hold of the royal family

Over the centuries, the British royal family have been many things: conquerors, vanquishers, tyrants and buffoons. They have been denied…

The deserted platform 1 at Aldwych

Notes on...

The eerie beauty of London’s abandoned Tube stops

If you’ve ever travelled on London’s Piccadilly Line, you may have noticed that on the stretch between Green Park and…

The Week

Leading article

The EU and UK are one sentence away from a Brexit deal. Why the games?

Even the most fervent Brexiteer would have to admit to being impressed at the cohesion and chutzpah of the European…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week: More Brexit talks, more French protests and less horse racing

Home Theresa May, the Prime Minister, returned from a trip to Brussels and Dublin and hurried to the Commons to…

Luciana Berger is escorted by police to Labour’s party conference last year after anti-Semitic attacks on Twitter [GETTY IMAGES]

Diary

Jess Phillips: The message I’ve been forced to send Luciana Berger too many times

‘You OK?’ was the message I sent to Luciana Berger last week. As I scroll back through our previous WhatsApp…

[GETTY IMAGES]

Barometer

Brexiteers have ‘a special place in hell’ – but who else has a spot there?

Places in Hell President Donald Tusk said there must be a ‘special place in Hell reserved for those who promoted…

Opposition supporters take to the streets against Nicolás Maduro [GETTY IMAGES]

Ancient and modern

How to get away with being a tyrant

Last week, in an effort to understand what that left-wing hero Nicolás Maduro, President of Venezuela, must be suffering, Hieron,…

Letters

Australian letters

What have we learned in 2,074 years? Sir: “The budget should be balanced, the Treasury should be refilled, public debt…

Columnists

The Spectator's Notes

It turns out I sound much cleverer in French

On Tuesday, Le Monde published a piece it had commissioned from me to explain why, from a British point of…

World Politics

If Corbyn’s not in the lead now, he never will be

Statistically, a Tory victory at the next election is unlikely. British voters tend not to grant a fourth term to…

Rod Liddle

My diversity targets for the BBC

Terrible news for gay broadcasters —  the BBC has only one year to meet a diversity target which says that…

Matthew Parris

The day I had enough of experts

‘Don’t even try,’ said the man on the car deck as Brittany Ferries’ Finistère tied up on the dock in…

Lionel Shriver

Without forgiveness, we’re all doomed

Over Christmas, I digitised slides from my twenties. In many an unidentified photograph, I didn’t recognise the scene. Where was…

Any other business

What would Keynes make of a looming no-deal Brexit?

‘It is seldom wise to sacrifice a present evil for a doubtful advantage in the future,’ wrote John Maynard Keynes…

Books

Portrait of Ruskin dated 1870

Lead book review

John Ruskin: the making of a modern prophet

At the time of his death in 1900, John Ruskin was, according to Andrew Hill, ‘perhaps the most famous living…

The inventor of gonzo journalism: Hunter S. Thompson, in his heyday in the 1960s

Books

How fear and loathing of Nixon sent Hunter S. Thompson crazy

Hunter Stockton Thompson blazed across the republic of American arts and letters for too short a time. When in February…

The road to Calvary: Enrique Irazoqui as Christ in Pier Paolo Pasolini’s 1964 film The Gospel According to Matthew

Books

Seeing and believing: the best spiritual films of Europe’s golden age

The Italian film director Federico Fellini was not known for his piety (far from it), yet towards the end of…

The North Pole, from the star atlas of the French Jesuit priest and scientist, Ignace-Gaston Pardies, published in 1674

Books

The unearthly powers of the North Pole

Having spent too much of my life at both poles (writing, not sledge-pulling), I know the spells those places cast.…

Credit: Getty Images

Books

Fiction for the #MeToo age: Victory, by James Lasdun, reviewed

James Lasdun is my favourite ‘should be famous’ writer, his work extraordinarily taut and compelling. His eye-boggling psychological thrillers are…

James Clerk Maxwell: funny, flippant and charming, with an extraordinarily fertile mechanical imagination

Books

The powerful magnetism of James Clerk Maxwell

Chances are, you are reading these words in some room or other. Build a wall down the middle of it,…

Sam Lipsyte. Credit: Ceridwen Morris

Books

Hitting the bull’s-eye: Hark, by Sam Lipsyte, reviewed

This is an ebullient, irreverent and deeply serious novel in the noble tradition of Mark Twain, Sinclair Lewis (especially Babbitt…

Yiyun Li, Credit: Roger Turesson

Books

No escape from grief: Where Reasons End, by Yiyun Li, reviewed

When Yiyun Li first became a writer, she decided that she would leave behind her native language, Chinese, and never…

James Simpson’s provocative book draws primarily on literary evidence, with Milton as its presiding genius

Books

The brutish origins of British liberalism

If the road to hell is paved with good intentions, the one to heaven may be surfaced with bad ones.…

Credit: Getty Images

Books

Fun at the EU’s expense: The Capital, by Robert Menasse, reviewed

Stendhal likened politics in literature to a pistol-shot in a concert: crude, but compelling. When that politics largely consists of…

Australian Books

Undercurrents

Former Melbourne detective Colin McLaren’s cold case book into the 2009 disappearance of Bob Chappell and the 2010 conviction of…

Arts

World-class: Symphony Orchestra of India in its tropical Barbican in Mumbai

Arts feature

Meet India’s first – and only – professional western orchestra

It’s a 31ºC Mumbai morning, and on Marine Drive the Russian winter is closing in. The Symphony Orchestra of India…

Mesmerising: Rosamund Pike as Marie Colvin in A Private War

Cinema

The film makes you ashamed to call yourself a journalist: A Private War reviewed

A Private War is a biopic of the celebrated Sunday Times war correspondent Marie Colvin who was, judging from this,…

Christian Gerhaher and Gerold Huber at the piano in their 2016 Wigmore Hall recital. Photo: Amy T. Zielinski / Redferns

Music

A Winterreise that included a mistake of genius

Broadly speaking, there are two kinds of approach to performing Schubert’s Winterreise, though sometimes there’s doubt or dispute about which…

Martin Freeman as Gus and Danny Dyer as Ben in Harold Pinter’s The Dumb Waiter

Theatre

Danny Dyer is not so much an actor as a fairground attraction: Pinter Seven reviewed

The Dumb Waiter is a one-act play from 1957 that retains an extraordinary hold over the minds of theatre-goers. It’s…

Two members of the Glasgow Humane Society on the River Clyde. Photo: Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images

Radio

The story of the River Clyde

It sounds like something out of Dickens or a novel by Thackeray, a classic case of high-minded Victorian philanthropy, but…

The thrilling first part of Dmitri Tcherniakov's new production of Berlioz's Les Troyens for Opéra Bastille. Photo: Vincent Pontet / Opéra National de Paris

Cinema, Exhibitions

Dau is not just a pretentious fraud – it’s rather disgusting

The best booers, in my experience, are the Germans. There’s real purpose and thickness to their vocals. Italians hiss. The…

‘Wonderground Map of London Town’, 1914, by Max Gill

Exhibitions

Not as good as his immoral brother Eric but still wonderful: Max Gill at Ditchling reviewed

MacDonald ‘Max’ Gill (1884–1947) is less well known than his notorious brother, Eric. But was he less of a designer,…

Atravesty: Sky Atlantic's remake of Das Boot. Photo: Sky Germany / Nik Konietzny / Bavaria Fiction GmbH

Television

Like getting Banksy to repaint the Sistine Chapel: Sky Atlantic’s Das Boot reviewed

‘I know, let’s repaint the Sistine Chapel. But this time we’ll get it done by Banksy.’ Perhaps this wasn’t the…

Culture Buff

Gerald Murnane

I know I’m a bit late getting to the party; the party that has formed to honour the writing of…

Life

High life

Faithless husbands can be the best husbands

Gstaad   Who was it that said we always hurt those we love the most? I did just that last…

Low life

‘I don’t know how ever Jerry stands it’: diary of a world war one artillery man

My sister’s boyfriend is a solitary man and easily overwhelmed by another’s presence. On his rare visits he flits in…

Real life

Why I could kiss Mark Zuckerberg

Since posting some of my research into the RSPCA on Facebook, I now better understand the way social networking works.…

The turf

Did the BHA call it right on equine flu?

The pre-war Fabians Sidney and Beatrice Webb apparently had a pre-marriage agreement. It wasn’t like today’s Hollywood prenups, designed to…

Bridge

Bridge

Two of the best (and most enjoyable) Pairs and Teams tournaments of the year have just finished, and I miss…

Chess

Homage to Kramnik

The former world champion Vladimir Kramnik recently announced his retirement from competitive chess. He is one of the greats of the…

Chess puzzle

no. 541

Black to play. This position is from Gelfand–Kramnik, Berlin 1996. This is one of Kramnik’s finest finishes. Can you spot…

Competition

What’s not to love

In Competition No. 3085 you were invited to submit a poem in dispraise of Valentine’s Day. The day is said…

Crossword

2395: Concise crossword

The seven clues below have to be interpreted cryptically and are then entered in the grid where they will fit.…

Crossword solution

to 2392: Beknighted

The unclued lights (10/1D, 11, 23/38, 29D/28 and 39) received knighthoods or a DBE in the recent New Year’s Honours List.…

School children gather in Sydney last November to demand the government takes action on climate change [MARK METCALFE/GETTY IMAGES]

No sacred cows

If children want to protest against climate change, why not do it at the weekend?

Thousands of schoolchildren are planning to go on ‘strike’ on Friday to protest about government inaction on climate change. Called…

Video-conferencing could revolutionise how we work – so why have we failed to invest in it properly? [GETTY IMAGES]

The Wiki Man

We don’t need more technology, we need better technology

I’d like to propose a new scientific institution: the IUT, or Institute of Underrated Technology. Rather than trying to invent…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary: How can I get my annoying children to answer my texts?

Q. I have learned through a third party that a friend, who is feeling particularly insecure these days, has not been…

Drink

Only the south offers beer lovers a decent pint

We were discussing beer. It is a cheerful subject so I made an appropriate point. In recent years, the quality…

Mind your language

What the sports pages mean by ‘marquee’?

Ordinarily my husband is punctilious in keeping the pages of the Telegraph straight, especially when it is read by other…