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The Spectator

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Australia

Leading article Australia

The conservative case for SSM

Is there a credible conservative case for voting Yes to same-sex marriage? This critical question has been addressed by, among…

Diary Australia

Travel diary

If you have never been to Helsinki, put it on your bucket list. But, go twice. Once in summer for…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Stan Grant’s papal bull

According to ancient legend, Alexander the Great was born on the day that the second Temple of Artemis at Ephesus…

Features Australia

Don’t change the Senate

Defenders of the constitution have our work cut out for us. It seems that every day brings a new, novel,…

Features Australia

Coming soon to a campus near you

If you are not worried about the state of free enquiry in universities around the Anglosphere then you are probably…

Features Australia

Business/Robbery etc

Why are so many company directors diverting their energies into pushing publicly-owned corporations to take up controversial social and political…

Features Australia

Cry me a river

My local council – Yarra City – is a grab-bag of inner-urban ‘brie and chablis’ lefties from central casting. It…

Features Australia

Aux bien pensants

Everything and anything to bring Australia down Will our elites succeed in bringing Australia down, just as Argentina and especially…

Features Australia

Where’s Waleed (on gay marriage)?

When the Chinese family who have a café in the small town near me put a sign in their window…

Features

Woven thread: a 19th-century Arthurian tapestry

Notes on...

Tapestries

It is rare nowadays to see someone pull out a half-finished tapestry from their handbag and get on with their…

Features

Starting again at 48

My name is Katherine and I’m an intern at The Spectator. What does that say about me? If you had…

Features

The Merkel supremacy

 Berlin ‘Capitalism is armed robbery,’ reads the graffiti on the subway wall, but here in Berlin, German capitalists are doing…

Features

The fat tax fallacy

James Cracknell, the athlete turned anti-obesity campaigner, was the subject of sniggering and derision in April when he said that…

Features

Love rats

 Paris A rat’s not called a rat for nothing, and — as we are repeatedly told — we are never…

Features

The lure of the abyss

I received a sad letter this week: Steve is back in prison. Each day the mail comes down to the…

Features

The green giant

Environmentalism has gone too far; renewable energy is a disaster; scares about pesticides and chemicals are horribly overdone; no, the…

Features

Fat Britannia: what can be done about our expanding waistlines?

The good news is that Theresa May has dropped the threat to withdraw universal free school meals. Thank God (and…

The Week

Letters

Australian letters

Odious Sir: It is typical of the sloppy zealotry of your Australian edition, which is so at odds with the…

Diary

Diary

September is my time of year. Summer is all very well if you’re one of those golden-haired, long-limbed types who…

Leading article

Keeping faith

For Church of England vicars who worry less about what they will preach on Sunday than whether there will be…

Barometer

Barometer

More or less a million One in 79 Britons is now a millionaire thanks to property price rises. The word…

Ancient and modern

A matter of life and death

Before he died, the former Archbishop of Westminster, Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor, reassured his diocese that he was ‘at peace and…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home On being asked if she meant to lead the Conservatives into the next election, due in 2022, Theresa May,…

Columnists

World Politics

May’s exit strategy

Nearly all Tory MPs now agree Theresa May should stay on as Prime Minister. She must get the party through…

Rod Liddle

Why English footballers are so useless

It is late in the evening. You’re in a bar. You’ve had quite a bit to drink but you are…

Any other business

Ten years after the banking crisis began, the unfairness of its aftermath still stings

Arguably it was Robert Peston’s breathless reporting of trouble at Northern Rock on the evening of 13 September 2007 that…

Lara Prendergast

The sinister power of family courts

It’s right that some children are taken into care. One case in point is that of Ayeeshia-Jayne Smith, the toddler…

Books

‘My witchcraft is going well’: The crazed Eva Rausing, photographed shortly before her death

Books

Descent into hell

It’s awful, but the surname Rausing (once synonymous only with the Tetrapak fortune) now summons up a terrible stench in…

The Templars’ final disaster: Guillaume de Clermont on the ramparts of Acre in 1291. Painting by Dominique Papety

Books

Crusading passions

In W.B. Yeats’s ‘Meditations in Time of Civil War’, a testing allusion emerges amid a scene of nightmare: Monstrous familiar…

Books

Beyond Timbuktu

Every so often a monster comes along. Here’s one — but a monster of fact not fiction, over 700 pages…

Books

A blast from the past

If you had to choose one book that both typified spy fiction and celebrated what the genre was capable of…

Finger counting from 1 to 20,000. From De Numeris by Rabanus Maurus. (Carolingian school, 9th century)

Books

The magic of maths

It’s odd, when you think about it, that mathematics ever got going. We have no innate genius for numbers. Drop…

Books

Creature comforts

As naturalist, educator and writer, John Lister-Kaye was for many years a voice in the wilderness. In 1976, when nature…

Books

Homer Simpson meets Homer

Milan Kundera has said that Homer’s Odyssey was the first novel. I’m not so sure — the verse kind of…

The miserly widow Mary Emsley, clutching a roll of her precious wallpaper, as portrayed in the popular press

Books

Ill-met by gaslight

What is it about Victorian murders that so grips us? The enduring fascination of Jack the Ripper caught the imagination…

The Normansfield Theatre in Teddington, a beautiful ‘lost’ Victorian playhouse, is still used for concerts and music-hall evenings, and by small opera companies

Books

Pleasure palaces and hidden gems

Theatre buildings are seriously interesting – as I ought to have appreciated sooner in the course of 25 years writing…

Books

Punks vs. Putin

What makes for meaningful political protest? In regimes where ideology was taken seriously (such as the Soviet Union or America…

The Korean war was the single greatest calamity of the period. Residents of Inchon surrender to American troops in 1950

Books

Armageddon averted

From 1945 to 1992 the Cold War was the climate. Individual weather events stood out — the Korean War, the…

Arts

Music

Bowled over by Bruckner

The two Proms concerts given on consecutive evenings by the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra were well planned: a short opening work,…

The Heckler

The National: Sleep Well Beast

Grade: A– There are plenty of websites where fans try to discern, without any success, what in the name of…

An out-of-work steel worker walking through Port Talbot, 1964

Arts feature

Made in Port Talbot

Port Talbot, on the coast of South Wales, is literally overlooked. Most experience the town while flying over it on…

Cinema

Male order

The starting point for Taylor Sheridan’s crime-thriller Wind River is explicitly stated at the end when the following words come…

Radio

The listening project

As Classic FM celebrated its quarter-century on Wednesday with not a recording but a live broadcast of a concert from…

Television

Second thoughts

I had planned to review David Mitchell and Robert Webb’s new Channel 4 sitcom Back without constantly referring to their…

Worse for wear: Kevin McNally as Lear and Burt Caesar as Gloucester in King Lear

Theatre

Keeping it in the family

A new orthodoxy governs the casting process in Hollywood. An actor’s ethnicity must match the character’s. If you extend this…

Culture Buff

Anne-Sophie Mutter

These are good times for the Sydney Symphony Orchestra. Chief Conductor Davis Robertson announced a glamorous 2018 Season. The Board…

Still life: ‘A Kiss’, 1891, by Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema

Exhibitions

Silent films

On 15 September 1888 Vincent van Gogh was intrigued to read an account of an up-to-date artist’s house in the…

Opera

Viennese whirl

‘First performance: Vienna, October 3, 1880’ declares the programme for Opera della Luna’s new production of Johann Strauss’s The Queen’s…

Life

Competition

From me to you

In Competition No. 3014 you were invited to submit a love poem written by one contemporary politician to another.  …

Dear Mary

Dear Mary

Q. Some rather flashy new neighbours of ours — I won’t mention their names as his will be familiar to…

Mind your language

Go ballistic

I had always thought that to go ballistic was the same as to go nuclear, metaphorically. But the ballistic figure…

Drink

Thank Evans for good wine

There was an entirely forgotten leftist called Allen Ginsberg, a so-called beat poet (surely an oxymoron) who once produced a…

The Wiki Man

Migration is complicated. Don’t pretend it’s not

I expect you’ve already noticed it, but in case you’ve been living in a cave or an economics faculty for…

Bridge

Bridge

Aren’t the Irish supposed to be lucky? The Irish open team are having no luck at all at the moment.…

Chess

David and the Giants

The overall scores of the exceedingly strong combined rapid and blitz tournaments in St Louis were as follows: 1. Aronian 24½;…

Chess puzzle

no. 473

Black to play. This is from Kasparov-Navara, St Louis Blitz 2017. White has just given what appears to be a…

Crossword

2326: ‘Suits you, sir!’

The unclued lights are of a kind. Elsewhere, ignore one apostrophe.   Across 2    Means to call poor chaperone about…

Crossword solution

to 2323: alphabetical jigsaw

A Ambition, A Aorist, B Battledore, C Caret, C Cashed, C Coact, C Coalman, C Cuttoes, D Dioxan, D Disaccharides,…

Real life

Real life

Stefano the Albanian turned up in a brand new Audi off-roader, cutting quite the dash. He looked older, with some…

Low life

Low life

‘Have you ever thought of having some colour put in, love?’ said Julian as he shaved my neck with a…

Status anxiety

All four of my kids will learn to shoot

I spent Monday morning being taught how to use a shotgun at E.J. Churchill, a shooting ground in High Wycombe.…

High life

High life

After the heat in Greece, the Alps are cool and green and very comfortable. My sensei Richard Amos is over…