Robert Lynd

Articles by Robert Lynd

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  • 06 November 2006

Taken from the New Statesman archive, 28 January 1933 The subject is as pertinent today as it ever was, and though you may not agree with the argument I doubt if you have seen it more eloquently or genially made. Lynd (1879-1949), who wrote under the pseudonym "Y Y", was a mainstay of the magazine for decades, and his essays, usually on frothier topics than this, were so popular they were routinely republished in anthologies. Selected by Brian Cathcart

Boats

  • 10 April 2006

Taken from the New Statesman archive, 4 April 1925. Lynd wrote for the New Statesman for more than 30 years, usually (as in this case) under the pseudonym "Y Y". A socialist and an Irish nationalist, he is best remembered for his epigrams, including "Happy is the child whose father can acquit himself with credit in front of its friends", and "The belief in the possibility of a short, decisive war appears to be one of the most ancient and dangerous of human illusions" - Brian Cathcart

Fidel Castro

The last revolutionary

The last revolutionary

Steve Richards

On Tory policy

Our future in their hands

Science

Religion and Darwin

Since the dawn  of time

James Macintyre

Miliband's dilemma

Brussels is back with a vengeance

Will Self

On Oscar Wilde

Where the Wilde things are

Film review

Bright Star

Bright Star (PG)

Books

Paul Auster

Invisible

Interview

Alain de Botton

The Books Interview: Alain de Botton

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