It is as contributions to the fulfillment of Tyrrell's salutary and constructive aim that I shall review all five works. In these days of our national decadence, the saving example has to be not an inspiration but a warning. In an earlier and better period, one of the greatest of our prime ministers hoped that, when England had saved herself by her exertions, she might proceed to save others, too, by her example. It is a most important and worthwhile aim. The aim of the editor-who is also editor of that lively conservative journal the American Spectator-is to present the post-World War II British experience as an object lesson. "Social democracy's failure in Britain" is the subtitle of the first of these books. Right Turn, edited by Patrick Cormack, London: Leo Cooper. The Coming Confrontation: Will the Open Society Survive to 1989?, edited by Ralph Harris and Anthony Seldon, London: Institute for Economic Affairs. $9.95.ġ985, by Anthony Burgess, Boston: Little, Brown. $6.95.īritain: A Future That Works, by Bernard D. Emmett Tyrrell, Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday.
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