Michael Portillo

Our departure from Iraq ends a dismal period in our military history

From our UK edition

‘The past is the past. It is no longer important,’ says Brigadier Billal Saleh Shukur, commander of Iraq’s 21st army brigade now occupying a part of Basra. We have met on a warm March day at the airbase outside the city, at the start of a five-a-side football tournament between teams drawn from the Iraqi and British forces. I had expressed my profound regret that the American-British Coalition, which rightly reveres every one of its own casualties, has always refused to count how many Iraqi citizens have been killed in six years of violence; and indeed has invested considerable effort in discrediting any human rights organisation that estimated the death toll.

From Chaucer to Channel Four

From our UK edition

'Everything of value in our spiritual and cultural life springs from our soil.' Thus spake Vaughan Williams; and Peter Ackroyd has undertaken a detailed proof of that proposition in this exploration of the origins of the English imagination. He has constructed a vast genealogical table, decorated with tiny marginalia, to identify the begetters of our national artistic consciousness, and to trace their lineage. We English are the sum of countless cultural influences drawn from across our history. Ackroyd delves into the Anglo-Saxon epic Beowulf and there identifies the four- beat alliterative line 'in an insistent rhythm which will affect the whole subsequent movement of English poetry'.