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He made conservatism `fighting faith'

georgewill@washpost.com

Those who think Jack Nicholson's neon smile is the last word in smiles never saw William F. Buckley's. It could light up an auditorium; it did light up half a century of elegant advocacy that made him an engaging public intellectual and the 20th century's most consequential journalist.

Before there could be Ronald Reagan's presidency, there had to be Barry Goldwater's candidacy. It made conservatism confident and placed the Republican Party in the hands of its adherents.

Before there could be Goldwater's insurgency, there had to be National Review magazine. From the creative clutter of its Manhattan offices flowed the ideological electricity that powered the transformation of American conservatism from a mere sensibility into a fighting faith and a blueprint for governance.

Before there was National Review, there was Buckley, spoiling for a philosophic fight, to be followed, of course, by a flute of champagne with his adversaries. He was 29 when, in 1955, he launched National Review with the vow that it ''stands athwart history, yelling Stop.'' Actually, it helped Bill take history by the lapels, shake it to get its attention, and then propel it in a new direction. Bill died Wednesday in his home, in his study, at his desk, diligent at his life-long task of putting words together well and to good use.

Before his intervention -- often laconic in manner, always passionate in purpose -- in the plodding political arguments within the flaccid liberal consensus of the post-World War II intelligentsia, conservatism's face was that of another Yale man, Robert Taft, somewhat dour, often sour, three-piece suits, wire-rim glasses. The word ''fun'' did not spring to mind.

The fun began when Bill picked up his clipboard, and conservatives' spirits, by bringing his distinctive brio and elan to political skirmishing. When young Goldwater decided to give politics a fling, he wrote to his brother: ''It ain't for life and it might be fun.'' He was half right: Politics became his life and it was fun, all the way. Politics was not Bill's life -- he had many competing and compensating enthusiasms -- but it mattered to him, and he mattered to the course of political events.

`Eye for political truths'

One clue to Bill's talent for friendship surely is his fondness for this thought of Harold Nicolson's: ''Only one person in a thousand is a bore, and he is interesting because he is one person in a thousand.'' Consider this from Bill's introduction to a collection of his writings titled The Jeweler's Eye: A Book of Irresistible Political Reflections:

'The title is, of course, a calculated effrontery, the relic of an impromptu answer I gave once to a tenacious young interviewer who, toward the end of a very long session, asked me what opinion did I have of myself. I replied that I thought of myself as a perfectly average middle-aged American, with, however, a jeweler's eye for political truths. I suppressed a smile -- and watched him carefully record my words in his notebook. Having done so, he looked up and asked, `Who gave you your jeweler's eye?' 'God,' I said, tilting my head skyward just a little. He wrote that down -- the journalism schools warn you not to risk committing anything to memory. 'Well,' -- he rose to go, smiling at last -- 'that settles that!' We have become friends.''

Pat, Bill's beloved wife of 56 years, died last April. During the memorial service for her at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, a friend read lines from Vitae Summa Brevis by a poet she admired, Ernest Dowson: They are not long, the days of wine and roses: Out of a misty dream Our path emerges for a while, then closes Within a dream.

Bill's final dream was to see her again, a consummation of which his faith assured him. He had an aptitude for love -- of his son, his church, his harpsichord, language, wine, skiing, sailing.

He began his 60-year voyage on the waters of American controversy by tacking into the wind with a polemical book, God and Man at Yale (1951), that was a lovers' quarrel with his alma mater. And so at Pat's service the achingly beautiful voices of Yale's Whiffenpoofs were raised in their signature song about the tables down at Mory's, ``the place where Louis dwells'':

We will serenade our Louis

While life and voice shall last

Then we'll pass and be forgotten with the rest

Bill's distinctive voice permeated, and improved, his era. It will be forgotten by no one who had the delight of hearing it.

©2008 Washington Post Writers Group

 

All white now as Kate and William take to the slopes in Klosters

by REBECCA ENGLISH in Klosters - More by this author » Last updated at 22:29pm on 18th March 2008

Comments Comments (15)

Swooshing downhill, side by side, Kate Middleton and Prince William show that their relationship is definitely on the up.

A playful Miss Middleton even gave her chap a tap with her ski pole as they descended the Alpine slopes.

The couple are enjoying a week-long break together in Klosters, where biting winds and heavy snowfalls have made skiing conditions less than ideal.

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The prince and the snow girl: Kate Middleton gives Prince William a tap on the slopes in Klosters

That has not deterred 26-year-old Miss Middleton, who confidently tackled some challenging off-piste runs before enjoying a romantic lunch with William in a chalet high in the mountains.

Their obvious closeness puts paid to mischievous rumours that their four-year relationship is on the rocks again following their temporary split last year.

While they have spent only a handful of weekends together since the beginning of the year, this is due to Army officer William's intensive three-month attachment to the RAF.

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Kate Middleton in Klosters

Kate and William's visit to the exclusive ski resort scotches rumours their relationship is on the rocks

The reality, friends say, is that their romance is stronger than ever.

The pair are due to be joined in Switzerland later in the week by Prince Charles, further cementing Miss Middleton's growing confidence at the heart of the Royal Family.

A source close to William told the Daily Mail: "His father sees Kate often and has become very fond of her. It is going to be a real family holiday."

William pauses to give Kate a helping hand as she adjusts her ski goggles

 

 

 

 

 
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