vendredi 1 mai 2026

The great landlord exodus

Behind the scenes of the royal tour | The 50 greatest films of all time, ranked
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Friday, 1 May 2026

Issue No. 432

Good morning.

From today, landlords could be punished for 15 new reasons, ranging from fixed-term tenancies to refusing a pet. Labour’s Renters’ Rights Act, which came into force at midnight, has left law-abiding property owners feeling like “criminals”. Maya Wilson Autzen, our Senior Money Writer, has the story.

Elsewhere, Hannah Furness, our Royal Editor, marvels at the King’s diplomacy in the US, and takes us behind the scenes to reveal what it’s really like on a royal tour.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Telegraph readers can now enjoy a year’s access for just £1.99 per month. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Starmer refused to show his face to the furious crowd in Golders Green

Britain’s population timebomb is about to blow. We have three terrible choices

Plus, the 50 greatest films of all time, ranked

Enjoy a whole year for £1.99 per month

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The great landlord exodus: why property owners are quitting the rental market

Maya Wilson Autzen

Maya Wilson Autzen

Senior Money Writer

 

Leah is a landlord – or, at least, she was. After more than 30 years renting out a portfolio of 100 properties, she is selling up as quickly as she can. She is down to her last 20. “Every landlord I know is unhappy,” she says.

Why? Labour’s Renters’ Rights Act, the most seismic change to the buy-to-let industry in a generation, comes into force today.

It introduces 15 new penalties for landlords and gives councils greater powers of enforcement, with fines of up to £40,000. Offences that now attract a penalty include attempting to let a property for a fixed term or accepting rent above the advertised rate. Landlords can no longer use “no-fault” Section 21 evictions or refuse a tenant with a pet.

Michael Grant, another landlord who’s selling up, says the system feels designed to trip landlords up. “It strikes me as very one-sided,” he says, adding that tenants can “get away” with not paying rent but if he makes “one simple error”, he will be punished.

The Renters’ Rights Act is just the latest affront in a decade-long crackdown on landlords.

In 2015, George Osborne, the then chancellor, introduced a 3 per cent stamp duty surcharge on buy-to-lets and reduced mortgage interest tax relief.

Rachel Reeves, the current chancellor, increased that surcharge to 5 per cent. Labour also expanded Making Tax Digital last month and will increase tax on property income by 2p in the pound next year. By 2030, all private rented properties must have an energy performance certificate rating of C.

It is little surprise that landlords have run for the door. Before the pandemic, around 9 per cent of property sellers were landlords. By the start of this year, that had climbed to 15 per cent. For many landlords, this is the end of the road.
Read the full story here

What the new law means for renters and landlords

It is still possible to make money. Buy-to-let Masterclass, The Telegraph’s new five-part newsletter, will give you actionable advice and practical tools to make the most of your bricks and mortar.
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Behind the scenes: The royal tour that was the making of a King

Hannah Furness

Hannah Furness

Royal Editor, in Washington DC

 

What is it really like on a royal tour? It is a question I get asked often (second only to “what are the Royal family really like?”), and today I will happily provide an answer.

This US state visit has been a tour for the ages. It has had all the classic elements: buses, lanyards, protocol, headlines, briefings, more buses and a giggling Queen.

It has also had one Donald Trump. The unpredictable US president has delivered news at all turns, starting with a speech declaring that his late mother had “a crush” on the King when he was younger and ending by lifting tariffs on Scottish whiskey with a flourish.

This week has taken us to Washington, New York and Virginia, via a black-tie White House dinner and a mayor calling for the Koh-i-Noor diamond to be “returned” out of the blue. There have been beehives, Botox, but no ballroom. Tea towels, chickens, golf carts, a submarine bell named for Trump and a lamb named for the King – this tour has had it all.

Do let me take you behind the scenes. It is a privilege, a front-row seat to history and sometimes quite silly. Welcome to a royal tour like no other.

This article is available to subscribers only.
Continue reading

 

Opinion

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard Headshot

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

It is Trump’s video-game war but Europe’s very real recession

Only an end to wishful thinking in the Oval Office will avert a downturn in Europe, the UK and Japan

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Sherelle Jacobs</span> Headshot

Sherelle Jacobs

Labour faces an extinction level event in the heart of industrial England

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Hamish de Bretton-Gordon</span> Headshot

Hamish de Bretton-Gordon

Make no mistake, Vladimir Putin is now afraid

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

The bus went off the road into the River Seine, taking a car into the water with it

Essential reads

Sir Keir Starmer meets members of the Jewish community away from the crowd of protesters

Starmer refused to show his face to the furious crowd in Golders Green

As Sir Keir Starmer’s convoy of cars arrived in North London yesterday the anger of protesters was palpable, writes Mick Brown. The Prime Minister’s visit prompted shouts and chants: “Keir Starmer, Jew Hater… Keir Starmer’s a traitor … Coward! Show your face!” However, the sense of fear in the crowd was just as strong. Once a refuge for Jews from the oldest hatred in the world, this country is now a place where Jewish people are afraid. Is this what Britain has become?
Continue reading

Go deeper with our full coverage:

Golders Green suspect charged with attempted murder

Met chief accuses Polanski of inflaming tensions

Police consider ban on pro-Palestine marches

 

Britain’s population timebomb is about to blow. We have three terrible choices

For two centuries, only war and the 1970s Labour government have slowed Britain’s growing population, writes Ben Butcher, our Data Editor. Now, this upwards trend is about to come to a screeching halt. With deaths poised to outstrip births and working-age taxpayers dwindling, Whitehall spreadsheets are flashing red, threatening the very functioning of the state as we know it.

Continue reading

 

Father Michael Mary on his way to Mass at the Golgotha Monastery on the Orkney island of Papa Stronsay

The reclusive island monastery where young monk vanished without a trace

On a windswept Orkney outcrop, a vanished monk has cast a spotlight on one of Britain’s most secretive religious orders. Papa Stronsay’s exiled monastery – already dogged by allegations of rogue exorcisms – now faces scrutiny after 24-year-old Brother Ignatius disappeared into the North Sea. Is this a tragic drowning, or a window into a cloistered world long accused of spiritual extremism?

Continue reading

 

Lebby Eyres with her son, Vincent, who will be taking his maths A-level mocks this year

‘I’ve been a hands-off parent with my son’s exams. Is it too late to help?’

It’s exam season, which means stress levels increasing in households across the country. Lebby Eyres admits she was a pushy 11+ parent, but has been more hands off with GCSEs. Now, her son Vincent is sitting his first A-level, she’s turned to experts for advice on how to help him secure his grades without turning into a nag (or bribing him with hard cash).

Continue reading

 
50 greatest films GIF

The 50 greatest films of all time, ranked

Since 2011, Robbie Collin has been our Chief Film Critic, casting an expert eye over thousands of releases. Now, he has finally been given the chance to let you know what he thinks are the greatest 50 films of all time. We will release them in three parts: entries 50-31 are now live, with 30-11 following on Saturday and the top 10 on Sunday. Unsurprisingly, Robbie has delivered a list that is eclectic, exciting, and sometimes surprising. This first selection includes Marilyn Monroe’s finest hour, the moment Jude Law predicted the 2020s and possibly the best movie car ever.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

The British holiday destinations that feel like being abroad

Portmeirion’s baroque flourishes make it a ringer for Portofino

Britain is set for a staycation boom this summer, as the fallout from the Iran war squeezes jet fuel supplies. Thousands of flights have been cancelled and air fares are soaring as Europe braces for a major kerosene shortage. While holidays at home may lack the glamour of overseas travel, these domestic doubles are fine substitutes for some of our favourite foreign destinations.

Continue reading

Here is another helpful article for you this morning:

 

Reviews of the week

The Devil Wears Prada 2 is a glorious, glamorous tribute to the Noughties

Meryl Streep and Anne Hathaway return as Miranda Priestly and Andy Sachs

Film

The Devil Wears Prada 2

★★★★☆

Meryl Streep’s Miranda Priestly is back, still in charge of Runway magazine and remaining in possession of a pursed lip that can crush an intern at 30 paces. David Frankel’s glossy and sophisticated sequel to his 2006 workplace comedy – which reunites Anne Hathaway, Emily Blunt and Stanley Tucci – may be no more than a millennial nostalgia fest. However, with a script this deft, and performances so perfectly pitched, it’s impossible to resist.
Read Robbie Collin’s full review

Book

Weimar: Life on the Edge of Catastrophe

★★★★☆

Katja Hoyer’s superb new book is a history of life in the town of Weimar from 1914 to 1939, and – through the eyes of its people – a chronicle of the tragedy that befell the entire country of Germany in those years. It conveys a clear and chilling sense of how a nation keeping its collective head down allowed the wickedness of Nazism to prevail.
Read Simon Heffer’s full review

Exhibition

Zurbarán

★★★☆☆

Brimming with paintings of saints, the Virgin Mary and Christ on the cross, this devout, violent exhibition of the art of Francisco de Zurbarán (1598-1664) can feel intense. Thank goodness, then, for the room of stunning still lifes in which each element is somehow simultaneously humdrum and mysterious.
Read Alistair Sooke’s full review

 

Your say

Spick and span

Every weekday, Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, shares an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Orlando writes...
Employing a cleaner has become the “ultimate taboo”, according to William Sitwell – widely perceived as a sign of laziness, profligacy and faintly seigneurial tendencies.

The day after his article appeared, Catherine Harber confessed to a habit – spending £500 a month on help around the house. Now that is subversive. According to her, though, it has accomplished nothing less than saving her marriage.


 

Telegraph readers, in the mood for some taboo-busting themselves, were able to relate. “Definitely worth the money,” responded Karen Nielsen. “When I was a new mum with a career, I hired a cleaner for a Friday clean-up, and to do the ironing. Starting the weekend with a clean house, where all I had to do was fill the fridge, was a huge weight off the family.”


 

Keith Gubbin agreed: “The secret to a happy marriage is having a competent nanny and trustworthy cleaner.” He also contended that “life is also too short for cleaning cars and plucking pheasants.”


 

Kirsty Blunt told how, “in the days when I was working and bringing up my children, housework was the lowest priority. I was fortunate to find the most wonderful home help, who kept our house clean – and me sane.”

Then a problem arose: “Maureen retired, and I knew that I would never find a satisfactory human replacement. So I invested in a robovac: the Maureenbot has proved worth every penny, vacuuming as well as mopping at the swipe of an app. My husband was so envious that he is now assisted by Percy the robomower.”


 

Sally Goulden described a different way to cope with losing your household help: “When my grandparents married in the 1920s, my grandmother’s parents – who thought the marriage ‘beneath her’ – insisted that they hire a kitchen maid. They then had to let her go, due to lack of funds. After this, they cooked each meal themselves, and would call from the dining room, into the empty kitchen: ‘Thank you, Mary!’”

Has a cleaner helped keep your marriage together? Send your responses here and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of this newsletter.

Please confirm in your reply that you are happy to be featured and that we have your permission to use your name.

 

The morning quiz

Brian May and Jeremy Hunt, the MP for Elstead, May’s constituency

Sir Brian May, the former Queen guitarist, has been denied permission to donate what to his local council?

 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including The 1% Club, Cogs, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was PERMEABLE. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Please let me know what you think of this newsletter. You can email me your feedback here.

Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Chris Evans, Editor

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jeudi 30 avril 2026

Jew hate ‘out of control’ in UK

Mamdani calls on King to return Koh-i-Noor diamond to India | Six signs you’re a midlife workaholic
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Thursday, 30 April 2026

Issue No. 431

Good morning.

Jew hate is “out of control” in Britain, according to Israel, after two men were stabbed in Golders Green yesterday, the latest in a wave of recent anti-Semitic attacks in London. Below, Martin Evans, our Crime Editor, brings you all the reaction to the harrowing incident, Fiona Parker reconstructs the moment of arrest and Patrick Sawer is on the ground with residents of a community in crisis.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. We’re giving email readers the chance to claim 4 months of The Telegraph for just £1. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

King sparkles in New York – but socialist mayor Mamdani has eyes on his crown jewel

‘I went to boarding school. Why do I have to apologise for it like it’s a crime?’

Plus, six signs you’re a midlife workaholic

Email exclusive: 4 months for 25p per month

Enjoy all of our award-winning coverage, from politics to international affairs.

 

Jew hate ‘out of control’ in UK

The moment the alleged attacker is arrested by police

Martin Evans

Martin Evans

Crime Editor

 

Anti-Semitic attacks are out of control in the UK, Israel has said, after two Jewish men were stabbed in a terror attack in Golders Green.

The Israeli foreign ministry said Sir Keir Starmer’s words were “no substitute for confronting the roots of anti-Semitism” after the men, aged 76 and 34, were stabbed as they walked near a synagogue yesterday morning.

My colleagues Fiona Parker and Patrick Sawer have reconstructed the harrowing incident below.

The Prime Minister is under mounting pressure to take tougher action to protect British Jews following a wave of attacks and firebombings on Jewish sites in north London in the past month.

Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, said Britain had lost control of anti-Semitic hate crime and demanded Starmer do more to “protect the Jews of England”. He added: “Weakness gaslights one anti-Semitic attack after another in London. Words are not enough to confront this scourge.”

Gideon Falter, the chief executive of the charity Campaign Against Anti-Semitism, said: “Jew hatred in Britain is out of control. Our young people are being radicalised, Iran is orchestrating terrorism and our politicians and police are appeasing extremists. This is a national emergency and after so many attacks, we have yet to see any evidence at all that the Prime Minister has a plan.”

Starmer, who has not attended the scene of the latest attack and said he would visit “as soon as possible”, said “we need to get to the root causes of extremism and anti-Semitism”.

Earlier in the day, Israel’s foreign ministry said: “Keir Starmer’s statements are no substitute for confronting the roots of anti-Semitism festering across the United Kingdom. British Jews should not need security patrols and emergency volunteers to live openly as Jews.”

Counter Terrorism Police, investigating the Golders Green stabbing, said they are searching an address in south-east London after reports that the suspect had been involved in a prior “altercation” with another person.
Read the full story here

 

How the horror in Golders Green unfolded, moment by moment

CCTV footage shows the moment the alleged stabbing took place in Golders Green

Fiona Parker

Fiona Parker

Senior News Reporter

 

Standing alone and waiting at a bus stop, a 76-year-old reaches into his bag. He pulls out a kippah – a Jewish head covering – and puts it on.

Moments later, a man lunges towards him, grabs his coat and repeatedly stabs him. He appears to push the man with such force that a bus stop sign briefly bends as he is shoved against it.

We now know this was the second victim, one of two Jewish men stabbed yesterday in Golders Green, north London.

Five minutes earlier, the suspect was captured running behind a man dressed in Orthodox attire, appearing to chase him.

In an image thought to show the suspect in the lead-up to his arrest, he is seen walking towards the end of Golders Green Road, holding a knife by his side

We cannot see the full confrontation, but the suspect appears to launch himself towards his victim, who then flees along the pavement with the attacker in pursuit.

Eventually, a 45-year-old man was arrested at a junction in the street, about 200m from the scene of the second attack. Two officers stunned a man with a Taser before a third man joined in to help hold him to the ground. He is a British national born in Somalia.

A knife appeared to be seized from the suspect, and officers were seen kicking him as he continued to struggle.

Police bodycam footage shows the moment the suspected attacker’s knife is seized from his hand

“Our brave officers confronted a man they believed to be a terrorist, who refused to show his hands, who was violent and who continued to pose a clear threat,” the Metropolitan Police said in a post on X.

“Using only their training, courage and tasers, they detained him while he continued to try to attack and stab them. This took true courage.”
How the horror in Golders Green unfolded, moment by moment

Yonathan Elkouby: I tackled the Golders Green knifeman

Patrick Sawer

Patrick Sawer

Senior News Reporter

 

On the streets of Golders Green there was anger, fear and sorrow.

Anger at yet another attack on London’s Jewish community, fear that others will follow and sorrow that once again two innocent people have paid the price for anti-Semitic hatred.

Those feelings burst to the surface when Sir Mark Rowley, the Metropolitan Police Commissioner, visited the scene of the double stabbing.

“Mark Rowley resign now! It’s pathetic,” shouted one bystander as the Commissioner arrived with Sir Ephraim Mirvis, the Chief Rabbi. “Shame on you,” heckled others.

Later in the day, waving British and Israeli flags, protesters shut down Golders Green Road with chants of “Keir Starmer, Jew harmer”. The Jewish community made clear that the time for empty promises was over and only action would suffice.

Residents of Golders Green came on to the streets to protest following the attacks

Standing on a soapbox, megaphone in hand, speakers also turned on the London Mayor, shouting: “Shame on Sadiq Khan” as resilience boiled over into anger.

To many of those gathered anxiously at the police cordon near the scene of yesterday’s attacks, there was a sad inevitability about the latest violence, which followed recent attacks on synagogues and even Jewish ambulances.
‘Keir Starmer, Jew harmer’: A scarred community turns on PM after anti-Semitic terror returns

Suzanne Moore: I’m so angry, I don’t know what to do with myself

 

Opinion

Allister Heath Headshot

Allister Heath

The Fall of Britain: A tragedy in three horrifying acts

Our columnist turns playwright with this dystopian tale of a nation trapped in a socialist doom loop

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Con Coughlin</span> Headshot

Con Coughlin

It’s Starmer who has broken the Special Relationship

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Matthew Lynn</span> Headshot

Matthew Lynn

Rachel Reeves is an awful chancellor, but it’s too late to sack her now

Continue reading

 

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In other news

Your Essential Reads

Zohran Mamdani greets the King at the 9/11 memorial in New York

King sparkles in New York – but socialist mayor Mamdani has eyes on his crown jewel

The King was supposed to have done the hard part of the US state visit, writes Hannah Furness, our Royal Editor. After charming Donald Trump and addressing Congress, he and the Queen left for New York City, where things were supposed to get easier. Instead, they landed to the Mayor of New York calling for him to return the hotly-disputed Koh-i-Noor diamond.

Continue reading

 

Nehgut, 53, believes a bin strike settlement won’t result in permanent improvements in her Birmingham neighbourhood

The bin-choked Birmingham residents refusing to be bribed by Labour

After 14 years of Labour rule, Birmingham is drowning in rubbish. A relentless bin strike has blighted streets with fly-tipping and rats that “have no shame”. Just days before the local elections, Labour’s council leader announced a settlement with the Unite union. Yet as torn bin bags slump on pavements from Selly Oak to Aston, deeply sceptical voters are dismissing the “breakthrough” as desperate electioneering, threatening Labour’s grip on power.

Continue reading

 

Annie attended the prestigious Wellington College, in Berkshire, for sixth form

‘I went to boarding school. Why do I have to apologise for it like it’s a crime?’

My parents made sacrifices to give me a private education, writes Annie Hayes. However, far from guaranteeing me a life of luxury, my schooling saddled me with decades of ridicule and inverse snobbery – from university roommates who derided my background to work colleagues who assumed I’d used contacts to get my job. The prejudice continues today, with parents abusing me for sending my own children to private school.

Continue reading

 

In the 15 years since the Princess of Wales married Prince William, she has become a global style icon

The Princess of Wales’s style evolution in 50 looks

It has been 15 years since the Prince and Princess of Wales got married. In the years since, the Princess’s fashion sense has evolved to become one of an undeniable style icon. To celebrate the anniversary, Bethan Holt has gone back to the beginning – and that Alexander McQueen wedding gown – charting the 50 most interesting and showstopping outfits the Princess has worn.

Continue reading

 

Sir Quentin Blake, 93, has worked with more than 150 authors and illustrated or written more than 500 books

Quentin Blake: ‘I probably disagreed with Dahl about everything’

During a rare interview – covering everything from the £12.5m museum that will bear his name, to his “provocative” former collaborator – Britain’s favourite illustrator reveals how, at 93, the impulse to draw still grabs him from the moment he wakes. “Sometimes,” Blake tells Alastair Sooke, “it is the middle of the night, and I think, ‘I wish I could learn not to do this.’”

Continue reading

 
The jetty in Stanley, the capital of the Falkland Islands

Falkland Islanders: ‘Our home is not a tradeable rock’

Following a leaked memo from the Pentagon, Argentina’s vice-president demanded Falkland Islanders “go back” to England. However, residents like Teslyn Barkman refuse to see their home treated as a “tradeable rock”. Defended by a 1,500-strong military detachment, they have no intention of leaving, and find comfort in the roar of RAF Typhoons – a noise they proudly call the “sound of freedom”.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

Six signs you’re a midlife workaholic and why it’s harming your health

Long-term stress is linked to higher risk of heart disease, diabetes and cognitive decline

For many high-achievers in midlife, burnout does not arrive suddenly – it builds quietly, disguised as relentless ambition. Overperformance has become a badge of honour until the body finally rebels. Psychologist Pippa Grange explores the six warning signs that you may be running on empty, and why, in an age that glorifies busyness, learning to rest may be key.
Continue reading

 

Inexplicable

‘Did I see a meteor flying out of Chris Mason’s head?’

Every week, Sarah Knapton, our Science Editor, and Joe Pinkstone, our Science Correspondent, demystify your supernatural experiences. From ghoulish encounters to bizarre coincidences, there’s always a scientific explanation and nothing is as strange as it seems.

Today, our duo investigates a mysterious object seen flying through Westminster...

“In your esteemed opinion, is there a meteor flying out of Chris Mason’s head here?”

– Andrew Hooper

 

 

Sarah and Joe answer:
In a week that saw sparks fly in Parliament over the Mandelson affair, it is perhaps fitting that the skies above the Commons were also lit up with intrigue.

Shortly after 9pm on Thursday April 23, a fast-moving pinpoint of light was spotted zooming from behind Chris Mason’s head, before exiting stage left.

The BBC political editor had appeared live from Westminster in front of Victoria Tower, but was seemingly unaware of the mysterious object in the background.

Andrew Hooper, a Telegraph employee, spied the peculiar flash while watching the news, and wrote in asking whether it might be a meteor.

Certainly, the streak of light does resemble a shooting star in the twilight sky, and the Lyrid meteor shower did peak on April 22, a day before the footage.
Read the full answer here

Plus, send in your questions for Sarah and Joe here

 

Your say

Time to call it a night?

Every weekday, Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, shares an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Orlando writes...
Earlier this week, readers discussed Sophia Money-Coutts’s suggestion – increasingly appealing to me, though I feel disappointed with myself for admitting it – that all dinner parties should end before 11pm.

From that debate, a more specific theme has emerged. What’s the best way to persuade lingering guests, eyeing a fresh bottle of wine or gearing up for an epic anecdote, that the time has well and truly come to go home?


 

I’ve much enjoyed reading your suggestions, and may even deploy one or two of them myself. “My husband has the perfect ploy,” wrote Julia Evans. “He disappears to the bathroom and reappears brushing his teeth, saying ‘Gosh, is that the time?’”


 

John Marsh recalled: “My father would disappear to his bed, and we would suddenly realise that he wasn’t there anymore. Mind, the fact he had to be up at the crack of dawn to milk the cows might have had something to do with it.”


 

Chris Boyle, meanwhile, “knew someone who had an excellent way of letting dinner guests know that they had overstayed their welcome. ‘Another drink?’ he would ask. ‘Cocoa, perhaps?’”


 

Yes, sometimes even the inebriated can take a hint. Andrew and Margaret Glover told how “our friend Jack didn’t have dinner parties, but you knew it was time to go at his house when he said: ‘Don’t let me keep you.’”


 

If a hint isn’t enough, though, there’s always this tactic, described by Peter Clayton: “A family friend would disappear under his stairs, emerge with his vacuum cleaner, plug it in and attend to the carpet around our feet. We then had a fair idea that he thought it was time we left.”

Job done. What’s your trick? Send your responses here and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of this newsletter.

Please confirm in your reply that you are happy to be featured and that we have your permission to use your name.

 

the morning Quiz


A humpback whale named Timmy is on his way back home on a barge, after being stranded for weeks off the coastline of which country?

 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including The 1% Club, Cogs, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was ADJOURNED. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 


Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. I’d love to hear what you think of this newsletter. You can email me your feedback here.

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