12166. Online
cheating
From C.N. 9254 (written a decade ago, in
intentionally utopian style):
Of all the lessons to be learned from the
shambolic, sprawling rumpus over ‘Vive la
Différence’ [a New in Chess article by Nigel
Short on women’s
chess ...] a neglected one is mentioned here,
in the context of any current issues (as opposed to
history and lore): the lack of a proper online chess
forum where topical controversies can be discussed
in depth; where comprehensive and comprehensible
coverage is founded on facts and informed opinions;
where contributions bear the writer’s real name;
where hearsay is absent; where wit is welcome but
glib illiterates are not; where Internet links are
supplied only if they lead to something worthwhile;
where irrelevancy and repetition are avoided; where
strong criticism of people and of ideas is expressed
solely if based on substantiated information; where
all relevant sources are cited; where points are not
deemed true, or even noteworthy, merely because they
come from the mainstream media; where press articles
by non-chess-specialists are treated not with
automatic gratitude but with particular caution;
where misquotation is excoriated; where the debate,
however lively, is moderated with rigorous
even-handedness; where good linguistic standards are
ensured; where contributors and readers are treated
with the respect that they deserve; where anyone,
including top-level masters, would be proud to have
a contribution posted.
Wanted: one topical chess forum where 100% of the
contributions are worth reading, and not 100 forums
where 1% are.
No topical forum along remotely similar lines has yet
emerged. The current battles over online cheating are
a grimly undignified, barely intelligible mess with,
as their hub, nothing better than X/Twitter.
There must be a better way.
12167.
A problem by Voronov

Mate in two
Before proceeding, readers are invited to tackle this
composition, as well as its twin (black knight on b3
instead of c2):

Mate in two
The problem (‘S.G. Voronov, USSR’) appeared on page
582 of the October
1970 Chess Life & Review, in the
‘Benko’s Bafflers’ column. The solutions were given by
Pal Benko on page 643 of the November
1970 issue:
‘1 R-R6? N-K6! 1 B-Q5! Twin: 1 B-Q5? N-B4 1 R-R6!
The deceptive becomes real in the twin.’
Drawing this problem to our attention, Tony Bronzin
(Newark, DE, USA) notes that the first diagrammed
position was taken up on pages 143-144 of the March
1971 Chess Life & Review by a reader
of the ‘Larry Evans on Chess’ column, Robert
Stachowski of Milwaukee.

Mate in two
Concerning the published key move, 1 B-Q5, he asked:
‘Isn’t 1 R-B5ch an alternate solution?’
Evans’ reply:
‘Right! If 1...K-K3 (1...K-Q3 2 Q-Q7 mate) 2 R/7-B6
mate.’
Mr Bronzin informs us that nothing more on the
Voronov problem can be found until much later. On page
266 of the May
1976 Chess Life & Review, Benko
wrote:
‘My problem column receives many attempted cooks, a
large number of which turn out to be mistaken. Of
course, problemists also make mistakes. I obviously
cannot publish the wrong cooks, and apparently some
readers do not realize that when their cooks do not
get published it is because they are not correct.
Then they send them elsewhere. Look at this:
S.G. Voronov

White mates in two
Twin: Nc2-b3
This position appeared in Benko’s Bafflers in
October 1970. A reader suggested that the problem
was “cooked” by 1 R-B5ch. (The published solution is
B-Q5.) I did not publish that “cook”. To my great
surprise, I found the same question in Larry Evans’s
column of March 1971. “Isn’t 1 R-B5ch an alternate
solution?” Evans’s answer: “Right! If 1...K-K1 [sic
– K-K3] (1...K-Q3 2 Q-Q7) 2 R/7-B6 mate.”
Obviously the “cook” is cooked: after 1 R-B5ch,
K-K3 is a discovered check to White and there is no
time for mate! At the time I drew the attention of
Grandmaster Evans to his error and waited for the
appearance of the correction. In vain, alas.
It is very difficult to admit a mistake. This is a
weakness of human nature.’
That was the conclusion of a three-page ‘In the
Arena’ article by Benko, subtitled ‘Errare humanum
est’. Two thirds of the final page comprised
corrections of Larry Evans on various points, and
Benko’s introductory paragraph in that section was:
‘Of course, I am not immune to error, but it hurts
me when someone claims there is a mistake in my work
when there is none, especially when that someone is
a grandmaster.’
This item will be added to our feature articles on Pal Benko
and Larry
Evans.
12168.
Reviewers
Why do almost all chess reviewers like almost all
chess books?
12169.
Emanuel Lasker in Cuba
From Yandy Rojas Barrios (Cárdenas, Cuba):
‘I have just finalized a 300-page manuscript on
Emanuel Lasker’s visits to Cuba in 1893 and 1906.
It is in Spanish, but I am hoping to have it
published in English, in a single volume or in two
parts.
With the advances in AI technology, it is now
possible for me to produce a working English
translation, but to ensure maximum accuracy I
shall need it to be reviewed by a native
English-speaking editor with good knowledge of
Spanish. In addition, I am seeking an
English-language publisher.
As examples of the material that has been found,
here are two reports giving very different
impressions of Lasker:
Andrés Clemente Vázquez, El Fígaro,
Ausencia de Mr. Lasker, 19 February 1893, page
70:
“El Sr. Lasker nos ha dejado convencidos de sus
excepcionales facultades como luchador de la
Escuela Moderna, pero sería inútil ocultar que
su despedida ha sido fría, no sólo por haberse
negado a medir sus fuerzas con el Sr. Walbrodt,
en lo cual había extraordinario empeño por parte
de los aficionados de esta capital, sino porque
en todos casos demostró, al jugar con esos
mismos aficionados, un implacable sistema de
aprovecharse de los más insignificantes
detalles, para ganar a toda costa. En la primera
partida con nosotros, nos obligó a jugar media
hora más después de habernos eximido de ella
previamente, a causa de una repentina
indisposición que sufrimos; habiéndose debido
quizás su postrero cambio de parecer, al hecho
evidente de que en el instante en que debía
haberse suspendido el combate, la posición era
crítica para él, y no le convenía que con el
descanso tuviéramos mucho tiempo para buscar y
encontrar la jugada con la cual podía perder.
Esto no obstante, al día siguiente le quedaban
diez minutos para hacer nueve jugadas, se
presentó en el lugar de la cita con un cuarto de
hora de retardo, y nosotros no quisimos reclamar
la victoria, por el transcurso del tiempo ...
Nobleza obliga, y la generosidad y la
caballerosidad han sido siempre blasones de
nuestra raza. Nosotros relegamos todo eso al
archivo del pasado, y deseamos al inteligente y
joven champion de Inglaterra [sic] las
mayores prosperidades, en su ya brillantísima
carrera, como jugador de primer orden, en el
sublime arte de Philidor y Anderssen.”
Juan Corzo y Príncipe, Diario de la
Marina, Lasker en la Habana, 11 February 1906,
page 5:
“El Campeón del mundo cuenta 36 [sic]
años de edad, aunque representa menos …
Desde su llegada se ha captado Mr. Lasker las
simpatías de los aficionados de Cuba, que no
habíamos tenido ocasión de conocerle cuando vino
a la Habana en 1893.
Siendo una eminencia en un juego eminente, y
poseyendo gran cultura que se revela en su
conversación que puede sostener en cuatro
idiomas, pues conoce perfectamente, a más del
alemán, el inglés y el francés y algo de
español, es modesto y afable, habiéndose
prestado desde el primer día a jugar partidas
rápidas con los jugadores fuertes y dando
partido a los jugadores débiles, siendo para
ellos un franco camarada, a la vez que un
maestro ideal, porque sabe enseñar deleitando.”’
We shall pass on to Mr Rojas Barrios any messages
from readers about editing and publishing his work.
Addition on 6 August 2025:
Mr Rojas Barrios has entered into a contract for the
publication of his book in Spanish and English.
12170.
Calendar dates
Very few calendar dates have entered chess lore,
despite possible prompting at the time. Page 59 of Anatoly
Karpov: Chess is My Life by A. Karpov and A.
Roshal (Oxford, 1980) has this piece of old-style
second-hand reportage:
‘When Botvinnik heard by telephone that Karpov had
become one of the winners of the Alekhine Memorial,
he exclaimed, according to the person who informed
him: “Remember this day, 18 December 1971. A new
chess star of the first magnitude has risen.”’
12171.
Obvious moves
Wanted: remarks by chess writers (Fred Reinfeld comes
vaguely to mind) to the effect that some inexperienced
players tend to spurn, or cannot abide, obvious moves.
12172.
Levy Rozman
An addition to Chess
Book
Sales is How to Win at Chess by Levy
Rozman (various editions, 2023). Its status is
demonstrated by exceptionally high rankings on,
notably, Amazon.com and the New York Times
bestseller list. The book has been translated into a
number of languages.
Levy Rozman’s YouTube channel, ‘GothamChess’,
currently has 6.5 million subscribers.
12173.
Keres in Havana
Olimpiu G. Urcan (Singapore) has submitted the
following, courtesy of the Prensa Latina Archive:
The photographs are undated, and information will be
welcome. Our feature
article on Keres includes (C.N. 2628) a game
from a simultaneous exhibition with clocks in Havana
on 9 February 1960. The source was pages 291-292 of Ajedrez
en Cuba by C. Palacio (Havana, 1960).
Addition on 14 July 2025:
Confirming the year 1960, and adding that Keres
arrived in Havana on 6 February, Yandy Rojas Barrios
(Cárdenas, Cuba) forwards from his archives two more
photographs from the visit:

With Eduardo Heras
León (1940-2023), then the national youth champion,
and later a prominent literary figure.

With José Antonio
Gelabert y Barruete (1893-1969).
12174.
Sämisch, Romanovsky and Eliskases
Mr Urcan has also provided this picture of Fritz
Sämisch and Petr Romanovsky, from the Russ-Photo
Archive (a Moscow photograph agency of the 1920s):
It may have been taken during Moscow, 1925, though it
is without relevance to their game in the tournament.
Lastly, a shot of Erich Eliskases at Mar del Plata,
1947, from the Crítica photographic archive:
12175.
Fischer Defence
Noting the references to Eduard Fischer in The
Nimzowitsch
Defence (1 e4 Nc6), John Saunders
(Kingston-upon-Thames, England) provides a game
between Georg Schories and James Allcock, played in
Plymouth on 31 August 1903:
1 e4 Nc6 2 Nf3 d6 3 d4 Bg4 4 Nc3 a6 5 Be3 e5 6 Bc4
Nf6 7 Qd2 Be7 8 a3 O-O 9 h3 Bxf3 10 gxf3 exd4 11 Bxd4
Nxd4 12 Qxd4 Nd7 13 Nd5 Bf6 14 Qd2 Ne5 15 Be2 c6 16
Ne3 Qc7 17 O-O-O Rad8 18 f4 Ng6 19 Nf5 Rfe8 20 Bd3 b5
21 h4 c5 22 c4 bxc4 23 Bxc4 Rxe4 24 Qd5 Rxf4 25 b3 Be5
26 Ne3 Ne7 27 Qg2 Qa5 28 Nc2 Qc3 29 Rd3 Qb2+ 30 Kd2
Nf5 31 Rf1 Rxc4 32 bxc4 Bf4+ 33 Re3 Nxe3 34 White
resigns.
Mr Saunders comments:
‘This clipping from page 3 of the Alderley
& Wilmslow Advertiser, 11 September 1903,
shows a British chess columnist referring to 1 e4
Nc6 as the Fischer defence. The columnist was
given as “Captain King” and was most likely to
have been Carslake Winter-Wood, who resided in
Plymouth, where the game in question was played.’
12176.
Opening of the future
When was the term ‘the opening of the future’ first
seen in chess literature?
An early occurrence, attributed to J. Crake, is on
page 172 of the May 1883 BCM, with respect to
1 e4 e5 2 d4 exd4 3 f4.
12177.
Raymond Chandler
Some alleged quotations:
‘Life’s too short for chess’ – Henry James Byron;
‘Chess is a foolish expedient for making idle
people believe that they are doing something very
clever, when they are only wasting their time’ –
George Bernard Shaw;
‘Chess is possibly the only game in the world in
which it is impossible to cheat’ – John Steinbeck.
The Internet is awash with such pseudo-quotes. All
have been discussed in C.N. (see the Factfinder)
and are examples of a practice referred to as follows
in C.N. 9413:
Any colourful approbation or disapprobation of
chess in the output of an eminent literary figure is
liable to be quoted as representing his own views
even if expressed only by a character in a work of
fiction.
Another case will be examined now:
‘Chess is as elaborate a waste of human
intelligence as you could find anywhere outside an
advertising agency’ – Raymond Chandler.
A point of evident indifference to some chess
websites is that the essentials of this ‘Chandler
quote’ have been examined in fine style on a Quote
Investigator
page. It was a remark by the narrator, Philip
Marlowe, in The Long Goodbye, a novel by
Raymond Chandler (London, 1953 and Boston, 1954).
We add that the text was discussed by Montgomery
Major, the then Editor of Chess Life, in D.J.
Morgan’s Quotes and Queries column, in the
November 1957 BCM, pages 294-295:
Below is the relevant part of The Long Goodbye,
with full context, on page 128 of the first US
edition:
The highlighted passage, consisting mostly of one
long sentence, prompts us to underscore Montgomery
Major’s observation about ‘candid criticism of some
grandmaster chess tactics’: the private detective’s
comment about ‘a waste of human intelligence’ refers
not to chess in general but to the 72-move draw
between Gortchakoff and Meninkin.
An earlier Quotes and Queries item (number 181 on
page 154 of the May 1954 BCM) also concerned
Raymond Chandler and The Long Goodbye:
From pages 194-195 of the US edition of the novel:
Regarding the Sphynx problem, our feature article Howard
Staunton includes the brief text of C.N. 1190:
In New in Chess issue 3/1986 the readers’
letters section suddenly comes alive with a series
of excellent contributions on the Sphynx problem in
Staunton’s Handbook.
In 2016 the matter was discussed in admirable detail
by Michael Clapham in his Chess Book Chats series. See
part
one and part
two.
The scans in the present article have been provided
by the Cleveland Public Library. As so often, we are
greatly indebted to Mr William Chase and Mr Raymond
Rozman.
12178.
Bjelica and Fischer
Our article Dimitrije
Bjelica currently has little on his relations
with Bobby Fischer.
John Donaldson (Berkeley, CA, USA) has provided the
following from pages 104 and 128 of CHESS,
November 1970 (extracts from an article by Bjelica):
From page 31 of the New York Times, 28 August
1973:
Can more information be found from, in particular,
sources in Zagreb and Belgrade?
12179. Sir
George Thomas
This ‘William Hickey’ column on page 4 of the Daily
Express, 9 January 1935 has been forwarded by
Jonathan Manley (Oxford, England), who is currently
co-writing a book on Sir George Thomas with Tibor
Károlyi:
We hardly dare ask whether corroboration exists for
the assertion that Lady Thomas ‘once hurled king at
her opponent’ but, for form’s sake, the column is
being added to Chess
with Violence and ‘Once’.
Mr Manley notes that the ‘William Hickey’ column at
the time was conducted by Tom Driberg (1905-76).
12180.
Another ‘William Hickey’ column
From page 4 of the 23 February 1935 Daily Express:
The ‘William Hickey’ column sometimes had a chess
diagram, but it is the subsequent item, about ‘Dr
Kratky’, that catches the eye, although there was
nothing topical about his proposed ‘deviation’,
Laureat, from regular chess. The report below had
appeared on page 10 of The Observer, 7
September 1930:
There ensued numerous similar items in newspapers
around the world (similar, not least, in misspelling
the name Spielmann). Additional information about
Bedřich Krátký available online includes a photograph
sold in a Czech auction in July 2020.
See also Chess
Variants and Rule Changes.
12181.
Alekhine in Folkestone, 1933
From the ‘William Hickey’ column in the Daily
Express, 13 June 1933, page 6:
‘He much prefers bridge to chess’ seemingly comes
from nowhere. The alleged fire incident mentioned in
the final paragraph was discussed in C.N.s 5169 and
10859. See Chess
and Bridge and Chess
and Tobacco.
12182.
Alekhine in Buenos Aires, 1939
On some chess outlets, the kneejerkerati are ever
poised to comment on the colour of h1 in any
photograph or video clip. ‘They got the board the
wrong way round!’ If h1 is disappointingly white, the
opportunity to air an observation is not lost: ‘At
least they got the board the right way round!’ See
C.N. 11471.
Olimpiu G. Urcan has forwarded a number of
photographs, and firstly this shot of Alekhine
(acknowledgement: the Crítica archive):
The apparent presence of pawns on White’s first rank
is notable but simply explained: given that in
photographs of Alekhine his wristwatch, breast pocket
and (where applicable) hair parting are, or should be,
on the left, the above photograph is a mirror image.
Moreover, he was spectating, not playing.
The full photograph, provided by Mr Urcan from the Crítica
archive and reversed below, shows the world champion
watching a game between two members of Argentina’s
team in the 1939 Olympiad in Buenos Aires, Roberto
Grau and Luis Piazzini:
12183.
Confusion over names
Also courtesy of the Crítica archive, Olimpiu
G. Urcan sends this photograph:
It will be recalled that Paulin(o) Frydman (White)
has been the victim of negligence by chess writers so
eager to have fun
with insanity
that they muddled him with a lesser-known,
similarly-named player.
12184.
Prison warders (C.N. 12134)
An addition to Chess
and Murder is Dr Buck Ruxton (1899-1936). From
page 1 of the Daily Express, 28 April 1936:
Dr Ruxton was hanged in Manchester on 12 May 1936.
12185.
Escalation
Impassioned
letters escalated into a plea
that a chess magazine ‘should be banned (or burned -
or both)’.
12186. A
remark by Bent Larsen (C.N. 12112)
C.N. 12112 asked what exactly Larsen said or wrote
about the safety derived from having a knight on KB1.
Ronald Young (Bronx, NY, USA) draws attention to
Larsen’s notes, in algebraic notation, on his victory
as Black over Karpov at Montreal, 1979 on pages
452-453 of Chess Life & Review, August
1979:
Position after 21
Re1-e4
Larsen played 21...Nf8 and wrote on page 453:
‘So that I do not get mated. With a knight on f8
you never get mated.’
12187.
Rubinstein photograph (C.N. 12131)

From Philip Jurgens (Ottawa, Canada):
‘The portrait of Rubinstein is intriguing.
Although the location and date may seem unclear, I
recall the photograph of Rudolf Spielmann provided
by Jan Kalendovský in C.N. 6131 in connection with
Magdeburg, 1927, from page 4 of Wiener Bilder,
7 August 1927:
It is not only the chessboard and background
that are similar in the two photographs.
Remarkably, even the position appears to be the
same, showing the conclusion of the fourth-round
game in Berlin, November 1926 in which Rubinstein
was White against Grünfeld. The handwritten note
on the bottom border of the Rubinstein picture
matches the credit on the Spielmann photograph:
“Atlantic Photo Co., Berlin”.
Rubinstein did not participate in Magdeburg,
1927, which Spielmann won. However, they did both
play in the November 1926 tournament in Berlin,
meeting in round one.’
12188.
One of the peculiar beauties
From page 11 of A New Treatise on Chess by
George Walker (London, 1832):
‘One of the peculiar beauties of chess is that if
two beginners be equally matched, they feel quite
the same interest in the game as if they were
thoroughly learned in its mysteries. Indeed, they
perhaps enjoy it more than the very greatest
players, who, having conquered every difficulty,
have no longer any opponents who can contend against
them; and who, having, when they play, their
reputation at stake, feel the greater degree of
mortification at being occasionally defeated.’
12189.
Philidor’s legacy
As indicated in C.N. 9668, it seems that the term
‘Philidor’s legacy’ first appeared in print in Thomas
Pruen’s An Introduction to the History and Study
of Chess (Cheltenham, 1804). The relevant pages:
The position (White to move) given on page 311:
If any reader can understand page 314, we shall be
grateful to know.
12190.
Freemasons (C.N. 10101)
From John Townsend (Wokingham, England):
‘C.N. 10101 noted some prominent people from the
world of chess who were identified as freemasons
during the nineteenth century from the membership
records available on Ancestry.com.
To these should be added the even more
illustrious name of Emanuel Lasker, who became a
member of Montefiore Lodge in London (Lodge no.
1017). He was initiated there on 22 April 1896,
“passed” on 27 May 1896, and “raised” on 24
February [year not specified]. His age on
admission was given as 27, and his residence was
71 Chiswell Street, [London], EC. His profession
was Mathematician. In the column headed
“Certificates” is entered the date 8 March 1897.
He kept up his subscription payments until 22
January 1902, the day of his resignation.
John Lane’s Masonic Records 1717-1894,
second edition, 1895, on page 337 traces the
constitution of Montefiore Lodge back to 9 May
1864, and notes early meetings at Freemasons’
Tavern, Freemasons’ Hall, and the Regent Masonic
Hall.
Montefiore Lodge was described as “a real
tribute to the benevolence of Bro. Sir Moses
Montefiore as a man and a Mason” in The
Freemason’s Repository, Vol. XX, 1890-91, page
634.
See also the brief reference on pages 112-113 of
volume one (Berlin, 2018) of the Emanuel Lasker
trilogy of books co-authored by Richard Forster,
Michael Negele and Raj Tischbierek.
Further particulars about Lasker’s activities as
a freemason may be obtained at: Museum of
Freemasonry, Freemasons’ Hall, 60 Great Queen
Street, London. WC2B 5AZ.’
12191.
Keres in Buenos Aires
Olimpiu G. Urcan (Singapore) sends this 1939
photograph of Paul Keres:
It comes from the same source, the Crítica
archive, as the Alekhine picture in C.N. 12182, and
presents the same problem. Other photographs of Keres
show him to be right-handed and wearing a watch on his
left wrist. Consequently:
12192.
Lasker in Havana
Olimpiu G. Urcan also provides the following:
Source: Illustrirte Zeitung, 7 April 1921,
page 281.
12193. Gibaud
v Lazard
‘Enough of this myth’, wrote André Chéron on page 12
of the Feuille d’Avis de Lausanne, 24 June
1933 (C.N. 7904), about the circumstances of the
alleged encounter 1 d4 Nf6 2 Nd2 e5 3 dxe5 Ng4 4 h3
Ne3 5 White resigns.
In the hope of summarizing matters in The
Gibaud
v Lazard Gamelet, we now take a new angle: when
were those, or similar, moves first linked to 1924,
the year given in many
editions of the Guinness Book of Records?
12194.
Restoring images
A new feature article, Alterations
to
Chess Images, has prompted us to experiment
briefly with an online program chosen at random. It
was asked to improve the following from Photographs
of
Capablanca:
Without guidance, it produced this in two or three
minutes:
The file name of the second image intentionally
contains the word ‘doctored’.
12195.
Fischer’s lawsuits
John Donaldson (Berkeley, CA, USA) comments that ‘Fischer’s
lawsuit against Dimitrije Bjelica (C.N. 12178)
stands out for being one of the rare occasions he
was awarded a settlement’.
Our correspondent adds:
‘Tracking Fischer’s legal activities is tricky.
I believe the first was his lawsuit initiated
after the Fischer-Reshevsky match. The conditions
were such that the winner was to be awarded 60% of
the purse, and Reshevsky being declared the victor
received this amount. Fischer as the loser was
given 40% but sued for another 10% on the grounds
that the score was tied when the match was
aborted.
I have been unable to track the lawsuit, but it
seems likely (Fischer being invited to the 1963
Piatigorsky Cup) that Jacqueline Piatigorsky ended
up enhancing the prize fund and in the end Fischer
was given 50%.’
12196.
Tarrasch’s religion (C.N.s 5997 & 6067)
The account on pages 357-359 of Siegbert Tarrasch
Leben und Werk by Wolfgang Kamm (Unterhaching,
2004) stated that on 28 May 1909 Tarrasch converted
from Judaism to Christianity. Have further details
come to light since 2004?
12197. Koltanowski v Grob
Philip Jurgens (Ottawa, Canada) writes:
‘George Koltanowski and Henry Grob contested two
matches in Zurich. Their 1937 encounter was drawn,
with two draws and a win apiece. In April 1953,
Koltanowski won by the score of +2 –0 =3. This
picture was taken during their second match, in
which Koltanowski secured draws with the Two
Knights’ Defence in all three of his games as
Black.’
Source: Journal et Feuille d’Avis du Valais,
16 April 1953, page 2, from e-newspaperarchives.ch.
12198.
Peter Saburov/Pierre de Sabouroff
The Swiss newspaper website mentioned in the previous
item provides an opportunity to read more about the music
activities of Peter
Saburov (Pierre de Sabouroff). For example:
Source: Courrier de Genève, 19 December 1925,
page 5.
Such material complements the biographical
information about him given, from the Tribune de
Genève, in C.N.s 448 and 2672.
12199.
Capablanca in Liverpool
Olimpiu G. Urcan (Singapore) sends this cutting from
page 7 of the Liverpool Weekly Courier, 4
October 1919:
The display was on 27 September 1919.
12200.
An observation by Nimzowitsch
In his annotations to Karpov v Larsen, Montreal,
1979, the Dane wrote on page 453 of Chess Life
& Review, August
1979 (C.N. 12186):
‘The bad bishop is out, but I insist it is still
bad. “To play positional chess is to make a
statement and then try to prove it”, said
Nimzowitsch.’
Not recognizing the remark, we have consulted Per
Skjoldager (Fredericia, Denmark), who responds:
‘Nimzowitsch wrote an article in Skakbladet,
August 1931, pages 121-124 under the title “Positionsspillet
og Kombinationsspillet skal supplere hinanden”.
Later, it found its way into Bjørn Nielsen’s book
on Nimzowitsch (pages 433-437).
Bent Larsen’s quote is slightly different from
what Nimzowitsch wrote but is essentially the
same. My translation:
“Positional play and combinational play must
complement each other.
Playing positional chess is to make a claim,
such as “I am better in the centre than my
opponent” or “the opponent is weak on the white
squares”, etc.
But one thing is to make a claim, another is to
prove its correctness.”’
The full
article is available on the website of the Dansk
Skak Union.
12201.
Simultaneous display by Vera Menchik
The present batch of items ends on a low note,
courtesy of page 9 of the Daily Express, 7
February 1931:
Page 16 of the newspaper had a photograph from the
exhibition, a shot discussed in C.N. 9849.
12202. Sam Loyd
Robert John McCrary (Columbia, SC, USA) adds a
reference to Sam
Loyd on the subject of chess
grandmasters:
‘We present this week a choice chess-nut from the
hands of the problem grand master, Mr Samuel Loyd.’
Source: Philadelphia Times, 7 March 1880,
page 2.
12203.
Morphy’s two-mover (C.N.s 5141 & 8473)
Mate in two
On the subject of the Philadelphia Times, we
add to C.N.s 5141 and 8473 by quoting its chess
columnist, G.C. Reichhelm, about Morphy’s two-mover.
30 January 1887, page 12:
‘Morphy’s only problem
It is not generally known that Paul Morphy once
set up a problem of his own and the position
therefore has a peculiar interest.’
A diagram of the two-mover followed, with the kings
on f8 and h8.
13 February 1887, page 7:
‘The position kindly sent by a correspondent as a
“Morphy problem” is a celebrated two-er by F.
Herlin.’
20 February 1887, page 10:
‘General John Tillson, of Quincy, Ill., writes:
“To the mention which you made of problem 712 it
might have been added that the problem was
composed by Paul Morphy before he was ten years of
age. This is the fact. His uncle, Ernest Morphy,
who was, as you must remember, in the first rank
of American players, showed me this pretty little
problem before Paul had made his swoop at the New
York Tournament, to the head of American chess,
and as it proved to the precedent place among the
chessplayers of the world. Mr Ernest Morphy was
full of pleasant little anecdotes about ‘Leetle
Paul’, as he used to style him, and predicted his
certain success against the best players in the
world, and showed this problem as the only one
that he knew Paul to have made, but as indicative
of his precocious intuitive capacity for chess.
Ernest Morphy’s description of Paul’s contests
with Löwenthal, when the little fellow – for he
was small as boy and small when a man – stood up
to the table instead of being seated, etc., was
very interesting, and many other remembrances I
have from the elder Morphy (who lived a long time
and died here) about his gifted nephew.
I had never seen this problem (712) in print
before, but have had it in my possession for 30
years.”
General Tillson adds that Paul composed the problem
at nine years of age, and we hope we can induce the
General to give us many more of his pleasant and
entertaining anecdotes about Paul Morphy.’
2 March 1902, page 8: The two-mover was
published again (kings on c8 and a8), with no
particulars.
General Tillson’s reference to Ernest Morphy having
died in Quincy, IL is confirmed by newspaper reports.
For example:
Brooklyn Review,
3 May 1874, page 5
In Reichhelm’s columns, no other references to
General John Tillson or to ‘F. Herlin’ have so far
been traced. The latter reference, in the 13 February
1887 column, has yet to be explained.
C.N. 8473 mentioned that this was the composition’s
first known appearance, on page 78 of the New York
Clipper, 28
June
1856:
As noted by David Lawson on page 27 of his 1976
monograph on Morphy, the problem was sent to the New
York Clipper with a letter from Ernest Morphy
dated 10 June 1856 which referred to ‘a two-move
enigma composed by Paul, as far back as 1849’. From
page 70 of the 21
June 1856 edition:
The C.N. material is brought together now in a
feature article, A
Problem by Paul Morphy.
12204. An
1882 letter from Morphy
Philadelphia Times,
13 August 1882, page 7
The letter was also published on page 16 of the St
Louis Globe-Democrat, 20 August 1882, but any
appearance in an English-language newspaper in
Morphy’s home state, Louisiana, remains to be found.
At the start of Chapter 25 of his 1976 monograph on
Morphy, on pages 307-308, David Lawson gave a
different text with, to take an example from the
penultimate paragraph, ‘during a part of the first
quarter of this century’ instead of, as above, ‘during
the first part of the century’:
Acknowledgement for
the scans from Lawson’s book: Cleveland Public
Library
Morphy’s letter was prompted by this item on page 1
of L’Abeille de la Nouvelle-Orléans, 30 July
1882:
Page 1 of the 1 August 1882 edition gave Morphy’s
response:
As shown above, Lawson introduced the letter by
stating:
‘In July 1882, the New Orleans French newspaper l’Abeille
announced plans for a biographical work on famous
Louisianans and proposed to include Paul Morphy as
“the most celebrated chess-player in the World”.’
However, as also shown above, there was no suggestion
in the French-language newspaper that it had any
involvement in the ‘Biographies Louisianaises’
project. It was merely announcing an initiative by
Meynier (self-published and in English, it will be
made clear).
It was rare for Lawson to misspell a name, but in the
first line of the letter ‘Meyiner’ should be Meynier.
Lawson’s bibliographical section made no mention of
anything on Morphy by Meynier.
The publication details of Arthur Meynier’s Louisiana
Biographies
are complex. Volume one number one can be viewed online.
The masthead stated that it was to be ‘published every
Saturday by A. Meynier, Jr., 133 Decatur Street’ in
New Orleans. That first number is dated 11 February
1882, nearly six months before Morphy’s letter. It
consists of eight pages, of which only four had
biographies (of Samuel D. McEnery, Randall Lee Gibson
and George W. Cable).
In the interests of further confusion, there follows
a selection of press notices, in chronological order:
- Page 15 of the New Orleans Times-Democrat,
19 February 1882:
‘We have received the second number of Louisiana
Biographies, a weekly magazine, published by
A. Meynier, Jr. The number contains well written
sketches of the lives of W.C.C. Claiborne, J.J.
Audubon, G.T. Beauregard, M.F. Bonzano and E.B.A.
Viel, and other interesting articles.’
- Page 14 of the Daily Picayune (New
Orleans), 26 February 1882:
‘The third number of Meynier’s Louisiana
Biographies, published yesterday, contains
sketches of James Philip Villere, Benj. F. Jonas,
Francis Xavier Martin, Aubert Dubayet, Thos.
Treard and Geo. L. Walton.’
- Page 3 of the New Orleans Times-Democrat,
5 March 1882:
‘The fourth number of the weekly magazine of
Louisiana Biographies, edited by Mr A.
Meynier, Jr, is quite interesting. It contains
biographical sketches of John W. Cannon, Edward
Bermudez, Charles Gayarre, J.H. Acklen, and other
interesting matter. The work, when complete, will
be of great value for reference.’
- Page 3 of the New Orleans Times-Democrat,
12 March 1882:
‘The fifth number of Mr A. Meynier, Jr’s weekly
magazine of Louisiana biographies is quite
interesting and valuable as matter for reference.
It contains the biographies of Louis Alfred Wiltz,
Pierre Soule, John Lawson Lewis, Adrien Rouquette
and J.H. Keller.’
- Page 4 of the Daily Picayune (New
Orleans), 19 March 1882:
‘The weekly magazine “Louisiana Biographies” has
been discontinued. The sketches of prominent
citizens which appeared in that publication, with
many others, will appear shortly in book forms,
and Mr Meynier promises the public a valuable work
for reference.’
- Page 3 of the New Orleans Times-Democrat,
31 July 1882 (a piece strikingly similar to what had
appeared in L’Abeille de la Nouvelle-Orléans the
previous day):
‘Mr A. Meynier, Jr, the author, compiler and
publisher of “Louisiana Biographies”, informs us
that the first portion of the work will go to
press today. This first part comprises the
biographies of all the Governors of the State of
Louisiana, comprising that of Fowler [Fulwar]
Skipwith, Governor of West Florida, the part of
Louisiana now known as the Florida parishes. The
volume will also contain an interesting
biographical sketch of Paul Morphy, the celebrated
chessplayer. Every pains has been taken to make
these biographies correct in every particular, the
information having been gathered with great care
at the most authentic sources. The book will be
ready in 10 or 12 days, and will be valuable not
only as a source of information and reference, but
interesting as reading matter.’
- Page 4 of the Daily Picayune (New
Orleans), 2 September 1882:
‘We are indebted to the publisher, Mr A. Meynier,
Jr., for a copy of Meynier’s Louisiana
Biographies, part first. This interesting work
will be complete in four parts. The one just out
gives sketches of Governors of Louisiana, from
William C. Claiborne to Sam McEnery; also of Paul
Morphy and Lafitte the pirate.’
- Page 6 of the New Orleans Times-Democrat,
4 September 1882:
‘“Louisiana Biographies – Part I”
A. Meynier, Jr, Publisher
This is the first number of a series of four,
which, when bound together, will make a valuable
volume for reference. The first part contains the
biographies of Governors of Louisiana in
chronological order, of Paul Morphy, the
chessplayer, and of Lafitte, the pirate. If the
remaining numbers present such diversified
subjects, this whole gamuet of human interest will
be sounded before the series is finished. The
biographies of the Governors are necessarily
short, on account of their number; but they are
written in a concise style, and seem to be
historically accurate. This is an age of
biographical writings, and the public craves any
work that shows the inner life of a great man.
From this point of view these sketches are meagre;
but their purpose is rather to draw the historical
outlines than to fill in the shadings and
colorings of the social or domestic life. The
biographies of Morphy and Lafitte are on the same
order, though the bare history of the latter has a
large sensational element in it.
The typographical features of the book are
excellent, the paper being strong and thick, and
the type large and clear. The Four Parts, bound in
cloth, will be $4; in paper, $3.’
- Page 1 of the Opelousas Courier, 2
December 1882:
‘We have had a call from Mr A. Meynier, Jr,
publisher of Louisiana Biographies, New Orleans,
La. We have examined part 1 of this new
journalistic venture, containing interesting and
succinct sketches of all the Governors of
Louisiana, Paul Morphy (the chessplayer) and of
Lafitte, the pirate. Those biographies are well
written, and embrace all the salient features in
each public personage forming the subject matter
of their contents; they are printed in large,
clear type, on excellent white paper, and present
a very handsome typographical appearance. Mr
Meynier will make Opelousas his headquarters for
several days to come, canvassing in the interest
of his valuable publication. Complete in four
parts, the work will contain 300 pages. Every
intelligent Louisianian who desires to be familiar
with a history of the prominent men of his State
should subscribe to the “Louisiana Biographies”.
Prices $3, $4 and $5, according to the binding.’
Google
Books records a 71-page work Louisiana
Biographies by Arthur Meynier (1882), but we
have yet to trace a copy.
New Orleans
Times-Democrat, 26 December 1902, page 12
12205.
Capablanca in Mexico
Eduardo Bauzá Mercére (New York, NY, USA) reports
that the Biblioteca
de México has made available the record of the
game shown below (with a couple of corrections here by
our correspondent):
José Raúl Capablanca – Enrique González
Martínez
Simultaneous exhibition, Mexico City, 21 April 1933
Ruy López
1 e4 e5 2 Nf3 Nc6 3 Bb5 Nge7 4 d4 exd4 5 Nxd4 Nxd4 6
Qxd4 Nc6

7 Qc3 Bb4 8 O-O Bxc3 9 Nxc3 O-O 10 Bf4 d6 11 Rad1 Re8
12 Rfe1 Bd7 13 f3 Ne5 14 Bf1 Bc6 15 Bg3 Qf6 16 Rd2 Ng6
17 Nd1 h5 18 Bf2 Ne5 19 Ne3 g6 20 h4 Kh7

21 b4 a6 22 c4 b5 23 Rc1 bxc4 24 Bxc4 Nxc4 25 Rxc4
Bb5 26 Rxc7 Rec8 27 Rdc2 Rxc7 28 Rxc7 Qe6 29 Nd5 Kg8
30 Re7 Qc8 31 Rc7 Qd8 32 g3 Be8 33 Bd4 Kf8 34 Bf6 Qb8
35 Be7+ Kg8 36 Nf6+ Kh8 37 Bxd6 Ra7 38 Be5 Qxc7 39
Bxc7 Rxc7 40 Nxe8 Rc1+ 41 Kf2 Rc2+ 42 Ke3 Rxa2 43 Nd6
Kg8 44 b5 a5 45 Nc4 a4 46 b6 Ra1 47 Nd2 Ra2 48 Nc4
Drawn.
12206.
Napoleão and Lucena
Leo Mano (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) writes:
‘The 1898 chess problem book Caissana
Brasileira by Arthur Napoleão is now available
online in PDF format.
It is the oldest surviving Brazilian chess book.
Its author, Arthur Napoleão (1843-1925), was
Portuguese. A music prodigy, he gave his first
recital at the age of seven. As a chess
aficionado, he contributed greatly to the game’s
development in Brazil by writing, promoting events
and founding chess clubs.
In the photograph Caissana Brasileira is
on the left, alongside a very rare copy of
Lucena’s Repetición de Amores y Arte de
Axedrez (1497). Caissana Brasileira is
from my own collection, and the Lucena volume is
held by the Biblioteca Nacional in Rio de
Janeiro.’
12207.
1944
From page 31 of the February 1944 BCM:
This early mention of Leonard
Barden dates from when Alekhine was world
champion and Vera Menchik held the women’s title.
12208.
Rex Sinquefield
In his Guardian
column on 29 August 2025, Leonard Barden refers
to ‘the St Louis billionaire Rex Sinquefield, who has
been the most generous individual sponsor in all chess
history’.
12209.
Capablanca’s nationality
Dennis Monokroussos (South Bend, IN, USA) asks:
‘Was Capablanca ever a US citizen? More
particularly, was he a citizen after 1902, when
Cuba gained formal independence from the US? I
realize that he was always Cuban, but I wonder if
he had dual citizenship and was technically an
American during his reign as world champion.’
As far as we know, throughout his life Capablanca
held only a Cuban passport, and never had US
citizenship.
12210.
Burn and Owen
As shown in Chessplayers
and Animals, this photograph of Amos Burn and
John Owen was in A Century of British Chess by
P.W. Sergeant (London, 1934), the location being ‘the
garden at Hooton’:

We now see a slightly different shot on page 9 of the
Manchester Guardian, 27 November 1925:
12211.
Janowsky obituary
On the subject of dark photographs, this obituary of
Dawid
Janowsky is on page 11 of the (London) Evening
Standard, 18 January 1927:
12212.
In memoriam
Whatever the temptation, it is bad form to decry a
chessplayer’s looks. Below is an extract from the
anonymous ‘A Londoner’s Diary’ column on page 6 of the
Evening Standard, 7 June 1929, in which Richard
Réti, who had died the previous day, was called
‘a very ugly man’, albeit with a saving grace:
Would a British publication write in similar terms
about a Briton?
12213.
Jack London
Christian Sánchez (Rosario, Argentina) sends a
paragraph from the widely anthologized 1895 short
story ‘Who Believes in Ghosts!’ by Jack London, ‘in
which two players are possessed by spirits (a
murderer and his victim) during a game of chess’:
‘He would be forced to double his rooks to avoid
checkmate – he saw that. Then his opponent would
check his queen under cover, and capture his red
bishop. Checkmate would then be inevitable.
Suddenly, however, a light broke upon the situation.
A brilliant move was apparent to him. By a series of
moves which he would inaugurate, he could force his
adversary’s queen and turn the tables.’
See Chess
in Fiction.
12214.
Grandmasters in the United States
An addition to Chess
Grandmasters comes from Robert John McCrary
(Columbia, SC, USA):
‘In The Official Blue Book and Encyclopedia
of Chess (New York, 1956) Kenneth Harkness
introduced his newly-developed rating system. On
page 344 he gave rating classes, with
“grandmaster” defined as 2600 and above, and on
pages 356 and 358 he listed Reshevsky and Fine as
the only grandmasters.
Since Harkness’s titles referred only to his
rating system, intended for the United States
Chess Federation, his rating classes and
associated titles applied only to US players. The
grandmaster classification was later dropped in
favor of the “Senior Master” designation, which
was the next class down and was retained by the
USCF. As far as I know, only Reshevsky and Fine
were ever officially recognized as USCF
grandmasters, as distinct from their FIDE titles.’
See too Chess
Ratings.
12215.
Alekhine photographs
Two further photographs of Alekhine have been
forwarded by Olimpiu G. Urcan (Singapore), courtesy of
the Crítica archive:
12216.
Morphy’s final two years (C.N. 12204)
After reproducing Morphy’s letter of 31 July 1882 to
L’Abeille de la Nouvelle-Orléans about
‘Louisiana Biographies’, David Lawson wrote on page
308 of his 1976 monograph on Morphy (who died on 10
July 1884, aged 47):
‘Perhaps some misinterpretation arose abroad from l’Abeille’s
mention of a Paul Morphy biography, for some time
later in 1882, English and other papers were
commenting on his demise at 45 years of age.’
Indeed, references to Morphy’s letter appeared in the
US press throughout much of 1882, and towards the end
of the year there was a spate of reports in the Old
World that Morphy had died.
In English-language outlets a brief, early instance
was on page 5 of the Manchester Courier, 20
November 1882:
Over the ensuing week, similar notices, all with the
wording ‘at the comparatively early age of 45’, were
published in at least a dozen English, Scottish and
Irish newspapers. Even prominent chess columnists took
up the accounts.
Shortly beforehand, various French newspapers had
announced Morphy’s death, though none with as much
fanciful falsehood as La Réforme (Paris) on 15
November 1882. From pages 1 and 2:
With digital technology, such untrue
reports are easily traced, although corrections
and retractions naturally remain elusive.
C.N. 12204 mentioned that we had yet to find the
71-page work Louisiana Biographies by Arthur
Meynier (New Orleans, 1882), but the Morphy section
can now be shown, courtesy of the City Archives &
Special Collections, New Orleans Public Library:
Larger
version
There is much on pages 62-63 that David Lawson could
have examined critically. Why he gave no indication of
having even seen Meynier’s book remains unclear.
12217.
Approximations
Below is part of the syndicated ‘London Letter’
published on page 2 of the Sheffield Daily
Telegraph, 4 December 1882. The overall heading
stated ‘London, Sunday Evening’, i.e. 3 December.
Before disseminating the false announcement of
Morphy’s death, the column deploys the boilerplate ‘it
has been estimated that ...’ regarding How
Many
People Play Chess?
On the subject of approximations, any worthwhile
review of The Real Paul Morphy: His Life and Chess
Games by Charles Hertan (Alkmaar, 2024) should
surely estimate how much of its factual biographical
narrative had already appeared in David Lawson’s Paul
Morphy The Pride and Sorrow of Chess (New York,
1976). Have there been such reviews?
12218.
John C. Owen
Paul Brown (Ponca City, OK, USA) enquires about the
chess author and translator John C. Owen, whose books
on St Petersburg, 1895-96, Budapest, 1896 and
Nuremberg, 1896 were published by Caissa Editions.
John Castle Owen was a valued reader of C.N. and
occasional correspondent from the 1980s onwards. A
reasonably detailed Hartford
Courant obituary records that he died on
16 October 2006, aged 80.
12219.
The death of Labourdonnais
From John Townsend (Wokingham, England):
‘The details entered on Labourdonnais’
death certificate were as follows:
Date and place of death: Thirteenth of December
1840, 4 Beaufort Buildings
Name: Charles [sic] de la Bourdonnais
Sex: Male
Age: 43
Rank or Profession: Gentleman
Cause of death: Dropsy
Informant: Jane Parry, present at the death, 2
Grange Court
When registered: Fifteenth of December 1840
(Source: General Register Office, Deaths, Dec.
quarter 1840, Strand Union, volume 1, page 342).
The informant was a sister of Labourdonnais’
wife, the latter having been advised not to spend
the night with her dying husband without support.
Both were daughters of Lewis Gordon, a purser in
the Royal Navy, and his wife, Sarah, who had
several children baptized at Stoke Damerel, near
Plymouth, Devon, including Mary Eleanor, born 27
October 1798, Lewis Gore, born 8 January 1800,
Eliza Waller (Labourdonnais’ wife), born 17
October 1801, Louisa Grimes, born 31 October 1803,
and Jane Kitchingham (the informant), born 31
January 1806.
Marriage register entries show that Jane
Kitchingham Gordon had married Thomas Holmes Parry
on 16 August 1832 at St John’s, Clerkenwell, while
Louisa Grimes Gordon had also married a Parry,
namely, Charles Richard Parry, at St Andrew’s
Holborn, on 12 June 1832. In 1825, Jane Parry had
been a witness to Labourdonnais’ wedding at
Shoreditch.
On the subject of the French champion’s health,
an informative, though not always accurate,
article appeared in the Leicester Journal
of 1 January 1841 (page 4), the author of which
was not named. This stated that “the first
French surgeons agree in attributing the
commencement of his sufferings to his playing
blindfold”, and continued:
“Two years back he played a game blindfold in the
presence of 250 spectators. He was intensely
nervous of committing an error, being peculiarly
tenacious of his fame. He won the game, but during
the night certain small vessels of the head burst,
and his eyes in the morning were blackened as
though he had been in the prize ring.”
In an article by Charles Tomlinson, entitled
“Simpson’s” (BCM, February 1891, page 53),
Labourdonnais’ opponent on this fateful occasion
was identified as Hyacinthe Henri Boncourt, one of
the strongest players in France. (Actually, in
March 1840 Boncourt predeceased his blindfolded
opponent by about seven months, but he was a much
older man, having been born more than 30 years
before Labourdonnais).
Tomlinson remarked:
“He said he felt as if something had given way in
his brain.”
There is, consequently, ample evidence that the
onset of ill health immediately followed the game
against Boncourt, but that is not to say that the
blindfold aspect of the game was the cause.
Presumably, his symptoms may have been the
consequence of the stress or other physical or
mental demands placed upon him by the occasion.
Your feature article Paul
Morphy has an addition dated 26
December 2022 by Ross Jackson, who warns that “it
is misguided to assume answers in contemporary
reports or understandings of medicine”.
The score of the game appeared in the Chess
Player’s Chronicle, volume IV, 1843, pages
291-293, with annotations by George Walker. This
account of the game contradicts the Leicester
Journal by recording it as a draw.
The Leicester Journal continues:
“Apoplexy came on, and for a long time his life
was despaired of. He could not play chess, but
subsisted upon the 1,200 francs allowed him as
secretary of the chess club. Repeated bleedings
averted apoplexy, but brought on ascites, for
which he has been tapped 21 times since the June
of last year. Mr Babington operated upon him a few
days back, and continues in attendance.”
Ascites is a variety of dropsy affecting
specifically the abdomen. “Mr Babington” is
referred to as an “eminent surgeon” in an article
by George Walker which appeared in the chess
column of Bell’s Life in London (20
December 1840). It was repeated in the Chess
Monthly (October 1860, page 303):
“During the 9th, 10th and 11th, De La Bourdonnais
was visibly worse in health, and on Friday week
was again operated upon by Mr Babington, the
eminent surgeon.”
This was probably George Gisborne Babington, a
successful surgeon who was then based at Golden
Square, St James’s, aged approximately 47
according to the 1841 census (National Archives,
HO 107 735, folio 24). Treatment in London by an
eminent surgeon was a privilege which
Labourdonnais enjoyed in common with Philidor
before him, even though, in both cases, there were
those who maintained that they were allowed to die
in poverty. (See C.N. 9759: Philidor in London).
According to Walker, “his disease was
ascites, accompanied by scrotal hernia”. From the
same article comes this:
“Between five and six on Sunday morning he
expired with a slight convulsion.”
A fund had already been established for the
support of him and his widow. Beyond allaying the
anxiety of the French champion himself, it may be
wondered if this charitable initiative served much
purpose in the event. His widow, who was referred
to in the press as “interesting” – a contemporary
slang expression meaning physically attractive –
was soon married, in 1842, to James Budge, a
Cornish merchant, described in the press as
“opulent”.
Labourdonnais had come to London from Paris at
the invitation of Samuel Ries of the Divan, to
earn a living. He was offering odds of pawn and
move during this period in London, but his play
was below his best. It appears that his supporters
considered a scheme which would have added to the
charitable arrangements that were set up, as is
shown by an article in the Weekly Chronicle
(London), 6 December 1840, page 13:
“... one suggestion strikes us as good, that
those who play with him should pay on losing, but
should receive nothing on winning; his stake being
half a crown. De La Bourdonnais challenges any
player in England to come up now to the scratch
and take pawn and move.”
Few would have doubted at the time that, in his
customary form, he could have given these odds
without the need to consider such a departure from
normal practice regarding the stakes.
H.J.R. Murray found it remarkable that Staunton
never met Labourdonnais in the flesh. The latter’s
match against Popert began during December 1840 at
the London Chess Club in Cornhill. The exact dates
of the match have not been established. Popert
played against Labourdonnais during the
Frenchman’s last few days.’
12220. Keene
v Ritson Morry
An update on two
matters covered in Cuttings:
In his ‘TheArticle’ piece of 13 September 2025
Raymond Keene falls back on a watered-down version of
his attacks on the deceased W. Ritson Morry, but still
with no acknowledgement of his untruths and, even,
with a new one.
‘I know the taste of such false criticism. When I
won the British Championship in 1971, I was told by
one prominent chess writer that I lacked fighting
spirit. This in spite of the fact that I sacrificed
recklessly, played games that stretched over days,
and fought until the end. Later, when I won an
international tournament, he wrote almost nothing of
my victory and much of my single loss. In England
such misreporting is only irritating. In Russia it
might have destroyed a career, or worse.’
Regarding, firstly, his games in the 1971 British
Championship, Mr Keene has asserted over the years:
- ‘the british championship i won included several
games of huge length -one over 120 moves’
- ‘... I had actually made speculative and unsound
piece sacrifices to force events and gone through
multiple adjournments with games lasting for days
and over 100 moves.’
- ‘... I had actually made speculative and unsound
sacrifices to force events and gone through multiple
adjournments with games lasting for days and over
100 moves.’
- ‘I sacrificed recklessly, played games that
stretched over days, and fought until the end.’
Britbase
gives all 11 of Raymond Keene’s games. Round by round,
the number of moves was 41, 29, 128, 25, 62, 30, 37,
38, 14, 31, 13.
Next, Raymond Keene’s claims about Ritson Morry’s
coverage of the Woolacombe ‘international’ tournament
in 1973:
-
‘i won the woolacombe international in 1973-the
strongest all play all outside hastings in the uk
for many years-and in his bcm report ritson morry
failed to give any of my wins and only mentioned
in passing that i had won the event!’
-
‘The same talent-free critic went even further
when I won the international tournament at
Woolacombe in 1973, writing a report which more or
less failed to mention me, apart from publishing
my only loss!’
-
‘The same, at least in my opinion, talent-free
critic went even further when I won the
international tournament at Woolacombe in 1973,
writing a report which more or less failed to
mention me, apart from focusing attention on my
only loss!’
-
‘... when I won an international tournament, he
wrote almost nothing of my victory and much of my
single loss.’
Exact citations are given in Cuttings,
which pointed out 12 years ago that Ritson Morry’s
tournament report in the BCM gave a complete
crosstable, that Raymond Keene’s name appeared a
further nine times on the same page, and that a win by
Mr Keene was included.
His 13 September 2025 formulation about Ritson Morry
on Woolacombe, 1973 is new: ‘he wrote almost nothing
of my victory and much of my single loss’. In reality,
Ritson Morry wrote a mere 11 neutral words about the
defeat: ‘In round 6 Keene went down to the rapidly
advancing Cardoso.’ The bare scores of two Keene
games, the loss to Cardoso and a win against
Hutchings, were given side-by-side at the end of the
report, without comment.
12221. What
is happening?
From page 10 of the (London) Evening Standard,
23 September 1930:
Answer
12222.
Pronunciation
When exactness is required in the pronunciation of
chess masters’ names in their native language, the
International Phonetic Alphabet is indispensable.
Eero Böök’s surname – [bø:k] – was discussed in C.N.
9381. On page 64 of the Illustrated London News,
9 July 1949, B. H. Wood wrote that it sounded more or
less like ‘Burke’ (which – leaving aside regional
variants – is [bəːk] or [bərk]).
The surname of Edgard Colle is an awkward case. He
was from Ghent, and the pronunciation in Flemish is [ˈkɔ.lə]. In
French: [kɔl]. However, chessplayers often pronounce
Colle like the dog breed collie: [ˈkɒli] by British
speakers and [ˈkɑːli] or [ˈkɑli] by Americans.
How do Brazilians pronounce the name of their
compatriot Trompowsky?
12223.
Sämisch v Romanovsky (C.N. 12174)
Javier Asturiano Molina (Murcia, Spain) points out
that the photograph was on a postage
stamp issued by the Republic of Djibouti in
1980. It can readily be found online and is also on
page 55 of Petr Romanovsky by Isaak Z. Romanov
(Moscow, 1984):
As mentioned in C.N. 12174, the board position is
unrelated to Sämisch and Romanovsky’s game in the
Moscow, 1925 tournament.
12224.
Lasker v Capablanca
Larger
version
The above comes from page 7 of the Evening Herald
(Rock Hill, NC, USA), 19 February 1921, and similar or
identical features found their way into numerous US
newspapers of the time. The image seems to have
chopped together bits of the well-known St Petersburg,
1914 group photograph. If the report itself could
serve any purpose, it would be as a test paper (facts
and style) for prospective copy editors.
12225.
Saint-Amant, Morphy and Edge
In his book on Morphy, F.M. Edge cited a ‘brilliant’
article by Saint-Amant in Le Sport. For
instance:
‘Saint Amant writes prose in poetry, and he has
made of Morphy an epic hero.’
The context was Morphy’s presence in Birmingham on 26
August 1858, and the praise appears in Edge’s book on
pages 77-78 of the New York edition and pages 71-72 of
the London edition. Lawson quoted from Edge on page
117 of his 1976 monograph.
Dated 27 August 1858, Saint-Amant’s article was
published in Le Sport on 8 September 1858 (page 2),
and other columns by Saint-Amant in the Paris
newspaper are also available on the Gallica website.
Page 2 of the 13 October 1858 edition had a letter
from Edge emphasizing that Morphy’s subsequent
indisposition had nothing to do with his eight-game
simultaneous blindfold display at the Café de la
Régence on 27 September 1858:
We also note mention of a (barely) anonymous letter
on page 2 of Le Sport, 1 December 1858,
concerning Paulsen’s acknowledgement of Morphy’s
superiority:
12226.
Exchange sacrifice
Early occurrences of the exchange sacrifice ...Rxc3
in the Sicilian Defence are referred to at the end of
our feature
article on the opening. The topic has also been
discussed by Tim Krabbé in his Open
chess
diary (item 339 on 8 March 2007).
Eduardo Bauzá Mercére (New York, NY, USA) now adds a
much earlier case (although not with the Dragon
Variation), from pages 118-119
of the Chess Player’s Chronicle, 1862. It is an
undated game between James Robey and Edward Löwe, and
Black’s 16th move is forced:
1 e4 c5 2 d4 cxd4 3 Nf3 Nc6 4 Nxd4 e6 5 Nb5 d6 6 Bf4
e5 7 Be3 a6 8 N5c3 Nf6 9 Bd3 Be7 10 Na4 b5 11 Nb6 Rb8
12 Nd5 Nxd5 13 exd5 Nb4 14 Be2 Bb7 15 Nc3 Rc8 16 a3
16...Rxc3 17 bxc3 Nxd5 18 c4 Nxe3 19 fxe3 Bxg2 20 Rg1
Qa5+ 21 Kf2 Bc6 22 Rxg7 bxc4 23 Bxc4 d5 24 Qh5 Rf8 25
Qxe5 Qd2+ 26 Be2 Bb5 27 Re1 Kd7 28 Rg4 Bc5 29 a4 Bc6
30 c4 Re8 31 Qf5+ Kd8 32 Qf6+ Kc7 33 Qxf7+ Kb6 34 Rb1+
Bb4 35 Rxb4+ Qxb4 36 cxd5 Qc5 37 a5+ Kxa5 38 Qc7+ Qb6
39 Qxb6+ Kxb6 40 dxc6 Kxc6 and White wins.
12227.
Grandmasters
Robert John McCrary (Columbia, SC, USA) has submitted
a number of further nineteenth-century occurrences of
the word grandmaster,
the earliest being on page
109 of the third edition of A New Treatise
of Chess by George Walker (London, 1841). ‘Our
Chess-grand-master’ is Walker’s description of
Philidor.
Our correspondent points out that when the passage
was reproduced on page
145 of volume five (1844) of the Chess
Player’s Chronicle, the wording was ‘our grand
Chess Master’.
12228.
Length of Wikipedia articles
On his YouTube channel, Ben Finegold often comments
about the length of Wikipedia
articles, and in a video
on H.N. Pillsbury earlier this year he said:
‘I’m furious at how short the Wikipedia articles
are for these great chessplayers.’
On any Wikipedia page the reader can see its length
(in bytes) by clicking on ‘Tools’ and then on ‘Page
information’. In the case of Pillsbury
(English-language version), the current length is only
10,066 bytes.
The disparities in Wikipedia articles are also shown
by these lengths:
Henry Edward Bird: 4,755;
Eric Schiller: 24,364.
12229.
Alekhine in Buenos Aires, 1939 (C.N. 12215)
From Christian Sánchez (Rosario, Argentina):
‘The reverse of this photograph given in C.N.
12215 states “40 partidas simultáneas jugadas por
el Dr Alekhine”, “Córdoba 731”, and “4/5/39”.
Skinner and Verhoeven’s work on Alekhine
contains no reference to exhibitions by the world
champion in Argentina between his appearances in
Peru and Brazil. However, a report
on page 7 of the newspaper Crítica the
following day says that the display took place, on
4 May 1939, at the Club Alemán (Córdoba Street
731), Buenos Aires. Alekhine faced 40 opponents of
the second, third and fourth categories (including
one blindfold game), and he scored +34 –2 =4 (the
defeats being against Christian Rosch and Carl
Isenberg).
Larger
version
A summary of Alekhine’s activities during this
period:
-
28 April: departed from La Paz, Bolivia;
-
1 May: arrived in Buenos Aires, Argentina;
-
4 May: gave a 40-game simultaneous exhibition
(+34 –2 =4) at the Club Alemán;
-
5 May: played bridge at the Club Argentino de
Ajedrez;
-
14 May: delivered a lecture on the Ruy López
opening at the Club Argentino de Ajedrez;
-
16 May: played a game against the Del Sel
brothers (Luis and Enrique);
-
21 May: left Buenos Aires for Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil.
I am building up a webpage
with details of Alekhine’s South American tour.’
12230.
Mr and Mrs Alekhine
A further photograph from the Crítica archive
has been provided by Olimpiu G. Urcan (Singapore):
12231.
W.C. Fields
The start of Larry
Evans’ column on page 12H of the South
Florida Sun-Sentinel, 23 September 2007:
We have found no earlier occurrence of this alleged
quote – or any later one from a reputable source.
12232.
Morphy in Birmingham, 1858
From page 101 of David Lawson’s 1976 biography of
Morphy and page 94 of the 2010 paperback edition:
‘After his arrival in Liverpool, he entrained at
once for Birmingham. In an article in the New
Orleans Times-Democrat of 18 June 1899,
Alderman Thomas Avery, president of the Birmingham
Chess Club, tells of meeting him at the Curzon
Street [sic] station:
“I was never more astonished by the appearance of
anyone. Having formed my opinion of the man by the
strength of his chess, I expected to see a tall
broad-shouldered individual, with a big beard and
a ferocious expression. And there he turned out to
be a slight, beardless stripling youth in a
broad-brimmed straw hat, a black tie and a meek
and mild manner. I took him at once to the
photographer, and had the portrait taken which is
now in the Birmingham Chess Club. He was a very
gentlemanly young fellow; no talker, and as it
seemed to me, a player who performed all his
wonderful feats by instinct and without any
visible effort.”’
Something is amiss, given that Thomas Avery died over
five years before publication of the New Orleans Times-Democrat
article.
It is shown below, from page 25 of the 18 June 1899
edition:
Compared to Lawson’s version, there are slight
differences in the sentence beginning ‘And there he
turned out ...’
The Times-Democrat item specified from the
outset that it was quoting the Birmingham Weekly
Mercury, from which it may be deduced that, in
the phrase ‘Telling us the story, Mr Avery went on
...’, the pronoun ‘us’ refers to the Birmingham chess
columnist Robert
J.
Buckley.
The following, from page 21 of the American Chess
Magazine, July 1899, cites another Birmingham
newspaper for which Buckley wrote:
‘There is a unique portrait of Morphy in the
Birmingham Chess Club room at the Midland Institute,
and here we record, for the first time, its history.
Mr Thomas Avery, President of the Birmingham Chess
Club, had heard of the exploits of Morphy in London
[sic], and on the eve of his arrival went
down to the railway station to meet him. Telling us
the story, Mr Avery went on, “I was never more
astonished by the appearance of any one. Having
formed my opinion of the man by the strength of his
chess, I expected to see a tall, broad-shouldered
individual with a big beard and a ferocious
expression. And there he turned out to be a slight,
beardless stripling, with a broad-brimmed straw hat
and a meek and mild manner. I took him at once to
the photographer and had the portrait taken which is
now in the Birmingham Chess Club. He was a very
gentlemanly young fellow, no talker and as it seemed
to me a player who performed all his wonderful feats
by instinct and without any visible effort.” The
people of New Orleans may be glad to hear of this
excellent portrait; and we venture to believe that
if application were made to the honorable secretary
of the Birmingham Chess Club (England) that very
courteous and obliging gentleman would see that the
New Orleans Chess Club, or whatsoever other chess
organization stands at the head of the New Orleans
Chess world, was presented with a duly authenticated
copy. – Birmingham Gazette.’
Unlike in Lawson’s time, such texts can nowadays be
found online with ease, just as information about
Avery’s year of death requires a mere glance at Jeremy
Gaige’s Chess Personalia (1987). We hope
to show the relevant Birmingham columns at a later
date.
Lawson incorrectly made the New Orleans Times-Democrat
sound like a primary source. Above all, it seems
strange that no more was said about the photograph of
Morphy taken on Avery’s initiative. Lawson added one
detail about it in his chapter on Morphy in World
Chess Champions (Oxford, 1981): Avery ‘had him
photographed at once with his Panama hat’ (page 18).
Where is that photograph?
The only picture of Morphy wearing a hat that comes
to mind is the sketch by Wallis Mackay on page 12 of Chess
Life-Pictures by G.A. MacDonnell (London, 1883):
On page iv of his Preface, MacDonnell wrote,
regarding the book’s illustrations:
‘It is but fair towards Mr Wallis Mackay to mention
that he has been somewhat handicapped in his work.
In some cases he has not had the advantage of having
seen the gentlemen whom he has portrayed, and in
several he has been obliged to sketch from
photographs, which, although the best I could
procure, were not perfectly satisfactory.’
Addition on 5 October 2025:
New Orleans Times-Democrat,
15 October 1899, page 24
The obituary of Thomas Avery on page 5 of the Birmingham
Daily Gazette, 19 February 1894 included a
lengthy section headed ‘Mr Avery as a Chess Player’.
12233. Paul
Morphy and E.T. Fellowes (C.N. 8469)


As with other recent Morphy items, we pick up where
David Lawson’s 1976 book left off.
There follows a chronological outline of the law
practices of Morphy and of E.T. Fellowes – separate
and joint – at 12 Exchange Place, New Orleans. These
are the earliest ones traced:
Daily Picayune,
5 November 1864, page 1
The above is the advertisement mentioned in Lawson’s
book (page 281 of the 1976 original and page 294 of
the paperback), although not shown by Lawson as
promised. Moreover, the notice had already appeared in
the Daily Picayune on 2, 3 and 4 November, and
there was also the following in another newspaper:
New-Orleans Times,
2 November 1864, page 5
See too Lawson’s Appendix 11 (‘Morphy Announcement of
Law Office’, dated 4 November 1864).
As regards E.T. Fellowes:
Daily Picayune,
2 May 1860, page 5
(The advertisement recurred with Fellowes’ name still
misspelt.)
New-Orleans Times,
12 December 1867, page 5
Over the years, many lawyers worked at 12 Exchange
Place.
Daily Picayune,
7 July 1871, page 5
New-Orleans Times,
11 April 1872, page 5
‘E.B. Fellowes’ may be a misprint, but it will
be seen below that there were three Felloweses
(brothers) who were practising lawyers and had a first
forename beginning with E.
New-Orleans Times,
3 April 1865, page 5
Another lawyer at 12 Exchange Place was John Ward
Gurley:
Daily Picayune,
18 April 1873, page 5
His time there overlapped with Morphy’s:
Daily Picayune,
1 February 1874, page 5
Now, the partnership between E.T. Fellowes and
Morphy:
Daily Picayune,
24 December 1873, page 5
Daily Picayune,
25 December 1873, page 7
New-Orleans Times,
25 December 1873, page 5
New-Orleans Times,
3 January 1874, page 2
But then:
Daily Picayune,
12 February 1874, page 5
Daily Picayune,
13 February 1874, page 5
On pages 290-291 of his monograph, Lawson was
unusually vague about the duration of the
Fellowes-Morphy partnership, stating that it began
‘ca. 1872’ and ‘lasted for some time into 1874’. That
could mean two years or more, whereas the evidence of
the newspaper announcements found so far indicates a
period of under six weeks (from 24 December 1873 to 2
February 1874).
Ernest Thomas Fellowes died in New York on 6 April
1913 (the New York Sun, 7 April 1913, page 7).
He was in his 71st year according to the brief record
on page 13 of the New York Times, 8 April
1913. The same day’s New-York Tribune (page 9)
reported that he was born in New Orleans in 1842,
although his year of birth was given as 1845 on page 2
of Ridgewood News, 29 October 1897.
An obituary of Eugene J. Fellowes (born in New
Orleans on 17 March 1847, died in Spokane on 20
January 1907) on page 7 of the Spokesman-Review,
21 January 1907 mentioned his brothers E.T. Fellowes
and Edward A. Fellowes as ‘both successful lawyers of
New York City’. The same information was in a shorter
obituary of Eugene Fellowes on page 8 of the Daily
Picayune, 20 February 1907.
Of the numerous other lawyers who had offices at 12
Exchange Place, New Orleans, John Ward Gurley (born in
1851) has been singled out here on account of his
fame. He became District Attorney, and on 20 July 1903
was shot dead by an aggrieved client, Lewis (Louis) W.
Lyons (New Orleans Times-Democrat, 21 July
1903, pages 1, 5 and 12). Lyons was hanged on 24 March
1905, as reported on page 4 of the Daily Picayune
the following day.
12234.
Supposedly Nimzowitsch
A new quirk is Editors’ use of fabricated or
imaginary photographs. Nothing is right about the
‘Steinitz’ picture on page 35 of the November 2025 CHESS,
and here is the start of an article about Nimzowitsch
on pages 30-32 of the same issue:
The authorities quoted in Mr Ben Graff’s text include
Divinsky, Schonberg and Sunnucks.
Addition on 4 November 2025:
The ‘Steinitz’ picture is shown in Alterations
to Chess Images.
12235.
Saint-Amant, Morphy and Edge (C.N. 12225)
From John Townsend (Wokingham, England):
‘I wonder if the praise given by Saint-Amant and
Edge to Morphy for his blindfold performance at
Birmingham was a trifle too enthusiastic.
Firstly, it should be remembered that Morphy had
defaulted in the main tournament, perversely, in
my view. Edge affirmed that it was because Morphy
wanted to avoid playing Staunton at that time,
while Morphy himself gave his unavailability as
the reason. In the first round, his absence left
the field to his opponent, Mr Smith, who was
declared the winner when Morphy failed to turn up.
For other information about Morphy’s withdrawal
from Birmingham, see my first contribution to A Debate on
Staunton, Morphy and Edge.
Whilst Morphy’s taking on, blindfold, eight
players was an achievement, the Morphy adulation
tends to create an exaggerated impression of the
strength of the contestants in the exhibition.
David Lawson, on page 113 of Paul Morphy The
Pride and Sorrow of Chess (edited by Thomas
Aiello, 2010), describes how the haphazard choice
of his opponents came about:
“There were then in the room Messrs Staunton, St
Amant, Löwenthal, Boden, Falkbeer, Brien, and
others of not much inferior strength, and Morphy
was in hopes that many, if not all, of these
gentlemen would offer themselves as opponents. But
he was mistaken and great difficulty was
experienced by the Committee of Management in
making up the required eight.”
In reality, none of those gentlemen accepted,
causing an anti-climax. Whether they regarded him
as a prima donna who was attempting to upstage the
main event, or whether they were fearful for their
reputations, or simply not available at short
notice, is not clear. The eight amateurs chosen
contained only two strong players, namely, Rev. G.
Salmon, of Ireland, and J.S. Kipping, of
Manchester. The latter beat Morphy.
Most of the eight were known as chess organizers
rather than strong players. If we look beyond
Saint-Amant’s hype and consider Board 7, for
example, we find Mr Carr, of Leamington, showing
distinct signs of being a weak player. He opened
his game with 1 e4 h6 2 d4 a5 – shall we call it
the Carr Defence? – and then lost a couple of
pieces in his first 15 moves (source: H. Staunton,
Chess Praxis, London, 1860, pages 521-522).
Saint-Amant also reported the score incorrectly,
stating, “Morphy a gagné sept parties”. In
fact, Morphy only won six, and drew with Thomas
Avery.
Edge commented as follows (in Paul Morphy,
The Chess Champion, London, 1859, page 71):
“But Morphy did not intend disappointing the
Birmingham gentry altogether, and felt convinced
that if he played six or eight games blindfold
before the Association, they would pardon his
absence at the opening of the meeting.”
This makes it sound as if Morphy regarded his
blindfold performance as an attempt to recover the
esteem he had lost through not facing his peers in
the main tournament.
Staunton’s predicament in preparing for his
Morphy match is likened by Saint-Amant to that of
a heavily outnumbered general in the field whose
only hope is to wait for yellow fever to come to
his rescue:
“ ... attendant pour auxiliaire contre l’armée
française la fièvre jaune, M. Staunton a fixé
l’époque des brouillards pour une lutte dans
laquelle son antagoniste, natif d’un climat
très-chaud et qui paraît jouir d’une poitrine
délicate, ne sera pas dans toute la plénitude de
ses aises.” (Source: C.N. 12225.)
This is witty enough from Saint-Amant, but it is
hard to tell to what extent he is joking. He
equates the yellow fever in his analogy with the
fog in London. Was he really suggesting that
Staunton had deliberately proposed a November
start to the match in order to enlist the fog on
his side? Wasn’t November offered simply because
it was, chronologically, the next available
opportunity for Staunton? In the quadrangle in
Birmingham, Morphy had invited Staunton to choose
from among October, November and December. If
Staunton’s objective was as dastardly as
Saint-Amant suggested, he could have chosen
December, when the fog was likely to be at least
as bad as in November.
The severity of London’s fog in those days
should not be under-estimated. In a letter, dated
10 December 1873, Staunton wrote:
“The cold is intensive and in addition to that
horror we have had four days’ fog as thick &
yellow as Tewkesbury mustard.” (See my book, Notes
on the life of Howard Staunton, page 159.)
The fog was sometimes, literally, yellow, so the
comparison with la fièvre jaune is apt in
that sense. By 1873, because of what he himself
described as bronchitis, Staunton viewed the
arrival of winter with real fear. On 2 December,
he had written:
“The late weather, so wonderful in its mildness,
considering the season, has been very favourable
to me, but, remembering what my sufferings were
last year, I am looking forward with terror at the
approach of winter with its cold death-wave.” (Source:
Edinburgh University Library, Special
Collections, Letters to J.O.
Halliwell-Phillipps, 77/9.)
Ironically, Staunton eventually died in
midsummer of the following year. We have little or
no evidence of his state of health in 1858, though
he complained of health problems at sundry times.
It is a big assumption by Saint-Amant that, of the
two players, Morphy would be the worse affected by
London’s fog.
At least Saint-Amant did not question whether
the match would go ahead. Commentators today tend
to assume automatically that experts at the time
all thought that Morphy would win easily. However,
at least one writer seemed to believe that
Staunton would perform well. A remark addressed to
a correspondent, “Alpha”, appeared on page 192 of
The Field, 4 September 1858:
“Alpha – It has been agreed by Mr Staunton to
play a match with Mr Morphy in November. Although
Mr Staunton must necessarily be a good deal out of
practice, we have no doubt that after the first
few games he will ‘come up’.”
Exactly how “come up” should be interpreted is
not clear. Perhaps it means that Staunton would
get into his stride. I wonder if any other writers
at the time thought that Staunton would “come up”,
or conveyed similar encouraging sentiments.
Backing Morphy must have been flawed by at least
one important uncertainty. As Lawson revealed,
Morphy’s family were strongly opposed to matches
for stakes and had threatened to send an agent to
London to remove the American champion bodily, if
necessary, and bring him home, if he played for
money (see my second contribution to A Debate on
Staunton, Morphy and Edge). Although Morphy was
over 21, his friend, Charles Maurian, feared that
they would be “as good as their word”. This being
so, once the stakes had been committed, Morphy’s
backers could have been vulnerable to a risk of
his defaulting, a risk of which they were not even
aware. Morphy had been secretive about the promise
he had made to his family, and Lawson indicates
that even Maurian and Edge were in the dark about
it, until the crisis over the source of the stakes
was at hand. Even after the New Orleans Chess Club
had supplied the stakes, Maurian’s last known
words on the subject of bodily removal had
contained no real assurance that it would not
happen:
“As to the threat of somebody going to London, I
hope it will not be carried into effect by the
family. It would be useless if not worse.”
(Lawson, 2010 edition, page 123.)
Perhaps there would have been some “smart money”
on Staunton in view of the possibility of a
default.
Why did Staunton pull out of the match? The
primary reason must lie in his commitments to his
publisher, Routledge. He may have made personal
sacrifices to retain a chance of being available
to play. For the match to come off, good relations
between the two belligerents were needed.
I wonder if the effect on Staunton of Morphy’s
letter of 6 October 1858, from the Café de la
Régence, has been adequately considered.
Confrontational from the outset, this billet-doux
ends with the following statement:
“In conclusion, I beg leave to state that I have
addressed a copy of this letter to several
editors, being most desirous that our true
position should no longer be misunderstood by the
community at large.” (Lawson, 2010 edition, page
137.)
Earlier negotiations had been conducted
privately, so the implication was clear: that
Staunton’s word could not be trusted. Staunton did
not say that he was insulted by this, but he may
have seen his response as being dictated by
self-respect. Morphy cannot have been surprised,
surely, if this letter brought an abrupt end to
negotiations which had been marred for some time
by hostile exchanges in the press and elsewhere.
Any remaining Staunton goodwill being enjoyed by
Morphy was forfeited when he sent this letter.
Staunton replied privately on 9 October. Among
other remarks, he noted that he had been waiting
for Morphy’s match with Harrwitz to be concluded
before he announced his decision not to play while
he was busy with the Shakespeare edition. (Lawson,
2010 edition, page 138.)’
12236.
The Aftermath
Daniel
Naroditsky was an infrequent but fine writer on
chess. Those less gifted, or whose native language is
not English, can lessen the gulf if, for every text,
they systematically embrace the freely available
fact-checkers, grammar-checkers and spell-checkers,
the ever-improving automatic translators, AI tools
employed critically, and a second opinion from
qualified confidants via e-mail. That is our
diplomatic, impersonal wording. A more direct
formulation would be that, and still referring only to
linguistic standards and clarity of presentation, much
of what Vladimir Kramnik has posted on X/Twitter and
elsewhere has been execrable and continues to do his
cause a marked disservice.
Our feature article on Daniel Naroditsky shows the
conclusion of an inscription in his first chess book –
the work of a prodigy and as such a record-breaking
publication. The inscription itself is private, but we
dwell on the date: 9 April 2010. It is a crushing
thought that nearly half of his life had already gone.
12237.
Language (FIDE)
Further to C.N. 12236.
On page 5 of the November 2025 CHESS, an
editorial by Malcolm Pein observes that there was ‘an
outpouring of anger’ at the first of two messages on
X/Twitter posted by Emil Sutovsky, the Chief Executive
Officer of FIDE, after the death of Daniel Naroditsky.
As in C.N. 12236, we propose to focus on language,
and from the same standpoint: why would the CEO of a
world federation issue a statement left unchecked by
basic computer tools? For example, Mr Sutovsky wrote
incoherently:
‘It kept haunting him for more than a year, even if
there was not much of polemics of recent.’
Another faulty text:
‘... public debate within the chess world has too
often moved beyond the boundaries of acceptable,
harming not only people’s reputation but ...’
‘The boundaries of acceptable’?
That line comes from a statement by the President of
FIDE, Arkady Dvorkovich, dated 22 October 2025, the
same day as Emil Sutovsky’s two X/Twitter posts. The
President announced that ‘all relevant public
statements’ by Vladimir Kramnik were being referred
‘to the FIDE Ethics and Disciplinary Commission for
independent consideration’.
On or about 28 October 2025, a statement appeared
from the ‘Chairwoman, Ethics & Disciplinary
Commission’, Yolander Persaud. One paragraph reads:
‘I confirm receipt of, and I have read the numerous
email petitions made to the EDC concerning the
bullying campaign and alleged unfounded cheating
claims directed at GM Naroditsky, even posthumously.
I acknowledge your expressions of hurt and
frustration.’
Incorrect punctuation aside, there is this to
consider:
‘... concerning the bullying campaign and alleged
unfounded cheating claims ...’
As that text stands, the ‘Chairwoman,
Ethics & Disciplinary Commission’ is publicly
affirming that there was indeed a ‘bullying campaign’.
Many will say, ‘Of course there was’, but where does
her declaration leave Vladimir Kramnik’s entitlement,
before her Commission, to deny any bullying campaign?
On the other hand, the cheating claims are described
by Yolander Persaud as ‘alleged unfounded’, which has
no meaning.
What could have been intended? Has she decided, with
or without her Commission, that the claims about
cheating were alleged and unfounded, or just alleged,
or allegedly unfounded, or something else again? Above
all, what business is it of hers to judge anything
before the promised ‘independent consideration’ by her
Commission has even begun? An AI tool would have
suggested ‘cheating and bullying allegations’, a
neutral wording which neither Vladimir Kramnik nor
anyone else could reasonably contest.
Inquiries can drag on beyond the worst fears. It may
soon be evident, if it is not already, that FIDE lacks
the requisite independence and competence for such a
major undertaking, and that an impartial outside body,
such as an international investigation firm, needs to
be engaged.
In the meantime, there is one practical step that
FIDE officials, and not only them, could decide upon
with immediate effect: no text will enter the public
domain until the person or body concerned has found
the short time needed to verify it properly with
readily available IT tools.
Finally, our observation in C.N. 12166, dated 2 July
2025, is reiterated here:
The current battles over online cheating are a
grimly undignified, barely intelligible mess with,
as their hub, nothing better than X/Twitter.
There must be a better way.
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