Chess NotesEdward WinterLatest batch of C.N. items (1 January 2026): C.N.s 12262-12266.C.N.’s main focus is on material not readily available elsewhere. If contacting us by e-mail (ewinter@sunrise.ch), correspondents need to include their name and full postal address; otherwise, messages are filtered out. Regrettably, we can no longer handle readers’ private research requests. |
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For pondering
‘A great deal has been written, at various times and in a variety of different cultures, about the character-forming aspects of chess, how it demands qualities such as patience and foresight that are useful in everyday life, and how the study and play of chess may help to develop those qualities; yet looking at the history of the game and its leading practitioners, one might be excused for reaching a different conclusion: that chess can bring out the worst in people.’
Source: W.R. Hartston, Short v Kasparov The Hi-jacking of The World Chess Championship (London, 1993), page 4. C.N. 10832.
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Chess thoughts
Chess literature teems with things that players purportedly ‘once said’, ‘said on one occasion’, ‘used to say’, ‘liked to say’ and other vague variants.
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Archives: for pondering quotes, and chess thoughts (our own observations).
12262. Check and checkmate![]() White played 39 Bxh6 Be5+ 40 Bf4 mate. As discussed in Check and Checkmate, Bogoljubow v Trott, Southsea, 1950 was depicted in the animated film War Is Over!, written and directed by Dave Mullins. Peter Trott (Paddock Wood, England) has sent us his father’s score of the game:
1 e4 c5 2 Ne2 Nc6 3 Nbc3 d6 4 g3 g6 5 Bg2 Bg7 6 d3 e6 7 Nf4 Nge7 8 O-O O-O 9 Re1 Rb8 10 Nce2 b5 11 c3 Qa5 12 a3 b4 13 Bd2 bxa3 14 Rxa3 Qb6 15 Bc1 Bd7 16 Ra2 Rfc8 17 g4 Na5 18 h3 Nb3 19 Be3 e5 20 Nd5 Nxd5 21 exd5 f5 22 gxf5 Bxf5 23 Ng3 Rf8 24 Kh2 Rb7 25 Rg1 Kh8 26 Ra3 Bd7 27 Ne4 a5 28 Bf3 Be8 29 Rg2 h6 30 Be2 a4 31 Qg1 Nd4 32 cxd4 Qxb2 33 dxc5 Qxa3 34 Nxd6 Rb8 35 Nxe8 Rfxe8 36 Rxg6 Rg8 37 Qg4 e4 38 Qh5 Rge8 39 Bxh6 Be5+ 40 Bf4 mate. We are also grateful to Peter Trott for this photograph taken shortly after the game started:
See too Efim Bogoljubow. An earlier photograph courtesy of our correspondent:
From left to right:
A.H. Trott, H. Meek, O. Penrose Addition on 3 January 2026: Two further photographs of his father from Peter Trott:
The board position occurs a number of times in databases, the earliest game being Richter v Engels, Bad Oeynhausen, 1938.
Regarding this shot taken on Southsea pier (in, we believe, April 1951), Leonard Barden (London) informs us:
12263. Alekhine v Lilienthal (C.N. 3348)From Michael Sharpe (Toronto, Canada):
12264. Assiac/Heinrich FraenkelFrom the ‘William Hickey’ column on page 6 of the Daily Express, 1 May 1935: ![]() 12265. Morphy cartoons in Le CharivariJean Fontaine (Montreal, Canada) refers to page 170 of the New York edition of F.M. Edge’s 1859 book on Morphy: ![]() Page 152 of the London edition is almost identical. Mr Fontaine comments:
12266. 1960Ross Jackson (Raumati South, New Zealand) sends the following (Punch, 3 February 1960) from his collection:
The cartoon, by Norman Mainsbridge (1911-93), is being added to From Former Times (Chess). |
Copyright Edward Winter. All rights reserved.