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Examiner22.07.1838
  • Datum
    Sonntag, 22. Juli 1838
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] any abatement of the great provocation to disobe dience, and leaving the peccant course in all its rank excess with merely a shift in its pressure. [...]
[...] cation of O'Normanby tranquillity. The conduct of Clare and Limerick is perfectly intelligible: their's is clearly a politic repose intended merely to support a favourite Government; but why is a county like Cavan quiet” The northern counties ought to feel [...]
[...] Let us merely recommend Doctor Hawkins, in conclusion, to reconsider that passage in his very in structive book (p. 357), which characterises incom [...]
[...] and Barnard Burke, Esqrs. Scott, Webster, and Geary. An extremely interesting work, not merely to the lovers of family history, but for a great ...] of mi nute information illustrative of events, and of the [...]
[...] that it was so re-painted; so that the repudiators of their patronage of all opinions concerning the pictures in the National Gallery have patronised the mere opinion, or erroneous inference, of Fuseli; and, as far as their au. thority reaches, will suppress the fact that the figure in [...]
[...] prepossessions got the better of all prudent inquiry upon the subject. It is not, however, merely this reiteration of an uncri tical opinion or mistaken inference, and their suppres sion of a moral and pictorial fact, or their evasion and [...]
[...] the commencement of a system of putting into the com mission of the peace persons of one political cast of opi. nion, for the mere purpose of counterbalancing the influence of other persons in commission who happened to be of another cast of political opinions, and of exclud [...]
[...] §. The people of England sent their representatives there to insist that an overwhelming majority of Irishmen— that 6,500,000 men should pay tithes for the benefit merely :* º: wº not º: . º º: . tº . t not, then, the e of England to [...]
[...] help noticing it. We do not believe that the circumstance is to be taken as an indication of growing depravity of the lower orders in Dundee, but merely that they have not kept up in refinement with the lower orders of the metro is-Morning Chronicle. [...]
[...] gether, it may not be uninteresting to our readers to learn that they met once, and but once, and then by mere accident. The Duke, then Sir Arthur Wellesley, had just returned from his ever-memorable campaign in India; but his fame, though high amongst all those who [...]
Examiner18.04.1841
  • Datum
    Sonntag, 18. April 1841
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] at those members of the Import Duties Committee who elicited, just now, its very inconvenient evi dence and report, was a mere summer shower com ared with the storm which has been raised in ormer times against some of the distinguished [...]
[...] present Administration is identified with a like ; and can only be obstructed in its course, by selfishness, ignorance, or mere party spirit. The choice, however, which has to be made between a review of our Import Duties, and thence an im [...]
[...] other declared it equally impossible, because the finances would not support it. According to the Minister, the mere preparatives of war had created a deficit of a thousand [...]
[...] consequently threatening a bankruptcy. If the mere pre paratives of war occasioned such dire results, what must not the war itself occasion ? Was not this a pretty picture [...]
[...] disinclined to the Russian ; but at present it was undigni fied to join or make concession to either. M. Guizot merely replied by denying the correctness of M. Thiers's statement, the time was not come for openly disproving them. [...]
[...] that, in occasionally dipping their hands into the large but confused heap of Arab materials, they have each selected merely what appeared to serve their purpose, and adapted it to their views by an interpretation as narrow and partial as their [...]
[...] deavoured, throughout the work, to substitute the result of observations derived from the monu ments, for the mere expression or suggestion of personal opinion, and this more particularly in the abstruse and mysterious questions connected with [...]
[...] long; and deferring, almost altogether, the wise and beautiful moral of the good old story, to a mere series of musical adaptations for the singers. The child (who is here the most competent critic) finds well nigh as little of the Beast of his nursery, [...]
[...] was carried to the utmost pitch. CAPE or Good Hope.—Cape of Good Hope papers to the 20th of February merely contain some allusions to the distressed condition of the emigrant Boors at Natal, whose cattle were dying rapidly from disease. [...]
[...] belongs to the Oriental Company for the mails, and is looked upon as a wonder here. The captain is a fine great fat fellow, who trims her by merely walking from one part of the deck to another.” [...]
Examiner29.06.1844
  • Datum
    Samstag, 29. Juni 1844
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] ‘ment, we have no grounds for calling on him to “explain.' The mere assertion of certain parties, quoth Lord Brougham, that their letters have been opened, is not sufficient. Why what can be had [...]
[...] perhaps, a calico shirt of the same origin. , More over, he consumes in a year, as a mere luxury, [...]
[...] any image at any expense. And finally the intro: duction of phrases which convey no image, and are therefore a mere jargon of †. Mr Patmore is in a position to guard himself from this great danger, and we counsel him to do so zealously. [...]
[...] for a foreigner singularly accurate; and, without damage to his earnestness, so extremely dispas sionate and free from party views, that the mere temper of his essay recommends it with a certain freshness to the English reader. He will find him [...]
[...] art he has attained what seems to us perfection. Edgardo in Lucia di Lammermoor was never so acted before, The artist did not merely touch a few abstract points, but he elaborated his expres sion. The dying scene was exquisitely wrought. [...]
[...] (Cheers.) A letter in the Post office ought to be assacred as one preserved in a desk; it was merely confided to [...]
[...] present system, which indicated its premature decay; and when Mr Gladstone appealed to the two last years, he merely proved that the present government, instead of be ing wiser, had only enjoyed much better weather than their predecessors. (A laugh.) Would the existing corn law [...]
[...] amendment bill. (Hear, hear.) It was extremely incon venient to have the measure repeatedly fixed for discussion and then postponed again, merely because the progress was not made that had been anticipated in the bank charter bill. [...]
[...] Stowell had said that two opinions had divided the world on the subject of marriage law—one holding that it was a mere'y civil contract; the other, that it was a sacred and religious que. But neither of these was correct. According to his judgment, it was not merely either a [...]
[...] mere and Persian Wests, rials - - - - 0 10 6 splendid patterns, 34, to 0 8 6 || Single-milled Victoria and Washing Satin West, war- plain Doe Trousers - 0 17 6 [...]
Examiner26.06.1841
  • Datum
    Samstag, 26. Juni 1841
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] than to support them out of the produce of the bread-tax. If it were merely in as far as it is a burden thrown off the shoulders of the country gentlemen upon those of the citizens, the present }. Law of Scot [...]
[...] of peace, did repose reign all round the Mediter ranean. But it is to be feared that the French want to settle the Alexandrian question, merely in order to awaken another, in which the Four Powers are not allied, and in which France may recover [...]
[...] over the patient, declares aid or medicine quite idle, and instead of joining a consultation to save the sick, merely meditates the best way of appro priating or partitioning his spoil. Lord Palmerston and Lord Ponsonby, on the contrary, stand up for [...]
[...] that power of resistance which an originally robust body offers to decay. Russia, perhaps, takes this view of the subject, for her policy applies merely temporary remedics to Turkey's ills. Russia does not recommend reform, or any of those alteratives [...]
[...] doctor on one side, an optimist doctor on the other, whilst a third interested party stands with a drawn sword merely to watch that no alteration be made in the will. If the two quarrelling doctors had common sense, they would consult [...]
[...] fering nnder those misgivings which all nonconformists like himself have felt when abºut to present a new work to the world, and which, thºugh often merely arising from physical exhaustion, are as oſteu misconstrued to mean a conscious [...]
[...] lic taste improved, so a more free admission to religious edifices, under proper regulation, may be made conducive not merely to the gratification of curiosity and to the acquire ment of historical knowledge, but to the growth and pro gress of religious impressions, by leading the mind of the [...]
[...] Examiner from Sunday to Saturday. This nakes no change whatever in the publication; it is merely dating the paper the day of the first edition instead of the day of the second edition, the edition for the post being publishsd on [...]
[...] called now. The paper was returned with a mere general statement of the number of males and females, the defend ant having reſused to make any other return. Mr Travers, [...]
[...] subjected the party to fourteen years' transportation. He strongly reprehended the conduct of the offenders, the youngest of whom said he was drawn into the act in mere joke, and committed them both for trial, expressing a wish, that in so heartless a case, the penalty, severe as it was, [...]
Nature13.02.1873
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 13. Februar 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] still made to the theory of Natural Selection on the ground that it is either a pure hypothesis not founded on any demonstrable facts, or a mere truism which can lead to no useful results, we find it year by year sinking deeper into the minds of thinking [...]
[...] means of combining men in societies, whether by the action of some common belief or common danger, or by the power of some ruler or tyrant. The mere fact of obedience to a ruler was at first much more important than what was done by means of the obedience. So, any [...]
[...] many statements and ideas of doubtful accuracy, but it shows an abundance of ingenious and original thought. Many will demur to the view that mere accident and imitation have been the origin of marked national pecu liarities; such as those which distinguish the German, [...]
[...] habits; but both are probably far inferior to the long continued action of external nature on the organism, not merely as it acts in the country now inhabited by the particular nation, but by its action during remote ages and throughout all the migrations and intermixtures [...]
[...] With this admirable material, and, what is no less important, with the philosophical spirit which a mere specialist always lacks, it is no wonder that a work of the first importance has been produced. [...]
[...] in the same time, and after the same fashion, and of one and the same principal matter are produced and generated. That matter is no other than a mere vapour, which is extracted from the ele mentary earth by the superior stars or by a sidereal distillation of the macrocosm, which sidereal hot infusion, with an airy sul [...]
[...] as I have named ; but even if it did, where is the surplus power to be found that gives the engine a palpable increase of efficiency? The mere reaction of the compressed air, with all the aid it can possibly derive from the absorption of waste heat, would barely save a loss, and certainly could never account for an important [...]
[...] to follow that it is only in the absence of a steam jacket to the cylinder that the economy of injecting air is realised, and in fact that the injection of air is merely a substitute for steam jacketing. Moreover, if such be the action of the air, pumping into the steam should, in this point of view, produce the same effect as [...]
[...] this country will remain constant, and that the consumption for domestic and manufacturing purposes, including exportation, will continue uniform at the present quantity, or merely vary from year to year without advancing, then our stock of coal would represent a consumption of 1,273 years. But if, on the other [...]
[...] reduction, the foot, whilst losing its lateral digits, acquires no better adaptation to altered circumstances of locomotion than is derived from the mere thickening of the remaining digits. The relation between the carpal and tarsal bones, and the remaining two metacarpal and metatarsals, remains unaltered, and the [...]
Nature24.11.1870
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 24. November 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] special claims of the Statistical Society and its asso ciates in the culture of Social Science :—“The scien tific labours of our members, inspired by a mere love of truth, looking to no pecuniary reward, and bear ing directly on the very questions which come under [...]
[...] Book of Facts.” It is obvious from the most cursory pe rusal of the history of this “singular plant,” that it is merely a fine specimen of coral, and the absurdity of the story was exposed in a number of the Gardener's Chronicle subsequent to that in which it originally appeared. The [...]
[...] modify my views, and I do so with the greatest pleasure, in my objection, namely, to the title of Mr. Darwin's great work. Taking the origin of spº, les as distinct from the origin of mere varieties, there is undoubtedly a sense, as Mr. Wallace points out, in which natural selection may be considered a prime factor. The [...]
[...] Further, though the whole change may be produced by an im mense number of small changes, it is not necessary to suppose that all the changes will be equally small. It is merely begging the question to assume that the first change could not possibly be large enough to be of any use. And if it may be of use, the [...]
[...] nothing less than absolute identity of appearance may be thoroughly effective. Thus the perfecting of the resemblance will be no “mere freak of Nature,” nor shall we be “landed in the di lemma that the last stages are comparatively useless” in this procedure. [...]
[...] Wallace's explanation of this point in last week's NATURE. One of the objects of Mr. Darwin has been to show that the existence of species as an absolute entity is a mere idea of our minds; that if we could at the same moment look around us in space, and also backwards in time, we should find the organic [...]
[...] Ha, to which the ordinary, red light of ignited hydrogen is due. Changes of pressure and temperature do not affect the position of lines, but merely influence their breadth and intensity, making new lines visible and expanding old ones. Sometimes, as in the well-known case of nitrogen, an entirely fresh spectrum is pro [...]
[...] distribution. (1.) Organography.—The tendrils, as shown by their development, minute anatomy and position, and the fact that they occasionally bear flowers, are merely modified flower stalks. The leaf, whether single or divided, always commences in development at the apex, and proceeds from above downwards. [...]
[...] corona was traced from its simplest form in Turnera to its most complicated arrangement in some Modeccas and Passifloras, in all cases it is a mere projection from the flower-tube, and is of late development, and morphologically of little importance, though essential to the individual life of the plant. The inner [...]
[...] which was examined the embankment faces Wales, and was therefore made to defend the country within it from the Welsh. Dr. Wright's view, therefore, that it was a mere geographical boundary to prevent the Welsh from stealing the cattle of the Mercians cannot be maintained, although it may perhaps receive [...]
Nature30.11.1871
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 30. November 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Smith Sound. The Russian polymias or water holes are in all probability caused by winds and currents acting on a shallow sea, and, so far as we yet know, they are merely local. The same thing was observed by Barents off Novaya Zemlia in November, and an off-shore wind will [...]
[...] an estimated latitude of 81° 30' on May 24, 1806, but his highest observed latitude was 81° 12' 42" on the 23rd. These voyages merely confirm the observations of Nor denskiöld and earlier explorers, that, though the pack is usually met with, east of Spitzbergen, between 75° and [...]
[...] have the principles of projection in a much more per fectly co-ordinated arrangement than we have hitherto found them in, and we must say that the mere act of mentally assimilating this interdependence of principles would be wholesome discipline, even if it did not, as it [...]
[...] nonsense has been talked on the subject of the thickness of the solid crust of the earth, even by scientific men of real power—generally mere mathematicians, sometimes geologists, rarely indeed physicists—and such extravagant views on the subject are still propounded and defended [...]
[...] reply without laying myself open to the charge of Egotism (second only in gravity to a charge of Immorality), shows that he is a good deal more than a mere metaphysician. Of metaphysics anon—meanwhile about mathematicians. [...]
[...] it. The man is either a Mathematician or a Non-Mathematician. There is no intermediate class. Merely to be able to integrate, to solve differential equations, to work the hardest of Senate. Houes Problems, &c., &c., is not to be a Mathematician. To deserve [...]
[...] it is not necessary that one should have devised a new Calculus. Are Stokes, Thomson, Clerk-Maxwell on the one hand, or Cayley, Sylvester, Clifford on the other mere Experts 2 Yet there can be º doubt that, in Dr. Ingleby's classification, this is their rank. [...]
[...] the island expressly for the purpose, have furnished the materials for this memorandum. The accounts as to the height of the cone are mere guesses—from 300 to 1,500 feet. H.M. surveying steamer Nassau, Captain Chimmo, is said to have visited the island in June, and we may [...]
[...] . º: width of the spectrum, having nothing to do with its ength. Using the same notation as before, merely adding t = intensity of source of light. 1 = length of the slit. [...]
[...] small glaciers on the coast, though when compared with the glacier system of the Alps, they are of gigantic size. The out skirting land is, to all intents and purposes, merely a circlet of islands of greater or less extent. There are, in all probability, no mountains in the interior—only a high plateau, from which [...]
Nature26.10.1871
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 26. Oktober 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] the arborescent habit was lost.” Prof. Williamson finds some difficulty in understanding this, and believes me to imply “that these exogenous conditions were merely adventitious growths assumed for a season and thrown off at the earliest opportunity; that they had no true affinity with the plants in which they were [...]
[...] Lepidodendron or its allies, the parsimony of nature has also sup pressed in it all those peculiarities of stem structure which were merely correlated with vast size, and in Selaginella and recent Lycopodiaceae we have the residuum. In Isoetes, which is only a few inches high, there is a kind of lingering reminiscence of cir [...]
[...] seen that the experiment cannot fail to bring home to the mind of the learner that his reasoning relates to things and not merely to abstractions. Let CB (Fig. 1) represent the jib or strut, and AB the tie rod of a crane, the line AC being vertical. Let a weight P [...]
[...] importance of education for ordinary life, as contrasted with professional life. Now in Canada the number of young men who receive a higher education merely to fit them for occupying a high social position is very small. The greater number of the young men who pass through our colleges do so under the [...]
[...] who receive an education for the profession of teaching, the great majority of those who obtain what is regarded as higher culture, do so merely as a means of general improvement and to fit them selves better to take their proper place in society. Certain curious and important consequences flow from this. An education ob. [...]
[...] An education pursued as a means of bread-winning is likely to be sought by the active and ambitious of very various social grades. An educa ion which is thought merely to fit for a certain social position is likely to be sought almost ex clusively by those who move in that position. An education in [...]
[...] tended for recognised practical uses, is likely to find public sup port, and at the utmost to bear a fair market price. An educa tion supposed to have a merely conventional value as a branch of refined culture, is likely to be at a fancy price. Hence it happens that the young men who receive a higher education and by means [...]
[...] women of those social levels rarely aspire to similar advantages. On the other hand, while numbers of young men of wealthy families are sent into business with a merely commercial educa tion at a very early age, their sisters are occupied with the pur suit of accomplishments of which their more practical brothers never [...]
[...] nificance, or must expose herself to be the derision of the shrewd and clever and the companion of fools. Perhaps, worse than this, she may be a mere leader in thoughtless gaiety, a snare and a trap to the unwary, a leader of unsuspicious youth into the ways of dissipation. On the other hand, she may aspire to be a [...]
[...] in all its parts.” We may ſurther point out that Dr. Pettigrew has not based his ideas on the structure of wings on mere theoretical considera tions. Besides elaborate anatomical examination, he has entered with a true experimental spirit into a close study of the visible [...]
Nature25.08.1870
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 25. August 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] From this state of things the original scientific inquiry of M. Taine is a refreshing departure, and M. Ribot’s work, though in the main expository merely, has its face [...]
[...] physics strictly understood) an cxtra-scientific, but neces sary, complement of knowledge. The sciences, such of them as have not grown out of mere arts, have, in fact, detached themselves from philosophy as a great trunk; mathematics as early as the third century B.C., physics as [...]
[...] physical speculation, this country is frankly placed first, It seems time, then, that we should cease to be blinded by any mere associations of language to Cne of our best titles to national fame. Nay, it even becomes our duty, if philo sophy is no more than M. Ribot (to say nothing of others) [...]
[...] science of mind in particular, the name of philosophy should have clung, and if the reason be good, philosophy may not be on the road to become the mere poetry of abstracts that M. Ribot foresees. Let us look a little way into this matter. [...]
[...] very language of the sciences—of such a word, to take but one instance, as “phenomenon"—is then first under stood ; and what before was mere practical assumption is turned into intellectual conception. Or, may we not say that there is gained a certain philosophic insight? A multitude [...]
[...] alumina or of potash" (p. 18); and that “culinary, rock, or sea salt, is chloride of soda” (p.277). His natural history is as peculiar as his chemistry. We will merely put his zoology to the test, assuring our readers that in so far as accuracy is concerned, his zoology, botany, and mineral [...]
[...] fertile in results of importance. If country botanists would bestow a portion of the energy which has been wasted in mere collecting, and the eradication of rare plants from their native haunts, on systematic physiolo gical observations, the gain to genuine science would be [...]
[...] itself, or the conclusions arrived at from the evidence brought forward. Just as a man without life is but a corpse, neither can a mere string of ſacts be called even the “outline of a lecture,” when we have only the body without the spirit. The object of my lecture was to institute a comparison between [...]
[...] the greatest contempt for the modern Turks, intimating that those who believe they have recently made real progress are deceived by mere appearances. He says he has gathered full materials for a work or works on the ethnography and archaeology of the districts he describes. Professor Pellegrino Strobel [...]
[...] seen, as in the case of the foregoing observation. The fact proves the phenomenon seen to be due to the actual lightening of the spots themselves, because if it were merely an optical or atmospheric effect, the whole spot would be lighter and the nucleus would be quite as difficult to detect as before. It is [...]
Saturday review01.08.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. August 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] E have very little doubt that the pretended conspiracy to assassinate the Emperor of the FRENch is a mere invention of the Imperial Government, intended to form a pretext for proceedings against the French exiles in London, [...]
[...] distich is a neat epitaph on a child :— L'enfant a deux tombeaux: le moindre est sous la terre; Le plus grand est creusé dans le coeur de sa mere. [...]
[...] written in Latin P Now, with a close verbal exegesis, Mr. Con ington has aimed at interweaving a metaphysical analysis of his subject, such as would never have been attempted by a mere Latinist, or would certainly have assumed in his hands a very repulsive form. Yet this is what we want. Our young readers [...]
[...] hoped for : but we may at least expect that editors should reform according to their own solid convictions, not rewrite in obedience to baseless and arbitrary fancies, or to the mere authority of a great name. [...]
[...] petes directly with them for employment, and absorbs the remu neration which would otherwise be theirs. Nor, again, are they mere tools in the hands of the rich planters. They are, on the contrary, the masters of the South, and the patrons of that Fili busterism which, wherever it is successful, takes away from the [...]
[...] sedulously avoiding, however, the very appearance of a trade or any regular employment. Sometimes he squats on a patch of rich land, where the earth, if merely scratched, will bring forth abundantly. The nearest approach to industry seen by Mr. Stirling occurred in Florida, where the poor white will sometimes [...]
[...] difference, he says, between English and American civilization is the greater thoroughness of the former. Workmanship, even in the Free States, struck Mr. Stirling as mere surface-work. In the lacquered and gilded mansion of the wealthy American, not a lock will catch, not a hinge will turn—knives wont cut, [...]
[...] much ability many of the earlier works. He insinuates that the admiration expressed for them in musical circles in his own country is but hollow and feigned—a mere fashion. As far as our own impressions are concerned, we can assert that we have found these quartets, when played, as it has been our good [...]
[...] “woman-creation,” as the Germans would say, that we have to deal with. The pitch and tar give a colour to the character as well as to the cuticle. Mere animal courage would have enabled her to face shot, shell, and sea-sickness; but nothing except a high moral nature could have carried her through pitch [...]
[...] title, is exactly the sort of book which people in the country would think they should like to see. Now, its pages contain not merely a formal accusation against the late King of Holland, that he was repeatedly guilty of the most revolting of crimes, but a loathsome description is given of one particular scene. It is a [...]