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Saturday review11.03.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 11. März 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] sufficed to impose on the PRESIDENT. He now confesses his guilt; and it perhaps matters little whether he is sentenced by the Senate or merely relegated to infamous obscurity. [...]
[...] plies a mistake as to the nature of things. To call a man incon sistent who changes for good reasons comes of fancying that there is some virtue in mere immobility, in mere keeping to the same ground, whether with reason or without reason. Still the point is only verbal; those who would call a man consistent for so doing [...]
[...] Of the nature of accuracy we have spoken before now. We need now only repeat a warning against the mistake which confounds accuracy with mere minuteness. Accuracy implies minuteness whenever minuteness is needed; but it is perfectly possible to be accurate without being minute. Accuracy implies that eve [...]
[...] good many mere slips; it will most likely contain a good many cases of that not uncommon process when it is good to write down something at once, to make some statement, to form some theory, [...]
[...] repay the very slight cost which in peace-time our Treasury might be called on to pay. A really broad view of the organization of the Imperial army should comprehend not merely the forces of England and of India, but those of the great colonies, which, instead of [...]
[...] from what they would take in a narrative history. Mr. Stubbs of mere reading of such a book one of course learns much; but it is onl in a process beyond mere reading that we find out the full strengt [...]
[...] former one, he writes everywhere as a lover of freedom, as an admirer of the men who strove for freedom; but he is never a mere political partisan. At each stage we wait with a kind of anxiety to see what will be his judgment on the next stage; we do not, as we do in the case of a merely partisan writer, feel sure [...]
[...] when we think of his living portraits of the Angevin Kings and so many of their contemporaries, his summaries of their reigns in all respects, not merely constitutional, but personal and oecumenical, we feel sure that the constitutional historian of England could also be, if he chose, its narrative historian. [...]
[...] Shadow and sun; faint forms that glint and fly; Sands shifting under foot; no staff or stay! My wisdom was mere folly! [...]
[...] chance. This is evidently written in imitation of Tennyson, and is a striking example of the distinction between real poetry and a mere stringing of words. Here is a sample:— In a haze of glimmering lawn And titter of girl-Tattons Mabel swam [...]
The tatler30.08.1709
  • Datum
    Freitag, 30. August 1709
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] diction; the other was decisive without words, and would give a shrug or an oath to express his opi nion. My learned man was a mere scholar, and my man of war as mere a soldier, The particularity [...]
[...] are looked upon with an observation suitable to their different talents and accomplishments, without re spect to their sex; while a mere woman can be ob served under no consideration but that of a woman; and there can be but one reason for placing any [...]
Punch08.08.1863
  • Datum
    Samstag, 08. August 1863
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] specimen. The first part, as it treats of a matter interesting only to lawyers, we will pass over; merely saying, that it refers to the droit du Seigneur, which M. InsoleNT found universally in force. This privilege, was formerly enjoyed exclusively by the LoRD MAYoF as head of the [...]
[...] - - It consists merely in laying hold of the wool in the middle of the back and endeavouring to give the animal a good shake. We advise the novice not to attempt to master the [...]
[...] loyal subjects to send in their names at once to swell the Royal list of helpers in the charity, which, as needless letter-writing is a nuisance this hot weather, they can do by their mere signatures at the bottom of a cheque. *If it had not been for wishing to say a word in favour of this de [...]
[...] pearing from our stage, we must hold ourselves prepared to see French actresses appearing on it, and we must take care not to sneer at them merely for their birth. So, faute de mieur, I’ll gladly welcome a French Juliet, when I find her act the character as a female FECHTER would. But I cannot say that MAAMselle Colas has done this, nor, in spite [...]
[...] attract at the Olympic, and its success must be encouraging, to lovers of the drama, as showing that a play well written and well acted is appreciated even in these, undramatic days, when scenes of mere sensation, are more praised than scenes of sense. The ever, urbane manager M.R. EMDEN takes his benefit next Saturday. At the Bandbox [...]
[...] was the best judge of its pleasures, and that the mere force of po pular opinion would effectually prohibit a [...]
[...] whether practised by Roman patriots or patriotic Roman Catholic Poles, and Revolution in Poland is identical with Revolution else where, with the Revolution, in fact;, which Revolution is not merely an anti-christian confederacy arrayed against the Powers that be; §: whatever the papalini British or foreign may say, considerably [...]
[...] ees : But it was not merely Masters and Wardens, no, the LoRD MAYok didn't invite them on’y, But LoRD HARRIs of Trinidad in the West Indies, Colonel Sykes [...]
[...] This part of our subject; while “at the inside” will relate merely to the pocket, and we shall soon exhaust that. Now then, Ladies and Gentlemen, for our [...]
Punch17.10.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 17. Oktober 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] | contemptible conduct, a vulgar illustration be per | mitted, we would merely | remark, that the more these | Italian irons are stuck into [...]
[...] 'Tis not by mere Swells taste in dressing is shown, And that size is not beauty’tis clear;. Nay, the shapeliest forms when balloon-like out-blown, [...]
[...] Our planetary contemporary may appear, in the concluding part of the above extract, to express a hope of hearing of many additional horrors from lndia, from the merely accidental insertion, either by a common slip of the pen, or an error of the press, of the word “not” before the word “wrong.” But are we so sure of this: May not the [...]
[...] makes the whole world of bigots kin!—would be our remarks on the outbreak in the Tablet against GENERAL NEILL, did.we not rather suppose it to be a mere explosion of Ultramontane malice. The valve of the Ultramontane engine has been held down under popular pres sure; the boiler has cracked; and a jet of nearly red-hot steam has [...]
[...] touching the mutinous Sepoys. If that can be thoroughly done without hurting them, mentally or bodily, let it be done, Pain, mental or hysical, inflicted on them as mere pain, would be idle surplusage. | could not undo the misery, they have caused. But if any treatment they can be subjected to is likely to deter others from repeating, their [...]
[...] These explanatory suggestions we might offer to the Ultramontane Sepoys, if they wanted any explanation, and did not know the real state of the case as well as we do, and were not actuated merely by a venomous and burning hatred of England, which they eagerly jump at every opportunity of venting, ...i. if, by so doing, they think [...]
[...] about it. Of course we can't expect in this business-minded age to discover that mere chivalry will pass current at the counter. Tradesmen get the habit of looking upon matters in what they call “abusiness light.” and will abstain from entering the Army or any other “concern.” [...]
[...] necessary, ...} see that all goes on right. And so I hope you will soon hear that all is going on well. Then, you see, he will show that it was not mere shame and sorrow, but a determination to do good for the future, that induced him to Fast and Humiliate i.i. For sorrow, without reform, is mere [...]
Saturday review31.08.1861
  • Datum
    Samstag, 31. August 1861
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Acts of Congress during the brief session of little more than a month which commenced on the fourth of July. Nay, the mere titles of the measures would suffice to give a substan tially accurate general idea of the history of the period. [...]
[...] all, while the same canals which supplied the land with water would, in any case, have prevented 50 per cent of the relief fund being spent on the mere conveyance of food. [...]
[...] 1860. However, by eliminating these disturbing causes, Colonel SMITH satisfied himself that the depression was not a mere reaction from a period of inflation, and that its cause must be sought in more special circumstances. The famine was naturally suspected of having had a [...]
[...] WHF we say that London is empty, we merely mean that at the West End there are not quite so many people as there were a month or two ago; and so, when we say that there [...]
[...] pas in composition, any more than in morals, that it is “a very little one.” The distinction is one important to be made, because people often confound accuracy with mere minuteness. , Com plaints of inaccuracy are often thought to be pedantic or hyper critical because they are supposed to be merely complaints of the [...]
[...] minuteness to call a man vaguely an Eastern Christian, but it is inaccuracy to call him a Greek if he happens to be a Bulgarian. It is mere lack of minuteness to call a man generally a nobleman; it is inaccuracy to call him an Earl if he happens to be only, a Viscount. In all such cases, the mere lack of minuteness may be [...]
[...] as of any natural defect which cannot. Inaccuracy, therefore, is morally blameworthy. Muddle-headedness is something quite different from mere ignorance. Of course the best-informed and most clear-headed man will constantly come across things, even in his own range of [...]
[...] enunciation of moral truths. The plaudits of a theatrical public, when they denote not merely the admiration of talent, but the approval of sentiments, may be taken as a very fair index of the moral theory entertained by a people. “Man,” says Schiller, “is never so much in [...]
[...] may be possible for anything we know to the contrary, and mental power need not always be in operation; but to speak of any form of mental activity apart from consciousness is a mere contradiction in terms. It would seem rather a curious, though apparently an inevitable [...]
[...] matters which puzzle modern astronomers as much as they may have puzzled the earliest Chinese observers. Some would make them mere optical effects, without more substance of their own than a sunbeam shining in a darkened room. Newton made the tail a mere vapour thrown off by the heat of the sun; but neither [...]
All the year round23.01.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 23. Januar 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] I was not merely, as she at first imagined, [...]
[...] docteur Gouvry's opinion, prevented her from thriving under his treatment. . Cer: tain it is that poor Lucy not merely did not thrive, but became so evidently worse, that Dr. Gouvry's services were dispensed [...]
[...] would give rise to no inquiries; her antecedents would pass unquestioned, and she would not merely be able to pass her immediate future in tranquillity, but in security; for surely the safest place in the [...]
[...] veller loses his identity, is numbered like a convict, and is reduced from a human being to a mere arithmetical expression. If the house be without lifts, stories are invented about tired travellers having [...]
[...] fort of his journey, the time and well being of a commercial magnate being of far greater importance than mere travelling expenses. This noble gentleman is a cherished guest of Boniface, who clearly [...]
[...] tended to, true enjoyment is impossible to him. Love of nature, locality, and sight seeing, are with him merely secondary con siderations. - The Prussian hardly makes a more [...]
[...] (although Edward the Third is said to have removed a coroner, because he was “merely” a merchant) the only subse quent legislation has been directed towards fixing their emoluments, and the mode of [...]
[...] a month after their marriage. Her com munication was not interesting to either of them, for it was a mere moan, a mere whining exposition of her own effete in ability to make herself comfortable and [...]
[...] of anger or annoyance against the writer of it: Cissy at that distance was no stum bling-block, she was a mere easily-bent aside twig in her path. But now the time had come for them to [...]
[...] motive than mere desire for their presence thankful, grateful joy, reverts to and [...]
Saturday review10.08.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 10. August 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] of England with the Holy See. Papal documents are often misunderstood because the versions which appear in modern languages are mere translations from the wordy media val Latin, which, having through long usage incorporated itself into a confused mass of metaphors and exaggerations, has become [...]
[...] careless of the little indulgences that mere students, or mere sportsmen, or mere men of business slip into the way of allowing themselves. He is open to every call and suggestion of the hour, [...]
[...] If a military expedition were merely an aggregate of Nile tra vellers—that is, of enterprising Englishmen carrying with them certain resources of food, presents, and arms—the difficulties in its [...]
[...] ology, and meet them on the ground of i. own limited voca bulary, where the advantages of fluency are all on their side. I'or it is not merely that a country like Abyssinia offers obstacles [...]
[...] especially valuable as containing examples of churches of almost every class; Driffield an ordinary parochial church, of some curiosity in its details, but otherwise redeemed from mere poverty and commonplace by a noble western tower; the great cruciform parish churches of Hedon, Pakington, St. Mary's [...]
[...] character, which she takes commendable pains to develop. At all events, for one so young, she has reached a very enviable position, a position it depends upon herself not merely to maintain but to in prove. There is little to add of mere historical detail about the season [...]
[...] tortions and caricatures of virtue than real virtues.” This sounds suspiciously like Luther's “splendida vitia.” Mr. Christie's essay on Christian philosophy merely repeats, in the technical and cumbrous manner of a scholastic treatise (which makes it very dry reading), some of the usual arguments for the existence of [...]
[...] liament, will have to discuss, not merely the reversal of our º policy in East and West alike, or the reduction of our forces, or the destruction of the aristocratic character of our army, but questions [...]
[...] he had to overtake was overwhelming, the times being critical, and de manding the constant exertion of the powers of Government. . Generally, the mere routine duties of the office were such as to occupy him from nine or ten o'clock in the morning till seven in the evening. Again, his biographer says:— [...]
[...] {. George IV. and the Duke of Wellington, and between Wellington and Lord Liverpool, prove beyond a shadow of doubt, not merely that Wellington was most anxious to bring, back Canning into the Ministry as Castlereagh's successor, but that in truth he mainly or solely brought about Canning's appointment, [...]
Saturday review23.05.1874
  • Datum
    Samstag, 23. Mai 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Paris at the last Exhibition is a memorable instance of this. But when feeling and interest go together, the interchange of civilities is something more than a mere matter of ceremony. [...]
[...] the account merely because the EMPEROR chooses to look in upon us for a day or two. These are things which cannot and ought not to be forgotten, but it would have been [...]
[...] PARs just now, having nothing else to think about except a mere change of Government and perhaps Constitution, is deeply interested in a question of personal tº: which has arisen, between a couple of noblemén. Have you a right to [...]
[...] candles, oil, powder, &c., and some of the pitmen came down to the magazine smoking, merely putting their pipes into their waist coat pockets when they got close to the magazine. Twice this officer was taken into magazines by persons carrying a naked [...]
[...] light it, and fired the powder. By this explosion one person was killed and many were injured, and 3,000l. worth of damage was done. At present the mere fact of selling powder constitutes a dealer, and the mere fact of dealing enables him to keep 200 lbs. of powder anywhere and anyhow, and without any supervision [...]
[...] mere show; and where we have a right to look for care, we encounter carelessness. The picture, we fear, can scarcely be naturalized either in England or Japan; the hands are too badly drawn for London [...]
[...] From that moment he knew that he loved her irrevocably. No merely human words could describe all the tumultuous longings and thoughts which thronged his brain; for there are some phases of human passion which, [...]
[...] he reader should be induced to have some kind of sympathy even with the wicked actors, or he does not take any interest in their ravings. Deborah is a mere demon in petticoats; we listen to her as to a mere embodiment of rant, and cannot pity her even for her º in love. Nobody would be much affected by [...]
[...] author of a certain paper in the Edinburgh Review,” inasmuch as it was the case of one “anonymous writer animadverting on another, merely with a view to what he has written, and without the slightest reference, directly or by innuendo, to any particular person. [...]
[...] or President while the people were inspired with a spirit of freedom and a love of liberty. Grote, even at the mature age of fifty-five, had so far re tained his youthful ardour as to feel elated by the mere fact of “living under a republic,” when he visited France in 1849—a sensation which to Fon blanque, whose mind was singularly unimpressionable to mere outward [...]
Saturday review12.09.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 12. September 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] insurrection, and continued at its head. The question of the mutineers' motives is not what it once was. So long as the mutiny amounted merely to military disobedience, equity and policy, though certainly not strict justice, required that we, who knew the marvellous [...]
[...] the army must, as a matter of the commonest precaution, be maintained, even in the most peaceful times, at a considerably higher strength than mere financial considerations would render desirable. But we want to see the question put on its true footing—so much annual taxation on the one side [...]
[...] system. It is as old as Christianity, and older—it is in favour with Roman Catholics, and with Dissenters, and with Churchmen of all sorts. In short, merely as a mode of communicating truth, or announcing opinions, open-air preaching is not a specialty of religion at [...]
[...] preachings consisted. Protestantism in Ireland is simple enough. It consists of good, solid, monotonous railing at the Church of Rome. We do not complain of this—we merely state the fact. Very possibly it is quite right. We know that out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh. The [...]
[...] To do Mr. HANNA justice, he has not the hypocrisy to attempt much concealment of his motives. He preaches “a temperate Evangelical address,” but, as he says, merely to “vindicate the right of the ministers to preach.” That is to say, he was very anxious to convert poor wretches who [...]
[...] chimera. Notwithstanding the advantages which he derived from family connexion, Fox entered political life in his boyhood as a mere ad venturer. His early squabbles with Lord North involved no pre tence of a question of principle. The young orator succeeded in [...]
[...] extravagant airs of the Great Mogul, will be readily allowed. We merely affirm that, on the average, as a body, by its integrity, its talent, and expe rience, it is equal to its task; that never have magistrates of greater integ [...]
[...] dark soul, and created beneath the ribs of religious bigotry, political intrigue, and Royal formalism, a living heart of affec tion. In these volumes Philip is not merely a State machine or a Grand Inquisitor misplaced on a throne, but a man whom We i. sometimes like, and with whom we occasionally sym [...]
[...] copyists have met with the usual fate of their breed—their imita tion has become caricature. Their conceits are not quaint, but uncouth—their similes are not merely far-fetched, but simply unintelligible. Still more unfortunate has been their abhorrence of i. for nearly all Pope's defects are negative. Though [...]
[...] that blank verse does not mean prose printed in short lines—that eccentric language does not alter the nature of commonplace ideas—and that even the mere art of poetry consists of something more recondite than the simple plan of leaving out all the nomi native cases and jº: substituting participles for verbs. [...]
Annals of oriental literatureNo. 3, P. 507 1820
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Januar 1820
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] time. It is solely inhabited by natives of the place; for it has no trade, or manufacture, or other advantage to attract strangers: it is frequented merely as a resting-place by the rovers, who wander about through these deserts.] f To the north of this town is Zalah.% [...]
[...] except to very few; and where the Barbarian language* he picked up could not be obtained by either grammar or dic tionary; but by mere local practice. And moreover, every body knows, that Professor Jackson does not live, and actually support himself by his Professor [...]
[...] The poor old man never thought of any such thing—he was employed, on a particular occasion, during his late Majesty's reign, as a mere colloquial interpreter. The second question is, Professor Jackson will oblige me very much, if he can say, since I had the honor of my employment, whether "His [...]
[...] who was kind enough to add the expression of his regret, for my not having given a transcript of that paper myself also. I then wrote down, (notfor thepress,bui merely as an answer to Mr. Bowdich) on the same proof sheet, in red ink, I re member thus:—" If Mr. Bowdich had asked for a transcript, [...]