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Saturday review24.06.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 24. Juni 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] of the present Ministry, been sufficiently threatened and un settled. A descent into the gulf of universal suffrage is not worth hazarding merely for the purpose of reviving a popularity which has been deservedly impaired. During the struggles of the last Parliament, Mr. GLADSTONE was [...]
[...] The revolt of the Commune or of the Central Committee of the National Guard was, according to the apologist, merely a measure of self-defence. The artillery which the Government attempted to seize was, it seems, the private property of the [...]
[...] debates, that the Trade Unionists are the whole people of England. There are not only Unionists and employers, but non-Unionists, and even on mere numerical grounds, being as seventeen to one, the non-Unionists are especially entitled to consideration. Picketing is a mode of coercion [...]
[...] predecessor Bishop Thirlwall. It is amusing to be told in the biographical notice in the Times that Bishop Thirlwall's work was not a “mere stop-gap.” This implies at least that there are or have been people who thought that Bishop Thirlwall's work was a mere stop-gap. Odd as such a state of mind is, we can con [...]
[...] THE British aristocracy owes its high position not merely to the intrinsic merits of its members, to the historical fame of its ancestry, and to the admirable mode in which it discharges its [...]
[...] country air, and glimpses of moors and forests and mountain tor rents. Perhaps we are mere ignorant Cockneys, whose gross vision cannot distinguish the charm which nobler eyes can detect in such amusements. If so, we shall be glad to be enlightened, and [...]
[...] Monarchy is driven to fight the Republic? It is clear that the prospects of Paris must be permanently injured by recent events. It is not merely the irretrievable destruction wrought among her historical monuments; that might be half forgotten, or set down to the impulsive crime which society [...]
[...] fires of Dido, and the books that follow are merely ingenious dis plays of the philosophic learning, the antiquarian, research, and the patriotism of Virgil. But it is yet more directly fatal in the [...]
[...] trouble. But the statement is not shown to be wrong by Dr. M'Corry merely lifting up his hands and pouring forth declama tions in the style of Peter Damiani. It really proves nothing when Dr. M'Corry “pictures to his mind the blessed spirits of the [...]
[...] Earlshope, are good and natural. We think her introduction a mistake; she is too violent for the general tone of the work; and as she does nothing to advance the story, as her mere existence is [...]
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 [...]
The tatler17.09.1709
  • Datum
    Dienstag, 17. September 1709
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] HOR. i. Sat. vi. 17. But how shall we, who differ far and wide From the mere vulgar,' this great point decide? FliANCIS. From my own Apartment, September 16. [...]
[...] these ladies are,' I perceive, free-thinkers; and therefore I shall speak only to the prudential part of this design, merely as a philosopher, without en tering into the merit of it in the ecclesiastical or civil law. These constant friends, Piladea and Orestea, [...]
[...] which must be possessed by whole armies, is so highly preferable in one man rather than another; and how the same actions are but mere acts of duty in some, and instances of the most heroic virtue in others. He advises me not to fail, in this discourse, [...]
Punch16.02.1856
  • Datum
    Samstag, 16. Februar 1856
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] phical features of the scene, “spoken,” says the Times, “with even more than his customary indistinctness of utterance, so that the explanation could be heard neither by members nor reporters.” . As he was merely talking nonsense, and knew it, this was of no particular consequence, but such people as WooD should not be insolent. [...]
[...] -literary criticism in the Plush is merely ludicrous. The JENKINs of the [...]
[...] understand it. But we do not bandy criticism with a JENKINs. . It is rather the flunkey animus that prompted the Plush's abuse of MR. MACKAY that we would point out; the mere Billingsgate itself is not worth notice. It is only vulgar and stupid; and some of the language is so low, that we should not wonder if notice were taken of it in the [...]
[...] Those garments—trousers, coat, and vest. Those boots—those gloves—how well they fit! But thou art no mere figure drest, No mimic beau of senseless mould, So elegant 1–but oh, so cold! [...]
[...] and the inextricable confusion into which papers are generally thrown by the process. Perhaps, however, the State Papers are not intended for reference, and as most of them are possibly mere waste paper by this time, a female hand may be very useful in cramming them into all sorts of holes and corners, where they will be quite out of everybody’s [...]
[...] in the infallibility of cashiers in general. I am sure of it, there is hardly one of the gifted body who could not tell how much copper was in HIERo's crown, by merely smelling at the rim of the diadem. Well, on the authority of the cashier a policeman is, singularly enough, ob tained, and the astounded young gentlewoman is given into his safe [...]
[...] of a seventh son is popularly esteemed a naturally qualified practitioner, so, not the eldest son, but the seventh son of the seventh son of a peer, might be entitled, on the mere ground of birth, to a seat in the House of Lords; and if this plan were adopted, the hereditary element in that august assembly would, without being abolished, be reduced to that [...]
[...] custom, tootbpicks for sale to every one who leaves the Embassy. It is quite clear that the beggar can only have been planted there from the mere love of sport and practical joking; for upon inquiry we ascertained that, though he has been stationed at his, Wºnmi.” %. every nigh; for the last ºmonths, he has not yet the of single tooth [...]
Punch17.11.1860
  • Datum
    Samstag, 17. November 1860
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] wonders which are worked by advertising tradesmen, who are constantly attracting notice to some new commercial trick:— “By merely pouring boiling water into the inverted lid of BLANK's Patent Coffee [...]
[...] cocted it from a few handfuls of beans. In the case quoted, however, the trick is done without the aid of these accessories, the beverage being brewed by merely pouring boiling water on an inverted lid. No mention is made of either tea or coffee being put into the coffee-pot, and yet either of these drinks is producible at will by the mere means [...]
[...] now be made without the need of tea-leaves; and surely nobody will dream of paying money for “Best Mocha,” when he can get a pint or gallon of the most delicious coffee by merely pouring boiling water upon a bit of tin. [...]
[...] * We have no objection to be called a Pet, but we must protest against the epithet preceding. Old, indeed, young lady!. What do you mean by “old?'" A man who lives a careful life, as every one does now-a-days, has quito a right to call himself “a mere boy" until sixty.—Punch. [...]
[...] taste and good sense of the wearer. Portland ladies are celebrated for their beauty and refinement, however, more than for any mere display of dress, and the gather ing on Wednesday in this :*: was sufficient to have constituted an aurora. * * One of the º officers, [...]
[...] large loose white shirts. They were padded in the shoulder with large waddings called “mahoitres:” + and were worn of silk, of satin, and of velvet, even by mere boys. The beaux, however, and perhaps the boys, were as capricious as spoilt children in their tastes and fancies; and after coming out one day in the shortest of short jackets, the [...]
[...] o make their noses bleed. This however was providing that they ould keep their seats, for, when once a knight came down it was iterally all up with him. The mere shock of his fall was quite enough n general to knock him out of time ‘º could not anyhow, get p without assistance, his conqueror º choose the best chink [...]
Saturday review03.07.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 03. Juli 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] that it is necessary to distinguish the essential letters of a root or stem from those which are merely adventitious. He then takes the verb pomere as an example, the root of which is pos, the letter n being adventitious, whilst in rumpere the m is adven [...]
[...] Christianity conferred upon the races it converted, it is to the Christian Church that the world owes the gift of intolerance. But Mr. Moberly's theory requires not merely a reconstruction [...]
[...] We have treated this subject at some length not merely be cause it seems to have especial interest for Mr. Mcberly, but because we are convinced that a misconception of our history on [...]
[...] “ecclesiastical history.” . The latter supposition, however, hardly squares with the conclusions which we should naturally draw, not merely from the large scope which Baeda gives himself throughout his work, but above all from the peculiar character of its opening. Up to the inroads of the Picts and Scots the book is little more [...]
[...] that this particular entry, as it stands in the Chronicle, is a mere translation from 13aeda. We cannot now, however, enter further into the question of the [...]
[...] of the word “reliable,” a quotation from “Matthew of West minster” whose personality has vanished into thin air before the attack of Sir F. Madden, the description of Wilfrid from a mere misunderstanding of the passage in Bede as “a pliest of Bisho AEgilberctus” at the Synod of Whitby, or of the Eumperor Mauri [...]
[...] have feared the scaffold or the stake. Only by thorough sympathy and great artistic power could such a character placed in such a position be not merely rendered interesting, but even invested with a kind of saintly glory. And, moreover, a humorous per ception of the latent absurdity of the position was necessary on [...]
[...] Bºš of sporting adventure are liable to two or three common failings. Sometimes they are a mere record of slaughter for the sake of slaughter, which is almost as repulsive as the history of a butcher's shop. Not unfrequently they are defaced by a use [...]
[...] of the peculiar and disagreeable slang patronized by sporting news papers. When they are written with a fair amount of literary skill, and the mere killing of defenceless animals does not occupy too prominent a position, they are often very good reading. As a rule, it is desirable that the creatures whose deaths are commemo [...]
[...] well acquainted, and beats a hasty retreat. M. Xavier Marmier's hero, Nilst, is likewise a traveller; but, instead of starting forth in quest of the picturesque or of mere recreation, his great object is the ideal. Dissatisfied with his native place in Dalecarlia, and hearing from some of the professors [...]
Saturday review23.11.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 23. November 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] had made through Northern and Eastern France, and to the hearty reception which he and the EMPRESS everywhere met with. That this welcome was genuine, and was not merely got up by the police, which can always get up sham welcomes, almost exactly like real ones, is not improbable; [...]
[...] practices among the worst and lowest portion of the com munity gives a certain importance to Mr. ERNEST Jones's communistic theories. Mere Jacobinism is transient, and in itself unmeaning, for the rabble cannot permanently exercise power. The bluster of the Reform League, of the mob on [...]
[...] anarchy may subside before more stringent legislation becomes necessary. As long as demagogues confine themselves to the propagation of mere disloyalty and confusion, their selfish ness and vanity are not likely to attract any serious amount of popular sympathy. It is pleasant to the BEALESEs and the [...]
[...] a week did not pass before Mr. Lowe was answered from an Edinburgh Professorial chair, by Professor Sellar, who, like Mr. Lowe, has the advantage of being more than a mere scholar. Turning from a Parliamentary debater to a University Professor would not always be a transition from exaggerated [...]
[...] of time. To use a cant phrase, what is requisite is not a class method of classical training, but a national one, if classics are to occupy a noble and useful place, not merely in finishing the minds of a few, but in enlarging the ideas of the many. [...]
[...] in the right. The usual talk about “useless pageants” and “incongruous anachronisms” is in fact a mere parrot-like repetition of phrases which expressed the blind aversion of the Reformers of 1834 to the very symbols of municipal existence. The aversion was far [...]
[...] tableS. In the face of all this we quite agree with the younger Thunderer, that it is idle to repeat the mere phrases of a moment of revolution, and to condemn a ceremony which com memorates the installation of the first municipal officer of [...]
[...] looking at each other through the long vista of house and hall and lobby. This spectacle can never occur for more than two minutes, twice a year, and it is, even then a mere, dream, for which the restoration of the architectural character of the present House is more than a compensation. [...]
[...] subjects; besides, what is to be done with those pretty little ab normal creations which are irreducible to genus and species, and which have no subject—which are mere shadows and echoes, un substantial, vague, and impalpable? Then take them according to publishers; but if a publisher is so omnigenous, or even multi [...]
[...] has a master, follows Millais, as in vigour so in a keen appreciation of the homely, not to say ugly, in art. He never condescends to mere prettiness and trick. If he occasionally gave a thought to the beautiful, it would be as well. Iłut in days of mere emascu lated smoothness, a sensible plain reaction to the domestica facta, [...]
Punch08.02.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 08. Februar 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] lated, or edited any thing for the Stage. I am merely an occa sional playgoer, easy to please, mostly a [...]
[...] If I were writing beautiful poetry, and not plain prose, I should make "cleverly" chime with Beverley (I shall not be surprised to hear that it has been done already), not merely as a rhymical conve nience, but as a just and sincere compliment to the scenic artist of Drury Lane. If any wayfarers will adopt me as their theatrical [...]
[...] In the Regent's Park Garden?, where you have all been: Armadillo, Armadillo, he's armed like good fellows, In mere self-defence front the wild beast that bellows. His back is protected with armour of scale. And he runs about safe clad in that coat of mail, [...]
[...] HOW TO CHECK POACHING. Being a good sportsman, and not a mere game-butcher, Mr. Punch is pleased to see that the Farmers' Club at Hexham have passed a resolution that big battues are a nuisance which ought to be abated. [...]
[...] If every farmers' club in England had the sense to do the same, no doubt a good effect might be produced upon the game butchers. What is sport to them is death, not merely to the birds and animals they slaughter, but to the crops which these same birds and animals consume, and for which no compensation really compensates the farmer. Great game [...]
[...] covert, needs neither nerve nor skill, nor any quality of sportsmanship, and only lazy, idle fools can fancy that there is any pleasure in it. Then think at what a cost this pleasure is enjoyed. Not merely waste of crops, but waste of life is caused by it. Where hares and rabbits swarm, there poachers, too, abound; and labourers are tempted to [...]
[...] mensely so, likewise, is the serious assertion on the part of a woman that her waist was reduced from twenty-three to fourteen inches by mere compression without ever giving any cause for regret to the subject of that process. It is a parallel to the allegation in Swift's mock advertisement about the juggler, who allowed any gentleman to [...]
[...] further, and ask what the Spiritual Police, who are paid to direct wandering theologians, have been about in the district of the Peculiar People. These poor folks had to be told by mere lawyers that though they had read the Book right, they had read but a bit of it. It seems hard that simple people should have to be tried for their lives in order [...]
Saturday review01.02.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Februar 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] The mere fact that the time has come for once more wiping off old scores, and starting afresh with the burden of an addi tional mortgage, by no means expresses the whole gravity of [...]
[...] making money. Nothing can be more shortsighted, more illiberal, nothing can be a more thorough pandering to mere ignorance, than this attempt once more to divorce studies which are doing all their best to assert their own identity. Let us turn from his view about language to [...]
[...] can any man understand history except by that process * Therefore I think it is a waste of time to try and teach a man that which he cannot teach him self. So that it is a mere burden to the mind. [...]
[...] nothing from them except a dim notion that Mr. Lowe objects to all historical teaching and study whatever. Why cannot a man teach history? Why is it a mere burden to the mind? Or rather, what is the “it’” which is the mere burden? If Mr. Lowe's words have any meaning, they mean that no man can teach history [...]
[...] vour, with a book so utterly worthless as this. It simply fills us with indignation that one who claims to be a poet should have dug up a poet out of his grave for the mere pleasure of indulging, under the covert of his name, in a “shy” at “Philistia” and morality. [...]
[...] trusted with the publication of this correspondence opens the twenty-first volume with a reiteration of the principles upon which the work is being edited. Mere repetitions of the same thought or the same details are purposely avoided by the omission of particular letters, but no document that it is thought right to [...]
[...] spiritualism—M. Taine, to quote only one—unhesitatingly endorse it. M. de Laprade is also accused of ignoring the greatness of science, and of vehemently denouncing it. This complaint merely shows what are the pretensions of modern materialists. Their motto is tout ou rien. They will be satisfied with nothing [...]
[...] originally designed as a i. of the Abbé de Polignac, or rather a sketch of his diplomatic career. The Ambassador of Louis XIV. has, however, now been reduced to a mere niche in a gallery of notabilities which includes Popes Innocent XI. and Alexander VIII., Sobieski, King of Poland, Queen Anne, Marl [...]
[...] last diplomatic act in which Polignac took a part, but it was the last which affected the general interests of Europe, and M. Topin merely glances at the remaining incidents in the public career of his hero. The name of M. F. Huet is not known beyond a very small [...]
[...] of the will as “an old Gothic fortress,” which the sciences of craniology and anthropology will pull, down for ever. We are merely organized beings a little more liberally endowed than the rest of creation; and the men who commit any crime against society are patients who should be handed over to some accom [...]
Nature30.06.1870
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 30. Juni 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] If the weight held be very small, much power is lost in merely sustaining the arm ; if the weight is large, there is comparatively little loss on that account, but the power of the muscles is soon run out, and no sufficient oppor [...]
[...] This election is important, not only as a recognition of natural knowledge, but also of the principle of research as against that of mere education. [...]
[...] take place, because the spores were no longer living. This was the result obtained in many experiments made by Bulliard, and related in his “Histoire des Champignons.” Mere contact with boiling water was found sufficient to prevent germination; and H. Hoffmann" similarly ascertained *. an exposure for from [...]
[...] ment in a well-marked degree. They seem to be reduced by the shortest exposure to a temperature of 100°C., to the condition of mere non-living particles, and then they become subjected to the unimpaired influence of the physical conditions which occasion these molecular movements. [...]
[...] and such resulting unicellular organisms were frequently met with. The unicellular organisms seem during such weather to persist for a very long time in this condition, merely, perhaps, increasing somewhat in size, and most of them ultimately become disintegrated without undergoing further development. They [...]
[...] some of the simplest Amaebar, after they have encysted them selves. In all these cases, formless and apparently homogeneous or merely granular living matter, resolves itself more or less rapidly into a number of individualised segments, which are [...]
[...] living matter of the encysted Protomyra occur by reason of the molecular properties of this living matter, and are not occa sioned by any occult influence exercised by the mere inert cyst-wall, which is but a product of the living matter that it [...]
[...] encloses. And so we have good reason for º: that the changes which take place in the mere granular, mucilage of the rapidly-formed terminal segment of an Achlya, by which this in the space of less than two hours, resolves itself into free [...]
[...] particular collocations of complex organic molecules occur. It rests, then, in reality, with the vitalist, who assumes the truth of a mere theory, in favour of which he can adduce no scientific evidence, to show why a different rule should be presumed to [...]
[...] * I was actually led to adopt this important modification, perhaps, by a mere chance. In the spring of last year Mr. Temple Orme, of Uni versity College, had kindly undertaken to perform some experiments with me bearing upon the subject of “Spontaneous Generation.” We at first [...]