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Saturday review02.01.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 02. Januar 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] words, but mere meaningless sounds, we give him full leave in sounding them to place his accent and his accessory accent on any syllable that he may think good. [...]
[...] husband. Mr. Carlyle, if we remember, is quite unaware until the final discovery that the stranger in blue spectacles is Lady Isabel. Or the recognition may be not merely one-sided, but mutual, and yet unaccompanied by the consciousness on either side that it is mutual. Following this precedent, the disguised husband or wife [...]
[...] manners. To speak of it as modelled on the style, or composed out of the same materials, as the delightful stories of Miss Bremer, is merely misleading. The scene is laid almost as much outside Sweden as in it, and, except in the heroine's Quixotic attempts to obtain a divorce from her husband, there is nothing to invest it [...]
[...] July last. Had he given some scientific inkling of the inherent differences between the muscular organization of birds and that of men, instead of the mere random statement that man needs wings of a surface equal to 12,000 or 15,000 square feet, with which he would have to strike the air several times in a second, he might [...]
[...] “to non-professional men who are or were as if cocks of the roost or in other words Natives of high social status.” But all these honours were merely preparatory to the crowning glory of the High Court Judgeship: This was a Desideratum to him. The hope which he so long hatched at [...]
[...] to be, seeing that she has long passed the age of plasticity, and that she has been ºf throughout as a woman of inten tion, a woman of principle, rather than one of mere temper. Again, we think that Mrs. Erskine gives too much force to re trospection. No active-natured, strong-minded woman like Miss [...]
[...] kind of summary of the narrative itself. We must not expect to find here a scientific account of strategic operations, a book like those of Jomini or Napier; M. de Gonneville merely aims at giving a description of the principal incidents in the erratic life of a soldier who went through all the campaigns of the Republic [...]
[...] and “the Apostle of the Word of God.” If, he says, the Christian virtues of the Genoese sailor are not yet universally known, and if he is not enrolled in the Acta Sanctorum, it is merely because his biography has hitherto been written by Protestants, who, being the sworn enemies of the Church, were interested in misleading [...]
[...] Recapitulating, àpropos of M. Viardot, the arguments which he has developed in the course of his volume, M. Janet shows that, if mankind is merely the result of the brute forces of nature, it is im possible to account for the notions of liberty, justice, fraternity, and the like, which most free-thinkers professedly adopt as fer [...]
[...] or rather the adaptations of Shakspeare, and the efforts made to acclimatize on the French stage the masterpieces of one of the least French of authors. The versions designed merely for read ing are difficult enough, as we can see by reference to those of M. Guizot, M. Montégut, and M. Hugo; but when we come to the [...]
Saturday review16.05.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 16. Mai 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] effectually and properly with, such a vast body of electors, spread over so large a space of a thickly inhabited district. The mere necessary and legitimate expenses of an election with such a constituency are such as throw a grievous burden on candidates. Undoubtedly the objection is in [...]
[...] and multiply very fast. In spite of the French colonels who used to threaten us, we have lived over all real apprehension of a French flotilla, and the mere fact that ill-will subsists between the nation of BLUCHER and the nation of the Great NAPOLEoN is a mere nothing. There is something far more [...]
[...] death of those we love, where all consolation seems a mere con ventional mockery, and the best advice that can be given is the trite suggestion not to despair of human nature, and to hope for [...]
[...] return of Mr. Potter and Colonel Dickson to the scene of their last year's triumphs. Merely as bystanders, we should say that meetings of this sort were not very likely to revive the credit of the Leaguers; and whatever view we take of the political crisis, it [...]
[...] will not be wasted on men who reguld them simply as so much pay for a certain amount of work already done. They will be opportunities of training for the future, not merely prizes for [...]
[...] :* call attention to it.-Report of Government Inspector, June 18th, IS00. - The author can be stillmore cruelly severe when the mere public has been so audacious as to express an opinion... Dealing with the undignified rabble, Dr. Fletcher does not even condescend to write [...]
[...] abroad. The foreign critics have less means of judging of its faithfulness as a picture of English society, and are likely to be more sensitive than ourselves to its merits or defects as a mere bit of story-telling. The Rock Ahead, then, has plenty of those peculiarities which [...]
[...] Palmer into a victim of overstrained philosophy, but it may be ermissible artistically to give an occasional description of an irreclaimable villain. The mere sensation novelist will make the description attractive as the Newgate Calendar is attractive, by piling up a sufficient heap of horrors. A superior artist may [...]
[...] vague noun denoting multitude; at what time the Greek myriad ceased to do duty in this way we cannot tell, but a word merely signifying a confused and mingled mass must have been used originally to denote all objects beyond the point to which the powers of reckoning extended. Distinctions based [...]
[...] to trifle with, even to deliberately mislead and deceive, the reason which he has implanted in his creatures.” The like argument, that strata and fossils in strata may be mere plantasms to impress upon us an idea of age not corresponding with facts, was urged by [...]
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, [...]
Saturday review08.08.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 08. August 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] allowance whenever they sat in the House of Lords? The Irish Church would remain equally as little as it is now a national Church. It would equally remain a mere symbol of [...]
[...] rather hard that they should be debarred from filling up so important a post as †: of Governor-General of India merely because a direct vote of the House has not established offi cially the existence of that superiority of voting power which [...]
[...] concurred in describing the innovations of Sir HENRY STORKs, and the Treasury letter, with its suggestion that the sooner Sir HENRY STORKs retired the better, as mere insignificant matters of internal regulation wholly unworthy of the fuss that had been [...]
[...] What is attempted now is to turn into a reality an extra Parliamentary authority which could only be endured while it remained a merely honorary supremacy, yielding whenever required to the legitimate power of the constitu tional Minister. The result, if the project is persisted in, [...]
[...] deny, and awkward at fixing dates; and there is not a home pre sided over by a fashionable woman where the family is more than a mere name, a mere social convention loosely held together by circumstances, not by love. Closing such a life as this comes the unhonoured end, when the miserable made-up old creature totters [...]
[...] he last of these subjects is the only one which in the present day retains much interest. Taylor treats the institution of Sunday as merely ecclesiastical:— The question concerning particular works or permitted recreations is wholly useless and trifling, for “quod lege prohibitoria vetitum non est [...]
[...] wer binds the conscience unless the civil power has forbidden its exertion (527-8). The civil power has jurisdiction over in ternal and spiritual, as well as merely ecclesiastical, causes. It may declare a doctrine to be heretical, as well as decide upon a right to present to a living:— [...]
[...] followed by a chapter on the power of the Church in canons and censures. He reduces it within very narrow limits, and, indeed, makes the power of the Church merely declaratory:— [...]
[...] the profoundest impression. . Nothing could be simpler, or more artless than the style of the winterers in Corsica. They do not deliberately grumble at anything. They merely state the facts. Any reader of the meanest capacity will see that grumbling would be sheer supererogation. When they tell you that in a [...]
[...] mouthed generalization about the dirtiness of foreigners, when we learn specifically that the maid-servant probably never un dressed, but merely lay down in her clothes under a black blanket. Wehement grumbling is ever so much less effective than the exact and mild statement that “Caterina used to go about the house [...]
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 [...]
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 [...]
Saturday review09.01.1864
  • Datum
    Samstag, 09. Januar 1864
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] nature under the influence of grand emotions rises to the call, and is great because the occasion is great—great in magnanimity, great in remorse, great in villany, or in mere abandonment and self concentration on one idea. Mere observers who seek to engraft their limited experience upon the received conventional standard make [...]
[...] less is it like mere political wars, mere dynastic wars, wars [...]
[...] the horrors, bodily and mental, which make up the largest and most telling portions of his story, there is a decper and graver purpose than that of merely pandering to a thirst for amusement, or glutting a morbid taste for the ghastly and the horrible. These details are more than mere pictures [...]
[...] modest announcement, “th Author an Invintor of th’ great Chronothairmal Therey o' Midicine, th’ Unity Perriodicity an' Remittency of all disease.” When we meet, not merely with a village practitioner, but a “Court physician,” who, in a case of simple love-derangement, doses a young lady with “blue [...]
[...] forget that the accentual pronunciation was that which the revivers of Greek learning brought with them from Constantinople, while the quantitative pronunciation was merely a theory of Western scholars devised a century later. Their theory might be right or wrong, but it was merely a theory deduced from books, and which [...]
[...] say if we add that we are strongly inclined to believe that it would have sounded equally strange to Josephus, and even tº Polybius? In fact, there is a point at which mere scholarship breaks down, A man cannot write safely about any language on the strength of being familiar with one stage only of its progress. The mere [...]
[...] of Homer, to call Macaulay “bad English " because it is not the Euglish of Sir John Maundevile, or to call Sir John Maundevile “bad English "because it is not the English of Alfred. The mere Greek scholar sins by stopping his researches too soon; the mere English scholar sins by not beginning them soon enough. The [...]
[...] volunteer, and the pompous little “gent”—all these in turn appear and reappear as the unfailing butts of Mr. Leech's jokes. They are mere jokes. Mr. Leech is not a Juvenal in art; he is never bitter, scarcely censorious. He laughs at folly, but he has not chosen to scourge vice. Perhaps he feels [...]
[...] That a drawing of this size, and often of this elaborate detail, should be sketched and cut, and generally so well cut, in perhaps a couple of days or less, is a remarkable achievement as a mere technical process of art. - [...]
[...] This Edition is not a mere reprint of that which appeared in 1857; on the contrary, it will present a text very materially alter, d and amended from beginning to end, with a large body of critical Notes almost entirely new ; and [...]
Punch15.09.1866
  • Datum
    Samstag, 15. September 1866
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] | . The founders of a home for houseless cats would doubtless be inclined to go farther than the infliction of mere exposure on any wretch convicted of trying to turn a cat out-of-doors. They would perhaps even be inclined to doom, if they could, such a barbarous [...]
[...] the necessary officers of a Cats' Home were commissioned to “ com; Fº all vagrom.” cats, and did so, they would deprive many an old ady of a cherished darling abroad on a mere excursion. Their em ployment, by the way, would be hazardous, involving many perilous adventures on the tiles, and particularly the risk of getting mistaken [...]
[...] cooked viands given them tº eat, let a national appeal be made to Englishmen in general no longer to submit to eat their dinners º dressed. ... Not merely health b twealth is wasted by bad cookery, an any Englishman with sense enºugh to take the pledge against it would soon find himself improved bothin his person and his purse. [...]
[...] body will º: keep in apple-pie order, and of covers for two; and I shall admire the pretty filbert-mails while she peels my nuts, and we ſº up our flirtations, mere entremets, and sit down soberly to enjoy that substantial pièce de resistance—Matrimony. Do you like [...]
[...] decisively, to show that I’m a man of business, “Oh, yes, give him a shilling,” and take up my pen again, by way of a hint to BooDELs. “It’s rather too much to give him, eh, for merely looking at a pond * * objects BooDELs. I return, settling to write #ain, “Oh, no!” as if I generally gave double that sum. “What?” says BooDELs.º. (He [...]
[...] Ilay down my pen, “Well,” I explain, mildly, because it’s no use having a row with BooDELs about this confounded pond, “I mean if the man has come to—to—or if he merely—why—that is, if the fellow—” I own I am wandering. BooDELs notices it, and says, with some tinge of annoyance in his tone, “I came to ask your advice; I [...]
[...] must be fing down!) says, “Ya-as—leave him to his writing, ya-a-as,” and laughs. Treeſ as if i will give up writing there and then, and be transported for merely one kick at CAWKER. BooDELS wants CAWKER to come and take a turn before lunch. Happy Thought.—As I haven’t been able to get on with Typical [...]
Punch02.04.1859
  • Datum
    Samstag, 02. April 1859
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] PATERFAMILIAs, who reads his Times daily, knows that the column of marriages continues to be remarkable for its brevity. The decline of matrimony reported by the Registrar-General, was not merely a tem porary thing, then, but is still proceeding. , No other theory has been advanced to account for it but that already proposed by Mr. Punch [...]
[...] The other DENIsoN, the Speaker, sat i Enchaired, and guarding his three-cor - mered hat. Petitions on petitions strewed the floor, One Member brings a dozen, one a [...]
[...] keep its eye upon our Admiralty tinkers. As tinkers pro |. have a knack of º: new kettles, and knocking holes in them merely for the sake of mending them, so our Admiralty tinkers pull new ships to pieces, merely for the sake, it seems, of putting them to º: - [...]
[...] e jºion to do this, f". one will gladly lend a hand to do the putting. “I merely throw this hint out en £º as you say, for when a good thing strikes one I think it is a shame to keep it to oneself. But what I wished to say, Sir, was, that if our meeting had not broken up [...]
[...] Need by no means excite your vain fears and alarms: Dismiss all such disquietudes, pray! All these terrible weapons mere playthings are for, They are warranted never to kill: And altho' you may think I’m Pºins for War, [...]
[...] ice-pail, the only views the world would get from them would thence forth be dissolving ones. There would, of course, be soon an end to all water-colour drawings, if the water were drawn merely for the sake of making ice. No, no!—we can’t hear of it. However pleasant Neapolitan ice may be, we cannot spare our rising CATTERMoLEs and [...]
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 [...]