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Saturday review01.10.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Oktober 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] On two occasions Marshal BAZAINE has given the Prussians a good deal of trouble by sorties from Metz, and the mere knowledge ...that there are still French troops whom defeat has neither dis mayed nor demoralized may give some much needed encou [...]
[...] make no serious attempt upon the place for at least a fort night to come. The advance of a mere detachment on Orleans, followed instantly by the rumour of its cession to the Prussians, shows at once the present weakness of the French on the side of the [...]
[...] this part of the reasoning aloud, the advice is in nine cases out of ten nothing but the echo of your own predetermined course. Asking advice is merely a branch of the art known as fishing for compliments, or, in other and less offensive language, it is merely one method of appealing for sympathy. The advisee has made up [...]
[...] destroy, or at least to induce others to destroy, what he does not like. The Empire was partly of his own making. In his eyes it was a mere usurpation, of course; a mere continuance of the régime of iniquity and fraud which had robbed him and his ancestors of their rents since '89. . But still he never repented [...]
[...] whose i. and heads are in the business, who individually, from the general to the private, are capable of playing the parts. which may be assigned to them. Mere skill in the use of a weapon mere personal gallantry, mere technical knowledge of drill, wi not avail an army which may have to cope with the efficient [...]
[...] Robsart. The wonder is that with Kenilworth before their eyes the author and manager could have produced such a contemptible result. They have concocted a mere stop-gap to serve until the time comes to produce the pantomime, in which the dances now performed before Queen Elizabeth will be re [...]
[...] script and in the printed page, and checking each conjecture by these conditions. It is a curious example, not only of the con scientious exactness, but of the mere mechanical labour and inge nuity, called for by modern critical accuracy in dealing with ancient papers:– [...]
[...] either mainly or exclusively on the authority of the later manu scripts “without rigidly testing their critical value”? What living writer advocates resting on the mere numerical preponder ance of later copies, if the early uncials will but agree among themselves? But, divided as these perpetually are in the Gospels, [...]
[...] gaining experience from his own repeated failures that the critic learns to surmount his difficulties. Those who, like Dr. Tregelles, forego the attempt through mere despair of success, can have no claim to the highest praise. To conclude. If we are not wrong in supposing that the text of [...]
[...] trary to the very spirit of the book:— The chief secret of the success of the dramatic work of the old times was that such “characters” were not mere isolated figures in the piece—coming in merely for their own sake, and the more selfish sake of the actor who played them—but were real aids to the story. They were not formed so as [...]
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 [...]
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, [...]
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 [...]
Saturday review20.02.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 20. Februar 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] riority. In mere diplomatic strategy, since the inchoate rupture with Turkey, the Greek Ministers have displayed a certain adroitness; à. all the substantial benefit of the trans [...]
[...] sitting member, and allowed in the accounts of another, were given indeed to voters for doing nothing, but were so given out of mere vanity, and in the pure delight of throwing away the gentleman's money. Then, again, there are whole regions of misconduct in the [...]
[...] case against a candidate can be made out as treating, unless the treating is quite outrageous, as it was at Bradford. If a candidate merely spends a great deal too much at public-houses, and the election is merely made the occasion of a state of permanent beeriness for a fortnight [...]
[...] make the comparison most instructive. And it is often the points of difference in detail which best enable us to see the essential analogy between two periods or states of things. A merely out ward likeness, a likeness which is a mere likeness of detail, may very well be simply accidental. But a likeness which pierces through [...]
[...] it altogether; to treat the landscape as a scenic accessory, and to aim merely at creating a receptacle for a series of brilliant immi grations from May Fair. There are common features, of course, in each. In both you dine and sleep well. Both provide their [...]
[...] speculation as to the amount of mere pleasure which a country house may be made to yield, and the most scientific means for developing it. [...]
[...] the papers on the subject. Many of these come from persons of no authority, but who by the outside world may be looked upon as possessing authority in virtue of the mere fact of their communications, with signatures attached, having been ad mitted into print. Some few, however, comprise suggestions [...]
[...] man had been able to invest the facts which he details with an interest as vivid though more true. Seen through the spectacles of chivalry, no doubt the reign of Edward is merely a pretty sham [...]
[...] really grateful for it. It is, we suppose, the original character of Mr. Longman's his tory as a mere continuation of his previous lectures which must account for the strange omission of the whole of Edward's life before his accession to the Crown. The omission, however, is a [...]
[...] as “a people who had as little historical sense as the Indians,” evi dently forgetting not merely the pyramids and temples, teeming with mementos and written tokens intended for the very latest generations of man, but also that other characteristic fact, that [...]
Saturday review15.05.1858
  • Datum
    Samstag, 15. Mai 1858
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] HAT any merely party Government likely, at this moment, to be constructed on the fall of the present Administra tion, would be in a weak and precarious position, we take to [...]
[...] the objections with which all improvements in Parliamentary machinery may be met. It is a mere verbal distinction to say that these inquiries are not judicial. In theory, the substantial part of the Report of a Committee is a mere declaration that the incorporation of a [...]
[...] judicial or legislative, but whether it would be better done by a good permanent Court than by Parliamentary Committees. This is the substantial point, and all the rest is mere verbal quibbling. But it is said that if the functions of Committees are not [...]
[...] and act on the report of a judicial body, as of a small knot of more or less competent men who add M.P. to their names. It is a mere question of convenience, and the convenience is [...]
[...] bust merely—is as fair a type of sweet girlhood as the others of refined womanhood, with the mass of rippled golden hair, the crimson lips, the half-tossing set of the head on the white [...]
[...] Mr. Cope always does fail—that of spontaneity. . On considera tion, its strength and superiority to mere prettiness gain upon you, but it is never satisfactory. Mr. Dobson, whose well meant, lily-livered Bible-pictures we did not pause to mention, is [...]
[...] After this, of course, mere editorial misdemeanours are tame. Still there is one omission which we cannot pass over in silence, as it justifies, and more than justifies, what we have said about [...]
[...] Free Masonry. - Undoubtedly, in one sense, Dante's sympathies were with the Empire; and it was not merely the accident of party warfare that drew him to fight in the ranks against the fierce democracy of Florence. At a time when all possession was held by the [...]
[...] by comparison with the story which tells us not merely that the soul is first born in love, and proved in suffering, but that only love can guide it through shadows and thick darkness to the [...]
[...] cordially recommend it, not only to professed students of divinity, but to all who are desirous of acquiring a general view not merely of the history of the Canon, but of what is quite as important—the history, namely, of the idea of a Canon. [...]
Saturday review04.05.1861
  • Datum
    Samstag, 04. Mai 1861
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] ledge in his possession, Sir CHARLEs WooD assured the House of Commons that the loan was not required for the ordinary expenditure of India, but was wanted merely to set right a little derangement in the balances occasioned by some slackness in the supply of railway contributions. The [...]
[...] mere cash transaction, quite different in character from an ordinary loan to make good a deficit. By such treatment as this everything is made to look pleasant for the time, and [...]
[...] field for the party fight was fairly chosen. The substantial question was acknowledged to be, not the mere disposal of the anticipated surplus, important as that might be in itself, but whether the Government of the country was to remain in the hands of its present possessors [...]
[...] taking under their protection none but those who have reached the reading and writing stage of social existence. All this merely illustrates what was sufficiently plain without any illustration—that the contest was not so much a financial as a party conflict. The relative merits, [...]
[...] indeed, that besides the actual contributors “many scholars “and divines were invited to contribute.” Why did they decline Was it merely that they were “stately oxen” of the Church, “silently ruminating in their own rich pastures,” and that they worshipped the “umbrella" as the symbol of [...]
[...] His foreign accent is much against him, and many persons object to the way in which he makes up the part. But still his Hamlet is in the region of art, and is not a mere recitation of the words of a great writer. Where art ends and merely meritorious acting begins it is impossible to pronounce; but we all instinctivel [...]
[...] a case and so good a head for business, should not have the art of stating it better. But they feel that they must not allow themselves to be biassed by his mere defects in art, or to be misled by his opponent's brilliant display. And they go away [...]
[...] great Conservative leader, just published, is as remarkable a work of art as the process has ever produced. Somehow or other, apart from the mere mechanical perfection with which the accessories and texture of modern dress are rendered in this charming picture, there is an ideality_in the portrait which [...]
[...] from first to last in a tone of raillery and badinage, there is a slight danger that, with all his . he may at last degenerate into a mere raconteur, whose monthly mission is to gossip about things in general. With some of the best characters in Framley Parsonage we [...]
[...] Lord Brougham is, as we have implied, exceedingly severe upon the French wars of Henry V. In his eyes they were mere unjust aggressions, carried on with needless cruelty, actuated by no motive but sordid love of plunder in their earlier stages, and [...]
Saturday review30.05.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 30. Mai 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] which turned out to be pewter just washed over with silver, could not be convicted—the judges holding that it was a mere misrepresentation of quality, and fell within the rule of caveat emptor. This iniquitous maxim is in deed neither more nor less than a judicial sanction to [...]
[...] are many. Those faults seem, however, to be rather on the increase than on the decrease; and it is easy to see that they are committed in matters of greater importance than mere organization and arrangement. Taking the one department of Missions to the heathen, we can discern that the true [...]
[...] They fasten their attention on the gross manifestations of Brahminism and Buddhism, and draw the hasty inference that mere courage, perseverance, and religious earnestness will arm the missionary with the power to combat faiths so monstrous and corrupt. But, though the effects produced [...]
[...] really entitled to represent the Christianity of the West, to match themselves against the doctors of the Eastern theo sophies. The current admiration for mere unlettered earnestness in religion is a danger of the most serious cha racter; and in Asia, as in Europe and in England, Chris [...]
[...] the liquor expenditure of the United Kingdom is very nearly twice its annual rental. Nor is this nonsense merely a foreign importation, and the customary rant of Exeter Hall. The Judicial Bench has been delivering itself of a jeremiad, and in Ireland Judge CRAMPTON [...]
[...] inculcating sobriety in drink as a virtue capable of being practised singly and alone. It is, of course, a mere waste of time to say that we agree with the temperance advocates on the main question that drunkenness is a great sin, and is the parent of many crimes. [...]
[...] to chance, but habitually selects the most incompetent for the function. “False slander mere foreign nonsense !” is the cry of the Authorities of the Horse Č.i. Of them alone, however, for no persons are more urgent for Staff Reform than the intelligent [...]
[...] .. accuracy of execution. For instance, Mendelssohn's beautiful part-song, “Oh, hills oh, vales of pleasureſ" was staccatoed nearly all through, as though it had been a mere sol-fa exercise, without the smallest regard to the feelings and ideas it expresses. “Rule Britannia” was taken prestissimo, to the utter [...]
[...] wise to generalize upon this, or straightway to draw, conclusions as to the change of political feeling in the old stronghold of legi timacy. We merely mention the circumstance to show the sºrt of facts which we should wish our tourists to observe. The [...]
[...] MANº. D'HARMONIE, Pratique et Elémentaire à l'usage des Pensionnats et des Meres de Famille. Ouvrage approuvé par le Con [...]
Saturday review28.10.1863
  • Datum
    Mittwoch, 28. Oktober 1863
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] themselves may be believed, abstinence from interference with other countries, is remote from their thoughts. They are always threatening to go to war with England for the mere gratification of revenge, to annex Canada, because they desire to possess an unlimited territory, and to settle the government [...]
[...] to acquit the Admiral, who only intended to silence the batteries, of intentionally setting the town on fire. The sagacity of mere landsmen is equal to the additional remark that a high wind has a tendency to render a conflagration more destructive, and philanthropic civilians might even [...]
[...] separate enclosure or a distinct quarter. It is perfectly intel ligible that an Admiral should report without special remark the conflagration of mere appurtenances to the palace which he was ordered to destroy; but English nerves must become less sensitive in an Oriental atmosphere if the destruction of a [...]
[...] It is not to be supposed that the statesmen of 1852 created a gratuitous complication through a mere love of officious interference. In return for their large concession of German rights, Austria and Prussia obtained a certain security against [...]
[...] been formed from it. “To prejudice ” is sometimes used when all that is meant is to “hurt; ” and “prejudicial” is constantly used as a mere synonym for “harmful,” “baleful,” and the like. This last is doubtless a mere abuse of language; it is one of those cases where a special, and as it were technical, word is taken and mis [...]
[...] sarily unreasonable. It may be a prejudice for a thing as well as against it, and the prejudice itself may be perfectly reasonable. So far as it is a mere bias, a mere presumption, sufficient to guide the judgment till evidence to the contrary is produced, but ready to yield the moment such evidence is produced, a prejudice either for or [...]
[...] mere prejudice. Such worthy people are best left to enjoy their prejudices undisturbed. All one can do is to be well pleased when their prejudices run for us, instead of against us — that is, when, [...]
[...] to be. The grounds of our difficulty are suggested by Mr. Doyle him self. His narrative is a mere chronicle of facts. “Relinquish ing the higher functions of the historian, he has been content to fulfil the humbler part of the painstaking chronicler.” So, just [...]
[...] Doyle wholly passes by, such important matters as “religion, laws, and social customs,” would surely be the things to interest them rather than a mere uninterrupted narrative of events. Such a mere narrative, without any attempt to make inferences of any kind, to refer results to their causes, or even to group events [...]
[...] This Edition is not a mere reprint of that which appeared in 1857; on the contrary, it will present a text very materially altered and amended from beginning to end, with a large body of critical Notes almost entirely new; [...]
Saturday review12.01.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 12. Januar 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] serious scratching, we mean, which would make her admirer's face look next morning as if he had been taking liberties with a . bride or a cat—is thought not merely unnecessary, but unfalr. This difference between civilized and savage woman may per [...]
[...] ought to have been settled beforehand; and this is a matter which is a good deal independent of the science of mere architectural design. Mr. Cowper should not, as he has done, have left to the architects a doubtful and hesitating alternative between top lights and side [...]
[...] they stand, the strongest and most paradoxical assertions. His comments are only those of passionate astonishment, indignation, and alarm. So that the dispute becomes a mere chimney-sweep's quarrel. Roth parties try which can do most in blackening the 9ther. The bystander may be amused or shocked, but we deſ [...]
[...] compelled to abandon that of judge, in view of the utter obduracy of the criminal; but we may . endeavour to discharge that of mere observers of curious literary phenomena. We may record Mr. Sala's performances, as astronomers record the flights of meteors, not in any hope of modifying them for the future, but [...]
[...] practice would enable him to fill any number of paragraphs and columns with the description. First, there is a whole volume of associations in the mere mention of the Regent. “Do you think,” he would begin, addressing his reader in the customary terms of affable familiarity, “do you think that the Fourth George, the first [...]
[...] torians, are the most undoubting believers in the Little St. Bernard; but a problem which has received so many contradictory solutions at the hands of scholars is not to be settled by mere authority. Mr. Law's two volumes contain a most exhaustive review of the whole controversy, and a very clear and candid argument upon the [...]
[...] taken part in the great events of the second Punic war. If Polybius explored and wrote in good faith, it is paradoxical to weigh against his evidence the mere opinion of the Augustan writer, who takes pains, moreover, to inform us that his opinion is diametrically contradictory to other more original evidence, such [...]
[...] odds and ends of book-lore that must have fallen in the way of so industrious an explorer in the by-paths of literature, from a mere vague dread of acting as involuntary pander to a few pruriently disposed folks, or of lending an unconscious puff to the forbidden wares of Holyweii Street. Connected with this [...]
[...] Charles Blanc knows these things as well as we do; and if he does, is it quite right to tempt idle people to try what is impossible, merely that they may buy M. Lalanne's book? Whatever may be said of delusions about the difficulties of art, the grim old facts remain—the insurmountable barriers eternally bar the way. [...]
[...] M. Lalanne seems to us to be in error when he says that other kinds of engraving can only be of use as a means of reproduction. This is a mere matter of custom. It is the custom for engravers with the burin to copy pictures by other men, but is it not con ceivable that a class of artist-engravers might arise who, like [...]
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