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Saturday review23.10.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 23. Oktober 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] propose vast changes in Irish tenure, not as if they were introducing a necessary revolution, but as if they were merely making a handsome and considerate concession to friendly farmers. Just as a landlord like Lord RossLYN announces, amidst the applause of his hearers, that [...]
[...] constituencies which have probably taken part in the recent insurrection. The present form of government so nearly re sembles a republic that merely political rebellion could only be attempted by pedants. Some of the leaders were probably speculative enthusiasts, but the mass of the combatants must [...]
[...] to restore the Habeas Corpus on the eve of the Fenian insur rection. It is time that the party, if it is not now too late, should cease to be a mere cabal. [...]
[...] investigation would, we are sure, induce the Commissioners to modify their proposal that the summary adminis tration decree should follow immediately upon a mere writ indorsed with the baldest possible particulars, instead of requiring a statement of the case in the first instance, as since [...]
[...] human type, in which all intellectual and moral excellence is re garded merely as a useful condition towards º his athletic capacities. #. may be various ways of explaining a social phenomenon so singular and so little suited to the general spirit [...]
[...] silver, of iron, of bronze, and even of lead. A cluster of a score or so of stars of the first magnitude blaze out in the firmament, but these give way before minor galaxies, and presently to mere nebulae and utter obscurity. [...]
[...] during the Elizabethan age was of quite another sort from that of either the Augustan or the Medicean age. It was essentially a display, not of mere scholarship and imitation, but of the boldest original genius. It is somewhat strange that the writer makes no reference [...]
[...] By careful and minute consideration of every step, the march was made to appear to hasty observers a mere triumphal promenade. But it is really an example of ars celare artem. }. more the conduct of this campaign is examined the better it will be appreciated, and [...]
[...] separates reading from education. Academies and the three IR's have achieved at least the very definite “results" of showing that the outside and merely mechanical appliances of education may be brought to a very respectable degree of perfection without any corresponding development of intellectual power. A multitude [...]
[...] Lake George, and other favourite resorts of American tourists during the summer season; a work intended and adapted for merely practical use, and as uninteresting to the general reader as it will prove convenient to the traveller who may meditate a visit to the Atlantic States. [...]
Saturday review06.05.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 06. Mai 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Government cannot be trusted to leave anything alone. Some of the Ministers, like Mr. GoSCHEN, having amused themselves with economic inquiries, propose, apparently for the mere purpose of testing their theories by practice, to disturb all the conditions of rural and urban life. Mr. BRUCE may [...]
[...] the conditions of rural and urban life. Mr. BRUCE may defend himself by referring to a prevalent demand for legislation, but his crotchet of an auction is the mere creation of fanciful and perverted ingenuity. Mr. Lowe evidently [...]
[...] regarded the lucifer-match scheme as a good joke, and in mere [...]
[...] it enough to have the mere name of a Republic; and therefore when the Commune is put down, it will probably have done thus much by its existence, that it will have inspired the con [...]
[...] provinces for Germany because the population inhabiting them is of German origin and speaks the German tongue. He merely looks on these Alsatians and Lorrainers as persons happening to live on the eastern side of the military frontier which Germany must have, if she is to frighten [...]
[...] CHILDERs introduced; and the best of it points unmistakably to the completion of the work by the extinguishment of what has now become a merely nominal Board. The inconveni ences which resulted from Mr. CHILDERs's illness have brought into prominence the necessity of investing some permanent [...]
[...] offered for the abandonment of the defence by even that : genuine portion of the Commune army which hatred of all real government, and not mere fear, keeps in the ranks. [...]
[...] ballads, were neither more nor less than brigands, who habitually lundered Christians and accidentally murdered Mussulmans. t is a mere euphemism to call them patriots, and an egre gious error to suppose that they had not a great share in perpetuating the barbarism which gave them birth. The [...]
[...] he cruel vengeance of escaped brigands forms a dreadful feature in the history of Greek brigandage. Mr. Soteropoulos declares “that imprisonment in Greece is often a mere nominal punish ment, for after a brief incarceration the most noted ruffians are usually liberated by the Minister of Justice.” [...]
[...] anxious to know whether some reminiscences would not be reserved by the accomplished lady, who for nearly fifty years ad held undisputed sway over French society by the mere power of beauty and of goodness combined. The two volumes now before us, without quite answering the universal expectation, were [...]
Saturday review14.07.1866
  • Datum
    Samstag, 14. Juli 1866
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] the case with the great German rival of Prussia—Austria, onee, like Brandenburg, a mark, a German outpost against the Magyar. Its sovereign for some ages was merely the “Marchio Orientalis.” The two Powers which have so long disputed the supremacy of Germany are mere creations of yesterday compared [...]
[...] but merely declares the existing law, and denounces all encroach ments upon it which had illegally grown up. In the face of these notorious facts it is difficult to understand [...]
[...] reason the Mutiny Act is passed accordingly. , What then, it may be asked, can be done by the Crown in time of war apart from the Mutiny Act, and by the mere force of the prerogative P The answer is that, for practical purposes, this is a question of mere antiquarian curiosity. The Crown in such a case might call out [...]
[...] dination to the cure of the soul. Mr. Niven allows, with that engaging candour which is one of the most charming attributes of the philosophical mind, that “in a merely philanthropic point [...]
[...] every one would expect to find accurately distinguishing the two sounds; and yet to find that in existing manuscripts 8 and p are sometimes used quite indiscriminately, sometimes used merely like the Greek or i c, as initial and final forms. Dr. Bosworth, or rather his assistant Mr. Waring, boldly goes back, and corrects [...]
[...] something grander and more sacred than, a mere reposi of ideas, scientific, political, ethical, poetic, and the like—can find no better basis, starting-point, or foundation for his student's know [...]
[...] ledge than history, which, instead of a single branch, he thus makes into the great trunk of the tree, of which all other subjects are mere offshoots and ornaments. We have dwelt at †† on Mr. Hannay's view, because it indicates the risin and important division between the old belief about letters, tha [...]
[...] they are a pleasant adornment, softening the manners, and not permitting them to be fierce, and the newer view, that the aim of education is not a knowledge of books merely or of facts merely, but essentially and foremost a knowledge of the progress of thought. Mr. Hannay is by no means in darkness as to this, or [...]
[...] º of personal danger. Merely to [...]
[...] t MERE'S MEMOIRS and CORRESPONDENCE, from his Family Papers. Iy the Right Hon. MARY Viscountess Coxiderinſeite, and Captain W. W. KNoLLYs. 2 vols. 8vo. with Portraits, bound, 30s. [...]
Saturday review26.01.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 26. Januar 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] market. If the shipwrights can establish such a position as this, they will have a right to have the case reheard. If they cannot, the mere statement of what they have done must carry their condemnation with it. [...]
[...] speeches, Earl Godwine, whatever his speeches were like, is thereby proved to have been a great orator. It is not an answer to say that large masses of men may be swayed by mere clap-trap. They may be led away by false statements and ingenious fallacies, but these are not necessarily mere clap-trap. ... No man ever [...]
[...] Of course we do not pledge ourselves to the soundness of the sentiments, to the º: of the advice, put forth by any of them. That is a matter altogether distinct from mere oratorical ower. Indeed it is a greater effort of mere oratorical power to ead people wrong than to lead them right. . Whether Pym or [...]
[...] wanted. College scholarships, designed to maintain students who could not maintain themselves, have been universally turned into purely honorary distinctions, assigned to mere proficiency, without [...]
[...] civilization engender special disorders; and because they are un natural they are only susceptible of unscientific and illogical pallia tives. Great subscription-lists may become mere hush-money administered to an idle and apathetic national conscience; and, so long as we are willing to look on periodical outbursts of distress [...]
[...] with what had been thought and written on philosophy, IIamilton was immeasurably his superior. Nor was Hamilton's knowledge a mere memorial, or book-learning. It was an intelligent apprehen sion, a keen perception of shades of difference, a grasp of the thoughts of others which preserved the most delicate articulation [...]
[...] but the possibility that we may put wrong constructions if we reason badly does not prove that sense provides us with fic tions. We merely take this as a specimen of the loose language which Mr. Dallas permits himself upon small and easily appreciable topics, thereby suggesting that we cannot depend with much con [...]
[...] and there must be something tangible in the tokens by which their goodwill is conciliated. But nothing can save the business from ridicule when mere trinkets are given, and when a general and a bishop, with a host of officers en suite, proceeding to their destination in a vessel of war, are the bearers of the [...]
[...] to the working-classes by Mr. Fairbairn, in a neighbourhood Where he is well known, would have great weight. But, having given the lecture, wº publish it? . It is a mere string of commonplaces, and platitudes somewhat prosily put together. It is very well to tell artisans with whom you may [...]
[...] mere advertisement of the place. Otherwise than as an advertise ment, of what possible interest can it be to the public generally P In the same lecture Mr. Fairbairn speaks .."the advantages of [...]
Saturday review28.09.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 28. September 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] religious observance. We laughed at the one; we should not have escaped from the other without a wonderful deepen ing of moral conviction. A mere agricultural innovation with Mr. DISRAELI would certainly have been saturated with ethical or theological meaning by Mr. GLADSTONE. And can [...]
[...] which in our forefathers would have been unhesitatingly ascribed to miracle or magic; but he hardly seems to perceive that in those ages they would not merely have been considered, but would have really been, miraculous. Suppose, for instance, a disease long held to be incurable, but for §. modern science [...]
[...] Langley fear, or fail, to tread. But, if we might advise, we should say that the Chancellor of the Exchequer is the right man to pre side at Monday's festivities. The mere fact of holding the fête shows that the Committee consider the Reform Bill a boon worth shouting for. [...]
[...] a prelate to have any scruple about bracketing portions of the Cate chism which are obviously, like the obnoxious Ornaments Rubric, mere relics and rags of Popery. Perhaps in parishes where the Celtic element is largely represented there might be some danger of street rows between Papist and Protestant schoolchildren, ani [...]
[...] Queen being allowed to have “the idol of the Mass" in her private chapel. Nor can it be fairly said that the Reformers merely inherited these views from their Popish ancestors. For the latter had usually based their persecutions on grounds of ecclesiastical or civil policy, while the Protestant authorities, [...]
[...] M. Froment Meurice still holds the first rank for his jewellery. This is not a mere “conglomeration of fortuitous precious stones,” such as our London jewellers delight in, but the gold which connects these precious stones is reduced to its smallest quantity [...]
[...] # is following Dialogue Alciphron turns his back both upon Lysicles and his own original views as to the supreme happiness of mere sensuality, and declares his preference for the doctrine of honour and disinterested morality as preached by Shaftesbury, and says that the true foundation of morality is to be found in [...]
[...] and marquises and the cream of society. Ouida undoubtedly accommodates herself to meet their tastes, and so far talks, not merely nonsense, but in some respects a pernicious nonsense. Still we think it is taking matters too seriously to suppose that her works do any particular harm. Most readers take them for [...]
[...] Irish buildings. Such, for instance, are the two doorways at Inchangoill, ãºuri at pp. 142, 143. The former is of the rudest and most primitive Éiº a mere square lintel and uothing else. The other is rich Romanesque, but retaining the older Irish tradition of sloping jambs. The capitals are very odd, [...]
[...] guilds, or individual printers. Mr. Berjeau himself advertises a Polyglot History of Pope Joan, compiled from writers before the Reformation. e hope he will treat the fable as a mere biblio graphical curiosity, and not (as, from certain hints which he gives, we fear may be his intention) in a controversial spirit. [...]
Saturday review04.07.1874
  • Datum
    Samstag, 04. Juli 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] TH: boundary which separates mere love of personal ornament from the art of dress is not always easy to determine. It is no sign of higher taste in the Yahoo that he hoards certain shining [...]
[...] It is one of the necessary effects of large generalization that small truths and mere minor facts must go to the wall. Every thing and person has a task and office assigned to him beyond and apart from his individual action. It depends entirely on the [...]
[...] #. to speak of would have been avoided; and those who now the inner history of the expedition are better aware than the mere reader of Captain Brackenbury's work can be that this un pleasantness formed one of the chief blots in a very successful campai For a third battalion was afterwards added to the [...]
[...] “There is not a priest in my diocese capable of any ecclesiastical office except the Canon Theologian of the cathedral.” Abelly adds that “a mere priest” was a common form of reproach, and Amelote that “the name was held to be synonymous with ignorance and debauchery.” It may be remembered that St. [...]
[...] remarks, for example, that “physical suffering in general possesses in a less degree than other evils the power of arousing sympathy. The imagination cannot take hold of it sufficiently for the mere sight to arouse in us any corresponding emotion.” But in the drama in question Sophocles has contrived wonderfully to intensify [...]
[...] bidden to use several pages. The reason against the practice is chiefly the difficulty of selling ten or twenty pictures together, so as not to break a series, but this is merely an economical reason, which has nothing whatever to do with the capabilities of the art. Several other important questions are dealt with by Lessing in [...]
[...] foolish. Litera scripta manet must be the motto on which she acts, and, like certain silly people who treasure up every letter they have received, she attaches a value to what is written merely because it is written. We should suppose that exactly as she wrote her journal, so has she published it. When once anything had got [...]
[...] coup d'état of Brumaire, and he finds there the exact counterpart of the crisis through which his country is now passing. The Republic of 1874, like its predecessor, is, he contends, merely an official label applied to the dictatorship of a party—an arbitrary régime which events might have justified, but which has now [...]
[...] state of society viewed under its different aspects. M. Boissier's conclusion is that Christianity found the heathen world thoroughly º for its reception, not merely because it was weighed down y corruptions of the worst kind, but also because the teaching of the philosophers and the aspirations of all thoughtful minds had [...]
[...] The political and physical description of the Slavonic racest contained in the little volume before us is intended to be not merely a contribution to geographical science, but also the pièce justificative of a theory. In a long preface the anonymous author declaims against the stupidity of his countrymen who waste [...]
Saturday review22.05.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 22. Mai 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] pointed out the true functions of the Commission. It was not a judicial body, and had never been intended to act judicially. It was merely a Commission, having for its object to help the Viceroy to decide rightly. After ex amining the ireports submitted to him, Lord North BROOK [...]
[...] difference between them and the members of the Senate. If the Senate is to become a working part of the French Constitution, instead of that mere excrescence which Continental Second Chanbers have commonly been, its representative character ought to be plainly marked [...]
[...] their power. The present Government has ostentatiously, and perhaps sincerely, professed its desire to revive the old national alliance of Church and State. The mere recep tion of the POPE's representative is an administrative as well as a diplomatic measure; for the Nuncio in Spain is a [...]
[...] “monstration.” It will be observed that vivisection for purposes of research is thus placed on the same footing as vivisection with a view merely to demonstration; that a very important branch of research is absolutely closed; and that such a phrase as “treating with galvanism or [...]
[...] same phenomenon is being contemplated from two opposite points of view. To a sharp-sighted, but not very appreciative, outsider it looks like a mere relapse into Ultramontane obscurantism, and it is described accordingly. But those who can tell the dream do not always understand the interpretation thereof. [...]
[...] fathers, have as little desire as their rulers to undo the policy of recent years, and re-establish “the legitimate sovereigns” on their forfeited thrones; and that not merely from a discreet resolve to acquiesce in the inevitable, but because they honestly prefer the new order to the old. [...]
[...] ventures and hair-breadth escapes, and so utterly different from your humdrum and everyday existence—for I will not call it life —that the mere contrast must be as refreshing to you as a dose of quinine to a fever-stricken man on the Gold Coast.” Undeni [...]
[...] has an eye to business. a mere chronological table such entries as these might seem sensational :— - [...]
[...] The difference between mere coincidences and real links in [...]
[...] Ballads. Miss Dodge's Ithymes and Jingles " disarm criticism by the modesty of their title; a very correct one, on the whole. But why should mere rhymes or mere jingles be printed * [...]
Saturday review24.10.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 24. Oktober 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] up to hate the principles of the IRevolution. Freedom of worship and universal toleration come in also as part of the programme. Yet they are merely decorative. A few Protestant and Jewish schools and chapels can make no difference to Spain, would attract no attention, and exercise [...]
[...] not a protest and a revolt against the system thus established, it is nothing. It must set up and secure a national existence apart from that of the priests, or it will merely end in another reign of Queen IsABELLA, with a different tool of the priests on the throne. The hope of the Government is not merely to [...]
[...] at Cambridge. And this characteristic, we think, has perhaps a deeper significance. It gives the representative a larger room, a firmer standing, a less merely representative or delegated function. By Oxford etiquette the candidate is known to be willing to be elected, but nothing further [...]
[...] Islam, whether voluntary or iº, whether the mature renegade or the Janissary kidnapped in his childhood, ceased to be Greek, Slave, or whatever he was before; the mere fact of proselytism enrolled him among the ruling caste, and made him, for all practical purposes, a Turk. Even the Oriental [...]
[...] are Greek and Armenian only in a very secondary sense. So, in the further East, names like Hindoo and Parsee— strictly mere names of nations, like English and French—have acquired a secondary religious meaning which has quite displaced the national meaning. If a Hindoo or a Parsee embraces [...]
[...] made known to any one in authority, and what was done in con sequence of this iniportant information. Anything short of this is mere beating about the bush. -- [...]
[...] there was both vigour and genuinely poetic condensation. There was a certain ingenuity and º about the first ; the last comes near to mere washiness. Finally, we are brought down to the lowest level of commonplace:— As for my wife, my Martha and my Martyr [...]
[...] And sºon for pages, but our readers have probably had enough. We will merely add the summing up of the argument at the end, where, we are assured that “the natural impossibility of intermix ture between the leading divisions of animate nature must [...]
[...] ture between the leading divisions of animate nature must denounce (*) all theories based on an unknown, or unac knowledged, or speculative source of life, either as mere ingenious hypothetical schemes, or premeditated inſidel teach ings.” . In ºther words, the “natural impossibility" of the [...]
[...] Mitchell should go out of his way at the end of a lecture on anºther subject to settle the objections to “the miraculous” in half a page of mere rhetorical declamation. But we fear that, [...]
Saturday review08.08.1874
  • Datum
    Samstag, 08. August 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] the mess into which he had drifted calculated to remove the impression that the Ministry was blundering. His explanation was, that out of mere kindness to Lord SANDON, and in order to give him an opportunity of showing what a nice young nobleman he was, Mr. DISRAELI [...]
[...] national cause. It is true that German statesmanship, being eminently practical, would regard with indifference a mere sentiment of ingratitude. If any adequate advantage were to be gained by intervention, the probable feelings of Spain [...]
[...] Mr. DISRAELI, repudiating the imputation of a merely passive foreign policy, referred in two or three grandilo quent sentences to the sympathy and counsels which might [...]
[...] imagined for themselves a statement which nowhere occurs in the Report of the Commissioners. Instead of domestic slavery, it seems that the inhabitants of Fiji are merely liable to indefinite servitudes, which mainly resolve them selves into the payment of rents and tributes to the chiefs. [...]
[...] on their knowledge of their own district, and of the character and habits of the population. The members of the Union had suddenly converted into a mere trial of strength relations which had never before been strictly commercial. If the labourers had exercised their own [...]
[...] neutrality is wider than its received interpretations; and that in exceptional circumstances a neutral who does not behave as such cannot expect to be treated as such on the mere ground that neutrals have hitherto been allowed privileges similar indeed in name, but wholly dissimilar in importance and extent. . If [...]
[...] serious purpose is deterred from it merely by the trouble of learning Spanish, we are not much inclined to pity him. But to return to the real difficulties. Dr. Scheppig has done his best [...]
[...] affectation also which characterizes the whole work often shows itself in the singular mode in which considerable parts of the narrative are written. Where facts are to be stated merely to link together the occasions of expressing feeling, Mrs. King does not trouble herself to do more than state them. She will not dress [...]
[...] part a direct expression of sentiment, and is often more powerful in proportion as it confines itself to that function—that is to say, according to Professor Masson, in proportion as it passes into mere moralizing. Epic or dramatic and descriptive poetry involves the process which #. Masson describes, but that which causes it [...]
[...] they should be severely punished by lightning. But Elias, the lord of the thunderbolt, mitigates their punishment, and they are therefore subjected at first merely to unseasonable weather, then to the in roads of smallpox, and finally to the ravages of an insatiable dragon feeding on young men and maidens. “Every morning for [...]
Saturday review15.04.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 15. April 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] But Baron Stoffel went much further into the causes of probable disaster to the French arms than merely to dwell on the superiority of the German military system. He looked on each of the two nations as a whole, and contrasted the one with [...]
[...] the area of administrative and fiscal unity; and Mr. Gosches will strive in vain to devise employment for his new elected vestries. The Chairmen are merely Poor-law Guardians under another name, except that the rating clauses of the Bill will create a new antagonism between the tenant-farmers and the [...]
[...] value of this guarantee is gone. To be divinely pre served from error is better than any protection which can be afforded by the mere accidents of temporal position. As to the objection that those whose crimes and errors the Pope may be obliged to condemn would never allow his voice [...]
[...] days before the Review; and it was undoubtedly due to the recent training of their officers that they appeared as familiar with their work as if they had merely been repeating the routine movements of the now exploded system. Of the marching past, a test valuable as indirect evidence of steady [...]
[...] goes down in the struggle, and her pretty empty-headed rivals have it all their own way. Perhaps, indeed, the tendency we have described is merely a collateral result from the general love of modern writers for the respectabilities. Dulness and decorum get the best of it in modern [...]
[...] for life. But, given that the motive which draws a woman into a sisterhood is religious and not professional—given, that is, that she accepts nursing merely as one form of a life of religious devotion to the wants of others, and not merely as an honourable calling for which she feels an inclination—it does seem to us that [...]
[...] way of making shifts which will for the future be rendered super fluous by the simple invention of the keyless or self-winding watch, we extract the following instance of how, by the mere light of nature, an artificial yet highly embarrassing want may be met:— [...]
[...] class fifteen excellent reasons why the soul is a pipe. The Sorbonne, which afterwards attained such high theological eminence, was originally merely one of the colle in the University, established for secular priests, in 1252, by Richard Sorbon, a poor scholar who became famous as a doctor of [...]
[...] chivalrous courage, it would be absurd to pass a sweeping accusa tion of backwardness or cowardice upon all. Captain Bingham chronicles some chivalrous feats of arms not merely by individuals. The courage and discipline of the sailors who manned the forts seem to have been beyond all praise; the Mobiles occasionally [...]
[...] want of rigorous method and strict verification, a disposition to draw wide conclusions from insufficient premisses, and an undue confidence in the certainty of mere hypotheses. Herr Planck's t assertion that philosophy is at last in his book made plain to everybody's comprehension (allgemein fasslich ent [...]
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