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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 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 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 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 [...]
Saturday review03.04.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 03. April 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] hundred and eighteen, anything but what Mr. GLADSTONE pro poses can be done for Ireland. They are therefore inclined to take things very quietly, merely congratulating themselves on their entire exemption from responsibility, let the conse quences of Mr. GLADSTONE's policy be what they may. [...]
[...] and conclusive, and had considered themselves bound to confine themselves to the mere discussion of details. If they could make their case out, it would be a case that ought even now to arrest the action of Parliament. It is needless to [...]
[...] mation, it is nothing more than a sheer mockery. The slan derer may be a man without a shilling, not worth powder and shot, a mere man of straw, hired and subsidized—for this is quite conceivable—for the mere purpose of slandering, by some secret wire-puller who wants his political or sectarian or private [...]
[...] merely to the boxes but to the galleries; and have a profound consciousness that if you bring down applause in one quarter the remainder of the audience will be *... unsympathetic. Duel [...]
[...] overcome sickness; all this may be well enough, but what would have been the language of the great poet when he found not old men, not middle-aged men, but mere youths of seventeen possess ing “a competent knowledge” of arithmetic, algebra, geometry, mechanics, hydrostatics, hydraulics, pneumatics, acoustics, optics, [...]
[...] those bucolic patrons of the Turf who dream of witching the sporting world with their noble horsemanship. Perhaps it may not be in all cases mere selfish ambition that sends men volunteering in a service where the dangerous and ridiculous blend in about equal proportions. There may be those [...]
[...] above suspicion as that of any Scottish borough. No man can have a right to throw about accusations of this sort at random merely because they are likely to fall in with the provincial vanity of hearers. Mr. Froude, having buttered the Scotch boroughs, next goes on to [...]
[...] It is not necessary to repeat the account of the plot which we gave in our review of the first volume. No new fact comes out in the succeeding portions; the facts already given are merely filled out and animated with living breath; the glow of colour is added to the scanty sketch which is sufficient for the merely material [...]
[...] marks, and becomes more fixed and sure, the incidents of the local chronicle multiply upon us, and the compiler's work grows more minute. It is impossible for mere extracts to do justice to the fulness of the writer's details. Allowing for a certain tendency to mere book-making, as well as for a degree of prolixity natural [...]
[...] divides the opinions of German crities. Itinck flatly maintains that the biographies generally ascribed to Cornelius Nepos are a mere forgery; Nissen regards them as the production of an abbre viator. M. Monginot refutes both these opinions with considerable skill, and bestows much praise upon the Latin author's style, [...]
Saturday review01.05.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Mai 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] the bar of the House, it was well known that their re porters had, with the assent of the Foreign Loans Com mittee, merely given an accurate account of the proceedings. Mr. LEWIS, who complained of a breach of privilege, really intended to find fault with the conduct of [...]
[...] The feature in the new Electoral College on which his ar gument fastens is the representation of the communes. Hitherto, he says, the communes have been mere municipal atoms isolated from one another and breathing no common political atmosphere. In future every municipal election [...]
[...] political atmosphere. In future every municipal election will have something political about it. The peasant's vote for a councillor will be determined by other than merely local considerations. His representative will have some thing else to do than to see to the mending of roads or [...]
[...] It is evident that almost all the objections raised against the Bill in Committee were intended as a protest, not merely against particular parts of it, but against it as a whole. It was practically admitted that no change in the details of [...]
[...] unjust in their special application that they were equally true of almost every Bill that comes before Parliament. The draughtsmen in this instance merely followed their usual plan of referring to a series of previous Acts in ex lanation of an amending Bill, instead of incorporating in [...]
[...] tives of Ireland do not exercise that influence on the de liberations of Parliament which they ought to possess, not merely in the interest of their own country, but for the sake of keeping up the fair balance of representative opinion which is essential under a constitutional govern [...]
[...] lived for a º is to say, for about three nerations. Such a length of vitality shows, in fact, that its celebrity was not a mere matter of accidental fashion. The first [...]
[...] with decorations, and endeavour, as far as they could, to look merely like ordinary people—an effort in which, we should say from our own observation, most of them perfectly suc ceeded. . They walked in the usual way on their legs, no [...]
[...] such a stage is of more than merely literary or scientific value. The pages in which Messrs. IRowe and Webb so clearly and strongly insist on the original unity of the Englishman and [...]
[...] marvels for which Columella, and not merely Virgil, who might be indulging in a poetic flight, vouches; whilst Miller's weighty authority pronounces such experiments to be veritably [...]
Saturday review03.06.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 03. Juni 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] there may be much difficulty in distinguishing between private crimes and acts of civil war. If the Tuileries had been burned, not in mere revenge and malice, but to delay the progress of the troops, an incendiary who might have escaped to England could not be surrendered without a viola [...]
[...] The EMPEROR, too, is not merely the representative of violent clerical antipathies, and of the hatreds and prejudices of a feeble and antiquated aristocracy. He might be trusted to think of [...]
[...] through spiritual competition and by social superiority. Mr. GLADSTONE would have accomplished a great act of statesman ship if, instead of merely suppressing an anomaly, he had used a part of the endowments at his disposal in purchasing the loyalty of parish priests and schoolmasters. Unfortu [...]
[...] and this Mr. Cole does not supply. Indeed the low standard of art in England is strongly shown by the im portance which mere busybodies are able to assume in connexion with it. The projectors of the Universal Art Catalogue appear to have seriously believed that Parliament [...]
[...] kind have formed a tacit conspiracy to impose upon us, and that events so horrible and so out of harmony with the character of the great pleasure capital of the world are merely a fiction invented by political philosophers for the purpose of pointing a moral in favour of order. [...]
[...] gravity. #. difficult it was to attack this stronghold of Satan may readily be imagined. - There is unquestionably something remarkable in merely form ing the scheme of invading such a fixed habit as this. He con tinues:— [...]
[...] f, however, the domestic press raves for the Cork shopboys and “godless” schoolmasters, its effervescence is but local; while the endless misrepresentations of the mere Irish which have crossed St. George's Channel have confused our judgment of the situation. We are surfeited with information, yet every year our [...]
[...] an almost superhuman degree of skill on the part of the invest ing army, and so forth—the real cause being apparently that the garrison consisted for the most part of , a mere rabble, the repulse of whose feeble sorties must have been mere child's play to the Germans after the business they had gone through of con [...]
[...] refer the reader to the volume passim. We merely indicate such things as the description of the gluttonous Goggs's peculiar mode of eating, and of the effect of low living on the boys' complexions. [...]
[...] the most useful amongst the subsidiary sources of information for the historian and the publicist; but it too often degenerates into mere spite, and many a clever writer, carried away by the desire of satisfying some private grudge, has forfeited beforehand all claims to be considered as a trustworthy recorder of the gossip [...]
Saturday review01.05.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Mai 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] are to get the glebe on paying off the charge; but where there is no building charge, they are to get the glebe-house by merely paying ten times the value of the site on which the house stands. This does not in any way represent the market value of the property; it is a mere nominal sum which the [...]
[...] in which this government, if secured, would be exercised. It is not as though the difference between the Opposition can didates were merely one of popularity. Probably, to many [...]
[...] the advantage of hereditary rank is withdrawn, it will be necessary to compensate for the defect of a modest economical condition by extraordinary personal qualities. Mere observers of social life, who have not the smallest disposition to become satirists, recognise the undoubted fact of the deference which [...]
[...] yisited KATE HAMILTON's hostelry for professional purposes. They might—so Sir WILLIAM BoDKIN is acute enough to see that the law might charitably presume—be merely paying a [...]
[...] framed for home life and for society; and they confess that, without woman's influence, they would soon degenerate into mere savages, and be no better than so many Choctaws before a [...]
[...] very place where the pamphlet is urging that it is necessarily ineffectual. We may leave the writers' admissions to answer their arguments. Upon this head we will merely add, that it is stated that the disease is chiefly maintained in French ports by importation from England; that the difference between the per [...]
[...] that those who have not been deterred by the risk become degraded, and form the nucleus of a debased population. It is surprising how soon such topics, become a mere matter of jest, and the necessary consequence is a moral as well as a physical degeneration. - - - [...]
[...] life, which gives such a strange charm to Oxford. The future Antony-a-Wood who sets himself to describe the true and not the merely official history of Alma Mater will find himself face to face with the most º because the most rapidly changing, panorama in the world. Without stirring the [...]
[...] an aesthetic point of view”; but with all his affectation Lepidus is quietly changing this old world into a new. If Oxford is to educate Englishmen, and not merely to drill them, to act as an intellectual, and not merely as a social force, it is time that she knew something and taught something of Turner and Alfred de [...]
[...] has the frankness to acknowledge this in the preface to the amusing book now before us. The Mémoires in question are merely a compilation, the materials of which have been borrowed from various quarters, and worked up into a kind of narrative which, published originally as a series of feuilletons in the Consti [...]
Saturday review12.03.1859
  • Datum
    Samstag, 12. März 1859
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] the case of the Charles et Georges does not fairly raise the question of the general foreign policy of the Cabinet—it merely exposes to comment the conduct and capacity of the Foreign Secretary. In a mere discussion on a motion for papers, it was very easy to criticise the course which Lord [...]
[...] the offices of any attorney in London. They are either educa tional bodies or they are mere clubs for the Benchers, and clubs not of the most agreeable or distinguished kind. If they are disposed to take up in good faith, and with proper zeal, the task [...]
[...] now formally inaugurated, professes to be. “Religion,” we say, because it is quite an error to criticise Positivism as a mere, philosophy. As a philosophy, Comtism may have its intellectual adherents. Miss Martineau, in some particu lars Mr. Mill, and in some Mr. Buckle, are said to have [...]
[...] tingham. They are a superior article of their kind, but they are not the real thing. The mere popularity—especially when we remember that it has been durable as well as extensive—which Sir Edward Lytton's novels have obtained would prove conclusively that [...]
[...] Apart from mere faults of manner, nothing can be more charac. teristically second-rate than the philosophy which Sir Edward Lytton appears to have considered throughout his whole career [...]
[...] It may be said that our criticism only amounts to this—that Sir Edward's novels are merely novels, and not treatises or histories; and this might be a fair observation if it were not the fact that throughout they assume, either tacitly or expressly, that [...]
[...] The local pronunciation of Saturdays would have been much more accurately indicated by the mere substitution of Z for S, and of d for t. Further attempts at phonetic conformity would be equally applicable to the ºl. vernacular of our own [...]
[...] jured husband, and, with the cant of decency and religion in is mouth, sought to blast the name of the wife he had abandoned for the mere purpose of selfish vindictiveness. [...]
[...] of Catholic Emancipation, the Grenville party evidently doubted his sincerity and secretly charged him with postponing it to his mere personal interests. Time has, as usual, ripened and softened men's judgments, and placed Mr. Canning, whatever may have been his faults, among those names which ennoble the [...]
[...] the mere acceptance of a bill in payment for goods, creates no more purchasing power than it afterwards absorbs, unless the bill is repeatedly .." as an instrument of purchase. This is true, no [...]
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 [...]
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