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Saturday reviewInhaltsverzeichnis 01.1870/02.1870/03.1870/04.1870/05.1870/06.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Januar 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 1
[...] Comparative Politics, 698 Competitive Examination, 107 Contagious Diseases Act, the, r1, roë cº Diseases Act, the, and the Ladies' Associa tion, 45 [...]
Saturday review31.01.1874
  • Datum
    Samstag, 31. Januar 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] in the field of Lansdown—will learn with surprise how much of the success of the party which “made war for the King against himself” was, according to Roe, the result of his hero's counsels, energy, and prowess. He will need to be warned that Roe was Birch's major, quarter-master, or secretary, and was possibly [...]
[...] ability, though of little principle; not wantonly wasteful of human life, whether of friends or foes, though coarse and almost brutal in his estimate of its cheapness. As to Roe, we feel little interest in extricating him from the oblivion which has gathered round an interested eulogist; but Birch, though dear at his own price, was [...]
[...] * Military Memoir of Colonel John Birch, sometime Gorernor of Here ford in the Civil War. Written by Roe, his Secretary. With an Historical and Critical Commentary, Notes, and Appendix, by the late Rev. John Webb, M.A., F.S.A., F.R.L.S. Edited by his Son, the Rev. T. W. Webb, [...]
[...] forces who were besieging the south. Of course, as the two heroes were not there, “the line was unhappily entered, for I cannot call it stormed" (this is Roe's account), and the immediate result so far as Birch was concerned was that, “while some were running to Oxford, others were getting pardons, and the best saving what [...]
[...] his career might remove a cause for jealousy. Being marched to the country about Farnham, Birch and his regiment did wonders, according to Roe, in the fierce fight at Alton, where a part of the Earl of Craford's forces, under a gallant Colonel Boles, were cut off and brought to bay by Waller's forces, and obliged to [...]
[...] were cut off and brought to bay by Waller's forces, and obliged to await the outnumbering foe in the churchyard and the church. According to Roe, Birch was the first to enter the street, even as he had recently been the arbiter of the day's fortunes at Farnham. His name, however, does not occur in the official account of this [...]
[...] well acted of not fighting with the King to the utterance. In like manner Waller's mistake and the capture of his shotless artillery at Copredy Bridge is shown up by Roe, while Birch's aid in retrieving the mishap is magnified to the exclusion of Sir Thomas Middleton's name, who had no small share in the [...]
[...] retrieving the mishap is magnified to the exclusion of Sir Thomas Middleton's name, who had no small share in the matter. Roe likewise imputes blame to the Parliamentary Generals for letting Charles get through the hostile armies from Oxford; but his commentator (p. 85) says with justice that the King [...]
[...] debted for it to “his own ability and resolution, aided by the º: of his advisers.” Had we space, we might quote Roe's really graphic account of Birch's hair-breadth escape in a cross country road after the battle of Basingstoke in the autumn of 1644, and how he converted the [...]
[...] ness, unscrupulousness, and trickiness. So, too, when later on, after the successful storming of Bristol—as to which Cromwell praises Birch's help in his despatches, while Birch and Roe never mention Cromwell's name throughout their account—he was sent to distress the city of Hereford at the close of 1645, the pane [...]
Saturday review[Beilage] 19.10.1872
  • Datum
    Samstag, 19. Oktober 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] Harringby Hall. LIFE BY MRS. GASKELL.- Portrait of Charlotte Brontë – Casterton School – Roe Head — Haworth Parsonage and Church — The Broute Waterfall. [...]
[...] 14. The WIDE, WIDE WORLD. By Miss WEthriteLL. 15. QUEECIIY. By the Author of “The Wide, Wide World.” 16. LOOKING ROUND. By A. S. Roe. [...]
Saturday review[Beilage] 31.10.1874
  • Datum
    Samstag, 31. Oktober 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 1
[...] 3s 1. The BOOK OF TABLE-TALK. By W. C. Russell. 2. LETTERS OF JUNIUS. Woodfall's edition. REV. E. P. ROES NEW BOOKS. Each 3s. 6d. 1. BARRIERS BURNED Away. 2. OPENING A ChESTNUT Burr. [...]
Saturday review12.10.1872
  • Datum
    Samstag, 12. Oktober 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] omission of which might be fatal. To take the first example which occurs; a declaration in ejectment commonly stated that John Doe had been dispossessed by Richard Roe of one hundred or some other round number of acres of arable land, one hundred acres of meadow land, one hundred acres of pasture land, and one [...]
[...] in fee of a close of land, and, being so seised, he cut down an oak tree, being the oak-tree in the declaration mentioned, and delivered it to Richard Roe, to be kept for his use, and Richard Roe delivered it to the plaintiff, whereupon the defendant took it out of the possession of the plaintiff, as he lawfully might, which was [...]
[...] iven, the colour could not be traversed. If the plaintiff in the case before us had taken issue upon the delivery of the oak-tree to Richard Roe, he would have been told that, by the introduction of the name of that imaginary personage, he had notice that the allegation was a mere fiction, which ought not to [...]
[...] tough for English appetites; and we are disposed to agree with him when we find that for his own words— Where abrupt Eas-Roe In many a tawny heap and whirl, by glancing salmon track’t, Casts down to ocean's oozy gulf the great sea-cataract— [...]
[...] Heady-eddied, horrid-thund'ring, ocean-prodigy-engend'ring, Billow-raging, battle-waging, merman-haunted, poet-vaunted, Royal, patrimonial, old torrent of Eas-Roe. [...]
Saturday review14.09.1872
  • Datum
    Samstag, 14. September 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] It is perhaps enough to be able to infer from a passage in Colu mella, quoted in Whittaker's History of Craven, that fenced en closures for the stag, fallow-deer, and roe were in use with the early princes of Gaul, and that their successors, our Norman lords, were but copying an almost, if not quite, classical precedent [...]
[...] elaphus of Cuvier), or stag, or hart; the fallow-deer (Cervus daria), and the roebuck (Cervus capreolus)—the last two being much more common in our day than the first. While the red-deer and roe deer are probably indigenous, the fallow-deer are almost certainly exotic. Mr. Macdonald says that but few of the red-deer remain [...]
[...] frequently foil the hounds; they do not roam so wide in the rutting season, and they are more gregarious as well as stationary. The roe-deer appear to differ from the red and fallow in livin in families rather than herds, in having twin fawns, a male an a female, in grace of movement and in smallness of size; the [...]
[...] average height is two feet eight inches, and length three feet ten. The flesh is finer in fibre and more tender while young, and the average life is shorter. The roe-deer have also glossier coats, and are more active. The roebuck differs from kindred lords of the deer in being “the husband of one wife.” The [...]
[...] said, too, that the doe's “calling” in July is to its kids, to which it is devoted, and has nothing to do with rutting. Like the fallow-deer, the roe-deer suffer from severe seasons; unlike them, they are somewhat rare in England. Delicate as to food, they prefer the buds and shoots of trees to grazing, as indeed do the other [...]
Saturday review[Beilage] 23.10.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 23. Oktober 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 1
[...] Stiff wrapper, 1s., postage 2d. - FROM JEST to EARNEST. By the Rev. E. P. Roe, [...]
Saturday review14.05.1862
  • Datum
    Mittwoch, 14. Mai 1862
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] believe that Gustavus had really fallen at Lutzen as their fore fathers had been to believe that Harold had really fallen at Senlac. Sir Thomas Roe, who had been ambassador to Sweden, and to whose letters Mr. Bruce properly calls special attention, was strong on Gustavus' behalf; ...} his anxiety was fully shared by the mass [...]
[...] the King and his courtiers. The following letter is important on several grounds:— 23. [Sir Thomas Roe] to Henry Earl of Holland. Moved his M. long since and often concerning a reconciliation of all the Protestant churches in Europe. Since, there has been such progress made that it seems merely the [...]
[...] showing his deep zeal in the cause. At this time, Sir Henry Vane was gone as special ambassador to Gustavus, the King of Denmark, and the German princes. Roe was content to hope [...]
[...] at Court. Though the King and his Ministers are not quite so contemptuous as Sir Toby, they evidently looked upon things . very different eyes from those of “Sir Thomas Roe's cabinet”: — [...]
[...] cofferer's place makes the world think that there is some staggering in the friendship between the Lord Treasurer and Sir Henry, and those that are of Sir Thomas Roe's cabinet would persuade that Sir Henry is sent over to undo the affairs of the King of Sweden and his own. If so, the causes are, 1, his greatness with the Lord Marquis; 2, his too lively representations, [...]
Saturday review[Beilage] 29.02.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 29. Februar 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 1
[...] VESUVIUS. DE FOE'S NOVELS. ROE-SHOOTING IN THE BLACK FOREST. “I DO NOT LOVE YOU." With an Illustration. HINDU FESTIVAL OF The PONGOL. [...]
Saturday review[Beilage] 27.04.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 27. April 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 1
[...] THE HE ROE S OF CRAMPT ON : .* constructed and well written narrative i its tonc is excellent through [...]
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