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Saturday review08.10.1859
  • Datum
    Samstag, 08. Oktober 1859
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] lord. A sovereign for you, Wiggins.” The fact is, humble worth and an industrious life never lose their reward. For fifty years, man and boy, winter and summer, in sunshine and in rain, this fine old English working man has toiled upon his master's farm without an unloyal thought or a discontented wish. He has [...]
[...] T. Surtees Society has never put forth a more curious or interesting volume than its recent publication—under the able editorial care of its secretary, the Rev. James Raine—of the Fabric Rolls of York Minster. At first sight, indeed, the con tents are most uninviting. Page after page is occupied by crabbed, [...]
[...] are most important. Ducange himself is quite inadequate for the thorough understanding of this peculiar form of Latin, and Mr. Raine's appended glossary, though full and carefully executed, is obliged to leave not a few words unexplained. So much for philology. The economist, for his part, will do well to consult [...]
[...] have said enough, we hope, to show that the interest of the Fabric Rolls of York Minister is not confined to the architectu. ralist or, the antiquary. But Mr. Raine has unfortunately not extracted for his general readers the precious metal from the ore that he has exhumed. He has given us, for example, no such [...]
[...] different epochs, Papal and episcopal briefs for eollecting money, indulgences and privileges, letters and injunctions, wills and in dentures. Mr. Raine reminds us that Chaucer must have had a Yorkshire breviger in his mind when he described, in his Sompnoure's Tale, the alms-gatherer in Holderness:– [...]
[...] to the state, not only of the churches, but of the morals and manners of their parsons and #. in the northern counties in the fifteenth century. Mr. Raine has not acted wisely in sup ressing, as he tells us he has done, almost all the cases of immorality, especially among the clergy, reported in these [...]
Saturday review30.09.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 30. September 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] “event, came up in a special train.” He was of cours: “received with every demonstration of applause," and is it rained at the time, Mr. PEASE suggested that they should seek shelter for a few minutes in the public half the village, and Mr. GLADSTONE consented. “Mr. Pris: [...]
[...] º of arguments to support it. The uncertainty of his . movements kept everybody on thorns, and imposed a ** rainful strain on political co-operation. Mr. GLAbstone's most successful period was undoubtedly that in which he was a member of the PALMERSTON Cabinet, and was [...]
[...] his own eyes. As for the carriage-way, it is composed of blocks set roughly on edge, with a multiplicity of tiny reservoirs to catch the rain water. But, if little is visible to the eye, your sense of small is in the fullest activity. All the scents of the city, subdued during the day, appear to disengage themselves at sundown; and whiffs; [...]
[...] and shrubs of warm climates, many tropical plants, such is the banana, flourish throughout the year in the open i. With the fall of the rain, about the middle of September, fºllowed by bright exhilarating weather, the aspect of nature changº Brown and arid hills are clothed with verdure, and life succº, [...]
[...] Brown and arid hills are clothed with verdure, and life succº, to death. All through October the weather is all that an invali could desire, and, after the November rains, both winter and spring are mild and genial. There is seldom a day when going out ºf doors is impracticable. Thunderstorms are far from frequent. [...]
[...] of the trade winds. Rain seldom falls in summer and * but copious rains of short duration prevail from * º º of November to the beginning of April, chiefly during Fº º y - [...]
Saturday review20.11.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 20. November 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] during the last ten days. It is the third experience of the kind that has been granted to us during the year 1875. There has been an excess of rain in July, an excess of rain in October, and an excess of rain in November. There must be thousands of persons now turned out of their houses, [...]
[...] It is this latter difficulty that has been most brought home to us during the past week. So long as they have only rain to fear, Londoners are merely called upon to sympathize with the sufferings of others. But when wind and tide are in league, London is no better off than the [...]
[...] that London was thus reduced to the condition of so many other towns at the same time. The tidal flood and the rain flood might not have thus come together; but if they were to come at all it is perhaps as well that Londoners, who are exempt from the latter form of disaster, should be re [...]
[...] Even now in passing through the garden walks Upon the ground I saw a fallen nest Ruined and full of rain; and over me Beheld the uncomplaining birds already Busy in building a new habitation. [...]
[...] After a day of cloud and wind and rain Sometimes the setting sun breaks out again, And, touching all the darksome woods with light, [...]
[...] mission from the custom-house officers to land the Bibles, he ven tured on the only smuggling expedition in which he ever engaged. On a stormy day, when mingled snow and rain were falling, he landed his precious cargo in a boat. “I have,’ he says, “felt much happiness in getting a wetting in so good a cause.” The good [...]
Saturday review15.08.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 15. August 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] sions, is awful. Heat and cold alternate with astounding sudden ness, the rains are deluges, and half the winds of heaven are loaded with sand. The country, except in the neighbourhood of Lake Corangamite—the Caspian of Australia—is detestably . [...]
[...] ceaseless agitation, or tumbling over in cataracts of gleaming foam-the wind roaring through the rigging—timbers creaking as if the ship would break her heart—the spray and rain beating in your face—everything round in tumult —suddenly to descend into the quiet of a snug, well-lighted, little cabin, with the fire-light dancing on the white rosebud chintz, the well-furnished book [...]
[...] As when the strong storm-wind is reaping the plain; And loiters the boy in the briery lane; But †† aslant comes the silvery rain, [...]
[...] The swallows alone take the storm on their wing, And, taunting the tree-sheltered labourers, sing; Like pebbles, the rain breaks the face of the spring, And a bubble darts up from each widening ring; And the boy in dismay hears the loud shower fall. [...]
[...] The robin darts out from its bower of leaves; The wren peereth forth from the moss-covered eaves, And the rain-spatter'd urchin now gladly perceives That the beautiful bow bendeth over them ... [...]
Saturday review03.01.1874
  • Datum
    Samstag, 03. Januar 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] November contains an interesting comparison between the famines of 1770 and 1866 and the threatened famine of 1874. As regards the absence of rain and the consequent failure of crops, 1874 seems to hold a middle position between the two first-mentioned years. It is worse than 1866; it is [...]
[...] famine years. In 1770 the mischief was partly caused by one dry season following upon another. In Behar and North Bengal the rains had failed in 1768 as well as in 1769, and in August of the latter year rice was so scarce in Calcutta “that it was found impossible to get two ship [...]
[...] year in which the crops were fair in Behar and good in Bengal. The prolonged drought in the early part of 1770 greatly aggravated the evil, there being no rain worth speak ing of till the end of May. In 1866, on the contrary, there was an unusual rainfall during January and February, and [...]
[...] may have rice enough at its command, but may be putting off its distribution over the province in the hope that spring rains may render a part at least of the store unnecessary. This is not a contingency which ought to be kept in view. The difficulties of distribution will, under any circumstances, [...]
[...] description in the whole book than its opening passage:– On a small headland of the distant island of Lewis, an old man stood looking out on a desolate waste of rain-beaten sea. It was a wild and a wet day. §. out of the louring south-west, fierce gusts of wind were driving up volumes and flying rags of cloud, and sweeping onward at the same time [...]
[...] bride of an Englishman. He sees the last glimpse of her in the white handkerchief which she waves to him from the deck of the steamer through the mist and rain, and drives sadly, silently away through Stornoway back to Borva. At every turn he is reminded of his loss; it is the natural subject of talk for all the servants and [...]
[...] has got distinct sounds for all the degrees of an intricate relation ship, for the divisions of time, for the sun, moon, wind, lightning, and rain, for the most familiar kinds of animals, tame and wild, for the parts of the human frame, for the utensils of the dairy, the functions of the priesthood, and a few obvious wants, he is [...]
Saturday review06.07.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 06. Juli 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] lower part of the Bengal Presidency is essentially a rice-producing country, and for the successful growth of this crop a very large amount of rain is needed, especially during the months of Septem ber and October. In 1865 no rain at all fell during these two months, and a very serious deficiency in the rice harvest of the [...]
[...] alluvial and rice-producing, and intersected by numerous streams which couie down from the inland hills. These streams are torrents during the rains and broad reaches of sand during the dry season, fortuing in both shapes a serious hindrance to locomotion, besides giving rise to singularly destructive inundations. Their [...]
[...] besides giving rise to singularly destructive inundations. Their waters have not been turned to any account in the way of irri tion, and the country depends wholly on the supply of rain r the moisture necessary for the crops. The isolation of the rovince is extreme. It is separated from Central and Northern [...]
[...] Pooree, but exceeding it in Balasore; and the enormous quan tity of 30,000 tons had been exported from the latter district alone. In May, 1865, the rains were very heavy, amounting in Pooree to 13 inches, against an average of 2:1 inches. But from that time to the end of September the fall in this district was only about [...]
[...] about 24 times their average rate by September, before any alarm was felt in Orissa generally. In Cuttack and Ba'asore there had been sufficient, though not abundant, rain throughout the summer. In the former district the crops were promising, and in the latter prices had not gone very much beyond the point to which expor [...]
[...] tation had already brought them. - - - - When, however, October, the most critical month for the whole rice harvest, went by without rain, very great alarm was felt over the whole province. The dealers had no large stocks on hand, and consequently closed their shops. Unfortu [...]
Saturday review17.09.1859
  • Datum
    Samstag, 17. September 1859
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] of the Missouri, in j. broad zone traversed by the Platte and Arkansas rivers, where the climate is doubtless warmer than at Red River, snow falls in winter, but little or no rain is seen in spring or summer. The consequence is, that a great part of the soil is struck with incurable sterility, and the passage across this [...]
[...] of climate prevail in the central region of British America. During the severe winters but little snow falls, while in the hot season the rains are frequent and abundant. At Red River the winter fall of snow is scarcely a third of that of Canada, but during the five warm months double the quantity of rain falls [...]
[...] full extent the principle which we have last stated. The whole question was not raised by the facts of the case. . The Wandle was proved to be supplied by water which, after falling in rain over a large district round Croydon, sank into the ground, and made its way into the river, sometimes by percolation in the [...]
[...] pertinent observation was, that if it was unlawful to cut off the supplies of a stream while percolating through the soil, it must be equally a wrong to intercept the rain which must ulti mately find its way into the river, which would certainly be a novel and stringent interference with rights hitherto unques [...]
[...] of the tempest.” At length he reached M. and visited on the following day the clay of Blackpºts, which has so much troubled the geologists of the north. The rain continued to be his companion on his visit to Portsoy, a small town in Banffshire, the neighbourhood of which is of extraordinary interest to the [...]
Saturday review17.08.1861
  • Datum
    Samstag, 17. August 1861
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] NORTH DEVON IN THE RAIN. [...]
[...] HE ill-fated writer of this article, having, in two successive years, attempted to explore North Devon in the rain, pro poses to describe so much of that humid country as the clouds allowed to remain visible. He has seen probably as much as he [...]
[...] the top of it he is still in Somerset, but is upon the seaward border of Exmoor, and is getting near to Devon, to scenery of renowned beauty, and to the rain. The road runs for ten miles along the top of the high cliffs which form the southern shore of the Bristol Channel, and then descends into the deep valley of [...]
[...] sea, a lime-kiln, on which, if it is not in use, he may again smoke, with the command of a slightly altered prospect, for perhaps a second hour. The rain sometimes falls perpendicu larly, and sometimes flies past upon the wind. The rivers gain in voice and volume, and in the depth of the colour which they [...]
[...] which Kingsley aptly calls “the mile-long man-stye,” to Ilfra combe, which is a considerable, and would be a cheerful sea-side town, if it were not for this perpetual rain. It is a conjecture of many critics that the lines of a well-known poem— And the stately ships go in [...]
[...] The name is said to come from a pool in the Barle, where a formidable outlaw named Simon, or Seignmund, took his morn ing bath, in some very distant age when it did not always rain upon Exmoor, and when the natives did not get every day a very complete washing without the trouble of taking off their clothes. [...]
[...] POISONQUIS, NOXIOUS, AND SUSPECTED PLANTS OF OUR FIELDS AND WOODS. By ANNE PRATT. With 44 Coloured Plates. Imperial lomo RAIN CLOUD, THE. By C. ToMLINson, Esq. 16mo . RAMBLE IN SPRING. By the Rev. C. A. Johns. 16mo RAMBLE IN SUMMER. By the Rev. C. A. Johns. 16m [...]
Saturday review06.03.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 06. März 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] follow up the action of contraction or shrinkage include heat— whether that of the sun or internal to the earth—with its opposing cold, the agency of wind, that of water in the form of rain, rivers, glacier and berg ice, and chemical agency. The respective action of each is briefly traced by Mr. Kinahan, who points out [...]
[...] If the sun acts alone, or only in conjunction with wind, it is a destroyer; but when it is joined with cold and rain, the effects are modified; as ali combined cause vegetation which eventually clothes the surface of the ground with a protecting envelope. Thus it is evident that the sun ought [...]
[...] Wind also is a denudant, the power of which has been scarcely estimated to the full, especially when aided by rain or by the chemical constitution of the rocks. Its effects are to be variously studied in soft sandstone cliffs, such as those of the New Red Sand [...]
[...] worked by the dissolution of lime into “table” and “mushroom * rocks. That wind and heat unaided by water can do similar work is proved by weathered rocks of fantastic shape occurring in rain less regions within the tropics. Rain and rivers seem the least efficient of agents in themselves; but when combined with the [...]
[...] for ages run over polished, scratched, and etched surfaces of rock without having been able to obliterate the ice marks. Indirectly, in fact, rain, by giving rise to an envelope of peat, forms a protect ing envelope against denudation; and chemical action, although in itself an assistant to other destroyers, may also be in an indirect [...]
[...] horizontal movement, cannot produce ravines or narrow winding valleys, but that these hollows have been excavated either by ice, rain, or river, Mr. Kinahan controverts by pointing to the geolo gical features of the South and West of Ireland. Were the land-level stationary, or gradually rising, the natural tendency of the action [...]
Saturday review30.12.1865
  • Datum
    Samstag, 30. Dezember 1865
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] number for the coming year being contributed by his son-in-law, M. Neyret. . That gentleman informs us that during the first sit months the heaviest rains will occur towards the end of January and the beginning of February. , March will be dry generally, though the last ten days will bring much wet to the North ºf [...]
[...] though the last ten days will bring much wet to the North ºf France, April and May also will be dry; but June and July will be stormy, with much rain. August is likely to be wet, and September will commence and conclude with rain. October will open with rain, principally in the North of France; about the 18th [...]
[...] or zoth it will pour, and at the end of that month and the beginning of the next storms will prevail along the coast of the Mediterranean. The rest of November will be marked by rain ºf wind. December is likely to bring rain or snow about the 2nd, rain from the 8th to the Ioth, and rain or snow from the 15th to [...]
[...] rain from the 8th to the Ioth, and rain or snow from the 15th to the 21st. Finally, the year is to expire amidst “great winds, with or without rain, in the South of France.” M. Neyret has not favoured his countrymen with a very cheerful programme, [...]
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