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Saturday review20.05.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 20. Mai 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] humanity, but for the most part they either belong to the intellectual side of our nature, or they are beneficial conse quences of moral defects. It is pleasanter to see men treating those who differ from them in matters of opinion with re spectful interest or careless indifference, than to see them [...]
[...] wisdom, there is surely no need to i. him the praise of intel lectual acuteness. But suppose that he does not begin to clamour in this sort. Suppose that he sees that a certain change is coming, but also sees that it is not coming just yet. And suppose that he acts accordingly. How he will act will depend upon . somewhat [...]
[...] approves or disapproves. For it must not be taken for granted, as it seems to be taken for granted by those who declaim against idea-mongers, that those who first see that a thing is coming will be those who wish to see it come. It is just as likely to be quite the other way. The little cloud like a man's hand, [...]
[...] be a cloud charged with poisonous vapours. Whether of the two it is in no way affects the acuteness of the man who is the first to see it. Such a man sees that a certain change is inevitably coming. It may be a change which he would give worlds to hinder alto gether. But it cannot be altogether hindered. A wise man in [...]
[...] did not know, a good deal may often be saved by yielding a little in time. But in all these cases the evil cannot be put off or lessened or modified in any way, unless some one sees the first [...]
[...] who undertook any cause of this sort, the abolition of the slave trade for instance, ought simply to be laughed at as “idea mongers,” who were silly enough to see a thing which other people did not see. ... Ought they, we would ask, to have done absolutely nothing at all? Ought they, because it was not likely that the [...]
[...] and limbs; he has a brain which, from analogy, we may assume to be useful in some kind of intellectual process; and as we see this complex machinery producing nothing in the shape of recreation except a very disagreeable amount of noise and clatter, we infer [...]
[...] would desire; for reflection upon them may save us from the dis appointment which awaits the over-sanguine. We ought to be prepared to see reforms work slowly, and to encounter many un foreseen checks. Yet, on the whole, nobody doubts that the world [...]
[...] commercial speculation as well as a political gain. Oppressed b such thoughts as these remarks may naturally cause, the †. public looks with anxiety to see what professional men of recog nised ability have to say on the subject of provision against any [...]
[...] change which has passed over the Church of England since that time, the circumstances of Dr. Hampden's nomination to the See of Hereford should be compared with those of Dr. Temple's nomination to the See of Exeter. In both cases the new Bishop's supposed opinions had been the subject of some sort of [...]
Saturday review13.02.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 13. Februar 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] cannot practise in the great hospitals. May not M. Mavras's interpellation be the expression of a somewhat similar feel ing ' An ambitious man who sees no chance of becoming a member of an irresponsible Ministry may come in time to see extraordinary virtues in a responsible one. To recur to our [...]
[...] trade to be fostered into unnatural luxuriance. We confess, how ever, that without some process of the sort we have not much expectation of seeing the fulfilment of Lord Spencer's hope. y, he asked, should we not see manufactures starting up in different parts of the country? Because, a cynic might answer, [...]
[...] THE TIMES ON THE SEE OF CANTERBURY. [...]
[...] tion of Christianity till it %f acquired an antiquity of six centuries on the neighbouring Continent. We might perhaps dispute the right of the See of St. Augus tine to be older than any throne of temporal authority in these isles, for the , continuous identity, amid all enlarge [...]
[...] writing in the grotesque, half-sneering, half-sententious style in which the Times has thought proper to write the history of the See of Canterbury. [...]
[...] undoubtedly be given to the two principals, because it was felt that without their presence the performance could not begin, but hardly anybody else could entertain a hope of seeing the fight in [...]
[...] But even filial reverence and affection could not make Guicciardini forego his habitual determination to see a man as he was: and even in favour of his father he could not pass by without animadversion the fault for which he had least patience, want of [...]
[...] conveying to the youthful mind the general impression of the con servation of force, which would take its place in a more strictly scientific treatise, we see no great objection to such language. Only we have a general fear of seeing what is hypothetical in science pass for an established fact in nature. It is convenient, [...]
[...] the whole of the backyard.” It is unnecessary to quote the moral addressed to those who, “in whatever they have to discuss, can only see that which is bad”; because, barring a misprint or two, there is little in these fables upon which literary Kavronyas can exercise their snouts. [...]
[...] in the other, are after all more accurate studies of Englishmen than have ever been executed by a masculine artist. If it is good for all human beings occasionally to see themselves as others see them, it must, we suppose, be edifying for men, when reading novels of this kind, to regard themselves for a while seriously and undoubtingly [...]
Saturday review14.03.1863
  • Datum
    Samstag, 14. März 1863
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] print what he pleases, and may cast into prison any rash official who illegally arrests or annoys him. A second set look to France as the sun of their sky. They see the height [...]
[...] stand apart altogether from our present. They are not interwoven either with our existing life or with the scenery most familiar to us. We know that if we see them once, or at most twice, it is all we are likely to see of them in our lives; and we associate the notion of something fugitive and exceptional with our visit to [...]
[...] fitable, if not an edifying, use, on a great day of public rejoicing. And though it is the fashion to say that we in $. land are not a sight-seeing or a pageant-loving people, it only needs the slightest glance at facts to see that we seize with the blindest [...]
[...] which resulted in many cases was no more than might reasonably have been expected. Disappointment is, perhaps, hardly the proper word; for if people did not see what they went to see, they ot what they meant to get – viz. a jollification. To borrow the anguage of an advertisement, “the proceedings were everywhere [...]
[...] for if the Queen herself had come up to London to see the illumi nations—as we learn from a penny daily paper she did to see the early part of Saturday's procession—and if she had ridden [...]
[...] mark? Nevertheless, they do care about him immensely; and so great has been the attraction of the Duke's Motto, that for some weeks places could not be obtained to see the piece satisfactorily without several days' notice. The acting of Mr. Fechter, who, as [...]
[...] finally of Jansenist doctrines, and which has always been taken in the Roman Church to be their inexorable condemnation. He lived to see Ganganelli Pope, and almost lived to see the suppression of the Jesuits, and the acts of Scipio de Ricci, and the Synod of Pistoia. In the whole later history of Jansenism he was a pro [...]
[...] excommunicated by the Pope for º; the principles of secular authority against i. pretensions of the Holy See, Peru has found its Passaglia. [...]
[...] A. J. B. BERESFORD HOPE, President. GEORGE GILBERT SCOTT, Treasurer. March 1863. JOSEPH Ch.ARKE. Hon. See. WOOLWICH, SANDHURST, THE LINE, AND THE INDIAN CIVIL SERVICE. WO CAMBRIDGE MEN, experienced in Tuition, receive [...]
[...] Please to see that no other Edition is substituted. [...]
Saturday review25.10.1873
  • Datum
    Samstag, 25. Oktober 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Government being embodiments of great general principles is full of danger to the electioneering prospects of the Liberal party. He sees in the disestablishment of the Irish Church an embodiment of the great general principle that Churches may be conveniently disestablished. This does not at all [...]
[...] under their own supremacy of the Slavonic tribes in the Turkish and in the Austro-Hungarian dominions. Patriotie Greeks can have no desire to see their traditional capital absorbed in the Russian Empire, nor will they be inclined to promote disturbances in Turkey for the benefit of their [...]
[...] debaters of succeeding generations, and thus the Union speakers have enjoyed the double advantage of addressing an audience that wished to see an ancient fame maintained, and that could be readily transported with the facile enthu siasm of prejudice. The bulk of undergraduates have [...]
[...] they will get an opportunity of speaking in public, and young men to whom birth or wealth gives a reasonable certainty of entering Parliament at an early age see the rewards of a Union training most distinctly before them. It is not therefore wonderful that among old Union [...]
[...] to say all the harm of it that he could; and now that this harm has been said, it is equally natural that politicians who wish to see the education policy of the Government reversed, and politicians who wish to make the Government [...]
[...] sermons, it was no wonder, seeing “he had a lot of hungry dogs looking down on him, to tak’ a bite of him gin they could.” Another witness, who took a comprehensive view of the subject, [...]
[...] Lord Chancellor would be likely to leave the Secretary and Manager of the South Kensington Museum to himself, and if he has only the enterprising genius of Mr. Cole, we shall see what we shall see. There was for many years a Statute Law Commission, which com prised all the judges and other legal dignitaries as commissioners, [...]
[...] authors have played upon some familiar theme. The comparison of parallel passages by the leaders of literature is in many ways instructive. It is interesting, for example, to see how writers differing so widely from each other as Hawthorne, Dickens, Scott, Leigh Hunt, Longfellow, Béranger, Victor Hugo, and Mr. [...]
[...] retations of Genesis, we are not at all clear that Adam might not ave studied the genealogy of Smith. The Smiths, we are glad to see, fill a considerable space among what Mr. Grazebrook calls the “armigerous families” of Worcestershire, and we are further glad to see that all the Worcestershire Smiths have the sense to remain [...]
[...] power. For, regard it as we may, a growth it assuredly was, and a very slow one too. Even in the fourth century, as the author justly observes, the See of Milan seemed more important than the See of Rome; and it was the Bishop of Hippo, not the Pope, who dominated the great African Councils of that period. [...]
Saturday review06.05.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 06. Mai 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] ally a strong pressure put on the Government by those who wish to see the bargain concluded. In Germany it is just the other way. There it is Prince BISMARCK who wishes to buy, and the owners of the railways who do not [...]
[...] office. Now you see, they say, the class of men you had to deal with. You thought that you might temporize with them, that you might be content with moving some to new de [...]
[...] would then have been a fair chance of seeing a really final Bill passed in the present year; whereas in its present form, [...]
[...] ensure a preference being shown for British vessels all over the world. The natural inference from this is, that British shipowners can have no special interest in seeing foreign ships subjected to similar regulations. The more en tirely these regulations are confined to British ships, [...]
[...] HERE are some things which everybody sees, but which there is a general reluctance to speak about until some kind of explosion occurs and compels attention. For some years past, for [...]
[...] precious a thing to be exposed to ruffling and jostling. Girls now adays go about too much into places where they are likely to encounter equivocal people, and to hear of, if not to see, equivocal scenes. Nobody would wish to see English girls shut up like the pupils of a convent, but it can hardly be doubted that just at [...]
[...] they make a clear agreement. The ticket in the case lately decided had on it the words “See Back,” and on the back was a notice that the Company would not be liable for lost property beyond the value of Iol. , Now, if the clerk who received the money [...]
[...] rather of those more intimately connected with the horse, who have been concerned with him either as owners or trainers, or lately as residents in Newmarket, with opportunities of seeing him from day to day, and who of course would not have allowed him to be [...]
[...] Ay, the toppermost class now-a-days have left off the use of wheels for the good of their constitutions, so they traipse and walk for many years up foreign hills, where you can see nothing but snow and fogs, till there's no more left to walk up; and if they reach home alive and ha’nt got too old and weared out, they walk and see a little of their own parishes. [...]
[...] “And I have no doubt she will keep her word to him in her usual pre cise manner.” “But see what she implied to me! I distinctly understood from her that the answer would be favourable.” [...]
Saturday review15.01.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 15. Januar 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] The logical neatness of the French organization seems rather to fail in this instance. The execution is public, but the greatest care is taken that as few people as possible shall see it. The time is not known, except to the few enthusiasts who watch till they see the scaffold erected on the night before the event. Great care [...]
[...] slowly tortured to death by the most revolting process at the Grèye, and a highly-polished English gentleman went over to Paris expressly to see it done. We now take pains to reduce every extra minute of expectation for a far more execrable villain, and try to cheat anybody brutal enough to desire to see his death of [...]
[...] }. sure the thread which in the first volume connected Mary Queen of Scots with the Tower was slenderer still. Still we do not see why the story of an Anglo-Spanish conspiracy, if there ever was such a thing, should be called Her Majesty's Tower; we do not see in what sense either Lady Essex or Sir Thomas Over [...]
[...] Just suppose Some god should come and with their wishes close: “See here am I, come down of my mere grace To right you: soldier, take the merchant's place l You, counsellor, the farmer's go your way, [...]
[...] But it is hard to see what is gained, as regards force, lucidity, or elegance, by the elongated equivalent of Mr. Martin— “What of yourself?” should some one ask me now, [...]
[...] “Not know myself,” he answered, “You say true: I do not, so I take a stranger's due.” Mr. Howes, too, sees the importance of compensating for, if he cannot reproduce, the point of the Latin:— “Art thou,” he cries, “blind to thyself alone? [...]
[...] - When Wine throws his brain into a stew, And he for every lamp sees two— [...]
[...] -------- "" PARAGUAY.” - IT must surely be in irony that Mr. Masterman has adorned the cover of his book with the motto Paz y Justicia, seeing that during the seven eventful years which he spent in Paraguay peace was banished from the country and justice never abode in it. The [...]
[...] an accomplished man of letters, and the result is a work as well calculated to diffuse sound ideas on English subjects as any we can hope to see. The most important essays are those treating of political subjects, especially of eminent English statesmen and thinkers. Palmerston, Cobden, Disraeli, Mill, Carlyle, are criti [...]
[...] to find his spiritual family-tree thus rudely cut up by the roots. Anathema is the natural resource of outraged ecclesiastical dignity, and we expect to see Lipsius's learned labours in the Index at an early date. There is probably no recent work which the Pope will be more emphatic in denouncing as mendacious, [...]
Saturday review[Beilage] 21.10.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 21. Oktober 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] º SINE. See Name on Label. [...]
[...] UDIE'S SELECT LIBRARY. —CHEAP BOOKS.—See [...]
[...] MUDIES SELECT LIBRARY,-NEW BOOKS.–See [...]
[...] lations,’ and see how the disgusting tribe of sham doctors are or - - related.”—Public Opinion- pilloried and their doings London : BAILLIRRR, TINDALL, & Cox, King William Street, Strand. [...]
[...] HEALTH and ART, LIVERPOOL CONGRESS.—See THE BUILDER of this Week—Maintenance of Roads-Constantinople—View of the “Baynard Castle,” and of Brighton School ºf Art, with Plan – As to the Injuence of Acade [...]
[...] MEMORIALS of the SOUTH SAXON SEE [...]
[...] THE MAID of SKER. By R. D. Blackwort. Fiſh?” crown 8vo. 7s.6d. - FAIR to SEE: a Novel. By Lavasci Lºmº " . Edition, 1 vol. 6s, º [...]
[...] ** "...-a ºrºugh it. with ºknº, afte: re-rºº-ºº: to see the best of Norway with as much comfort and luxury as the country affords. - * -- It will also include, in a popular and readable form, [...]
[...] cultural purposes and the western part to mining and manufacturing i or by reference to the Map, of Europe wer can readily see how'ſ rise in the level of the sea of a few hundreds of feet would suffice to inundate the whole northern part of Europe; and, on the other hand, how the [...]
[...] *...* For Complete Lists of EDWARD STANFORD’S PUBLICATIONS, see Special Catalogue, Gratis on application; or by Post for One Stamp. [...]
Saturday review04.06.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 04. Juni 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] rejecting schemes for the machinery of secret voting. It would be a great pity that the Government should waste a night on their Bill, unless they see that it will pass; and now that Mr. GLADSTONE has been to the Derby, he may see in the culmination of his popularity a substitute for declaring himself more [...]
[...] by the appointment of bishops with fixed dioceses and terri torial titles; yet the law of the land was so far respected that the real English sees were not infested by irre gular occupants. Nothing was done about Ireland, where the Roman Catholic bishops, unlike their new English [...]
[...] came obvious also that the policy we have advocated was impracticable. " - - Although, therefore, we should have preferred to see the Government Bill amended in the sense of Mr. DixoN's amend ment, if it could have been done at the instigation of the [...]
[...] and by a combination of fraud and violence, appointed to the See of St. David's (the Archbishopric of Wales) a lawyer and courtier, on the under standing that he should forego the right to be Archbishop of Wales, and [...]
[...] independence of the See of St. David's of the See of Canter [...]
[...] bury, did not seem to have any notion of making either of them independent of the See of Rome. Who the courtier lawyer spoken of by Mr. Williams is we do not know. It may have been Peter 1)e Leia, Prior of Wenlock, or it may have been [...]
[...] three centuries in oblivion—has ever been anti-Roman. We understand that Mr. Williams cited the Venerable Bede, Augustin Thierry, and even Chaucer, to prove what to our minds requires no proof–that the See of St. David's is properly independent of the See of Canterbury. It is not more than seven hundred years ago—say in the reign of Henry II.-that [...]
[...] anvil, and usual accessories, which are worked by the hero of the iece, Henry Little. If anybody desires to see how a person not rought up to the business can forge a knife-blade, his curiosity may be gratified at the Adelphi Theatre. The scene of the piece [...]
[...] to conclude, we may quote the following effusion of an elder who was invited to pray on the day after a battle —“Oh, Lord! I never see such a day as it was yesterday, and I don't believe you ever did.” Extempore prayer has its difficulties. [...]
[...] It is an intermediate family, originally located in the tropical parts of Central Africa, and which has long since disappeared, "Our readers will see that, notwithstanding the scientific pretensions of [...]
Saturday review18.06.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 18. Juni 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] criticism is to create an impression, the strength of which does not all depend on its consonance with facts, that the Government do not see clearly what it is they are doing. [...]
[...] centuries old. The error can, and no doubt will, be put right in the Lords, but it would be more graceful in the Govern ment to see that it is put right in the Commons. [...]
[...] a certain quickness of perception; a quickness of perception no doubt which needs to be reined in, a quickness of perception which sees part of a thing so fast that it fails to see the whole thing and its relations to other things, but still quickness of per ception as opposed to slowness and dulness. A real blunder, a [...]
[...] nected with any word meaning “white”? “Albrecht” is the German form; and it would be well to compare the words “Hubert,” “Robert,” “Herbert,” and “Gilbert,” to see whether “bert” and not “ert” be not the etymolo gical termination in all such names. It would be well to see whether Queen Anne is not dead and [...]
[...] substance of other places, no doubt; but we can hardly wonder that the pretty cousin goes home again as wise as she came. She has Å; to see Oxford, as £eicester failed to see the Spanish fleet, “because it was not in sight.” It is the season, not the method of her *. which is at fault. The one [...]
[...] his business, has modernized the play, and has also shortened it and added some love-making which is not in the original. We should like to know whether the people who went to see L'Aven turière at the Princess's Theatre are the same people who go to see La Grande Duchesse at the same house, and whether they like [...]
[...] with her well-known rush that was so irresistible last season. During the next three months she may be expected to make such signal improvement that in September we may hope to see her [...]
[...] in a poem to the text of “non eadem est aetas, non mens,” the presiding divinity of the Law Courts, for which he was about to quit the shades of Henry VI. at Eton (see vol. ii. poem xxiv.):— Illic implicitos inter latet abdita sentes [...]
[...] masters to the pupils—a scarcely fair proceeding, seeing that ual rights. We regret that we have no room for samples ..º. Jebb's [...]
[...] there married her to another.” Here is a proclamation of 1623, which just now we should like to see in º: The tenants of the Barony of Kendal were sued for combining to oppose the proclamation for abolishing “Tenant right.” The King by his letter [...]
Saturday review26.12.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 26. Dezember 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] succeed, that we can conceive that an Ultramontane able to look ahead, and not dazzled by petty temporary and local triumphs, would prefer to see the Established ë. preserved exactly as it is. - [...]
[...] case it has been in possible to promote M. DE ForcADE DE LAROQUETTE without offending the Minister who has been dis missed to make room for him. M. PINARD declines to see [...]
[...] that are hardly a shade less deadly, mutatis mutandis; at all events, from vices and foibles which their victims would probably count quite as deadly if they could only see themselves as others see them. Take weakness of purpose, for example. It is as certain as any [...]
[...] and happy household book which is always to be, but never is. Mr. Childers, First Lord of the Admiralty, expatiates on this golden dream. He sees, or says that he sees, and wants us to think [...]
[...] -that we see, how all these glorious things shall come to pass; when we shall have our tarts all jam and no crust, when we shall have everything better than ever, and fewer bills to pay. He tells us [...]
[...] France or Spain than any one now can wish it to have been. Of this policy Iłacon was a forward and able champion. With those who see, or believe that they see, what this policy would have led to, this is a point against him hard to be got over. Ilis immense powers, his inexhaustible fertility of exposition and argument, his [...]
[...] means, Mr. Spedding asks who has a right to cast the first stone at Bacon:— It must not be forgotten that we see here not only thoughts and in tentions half formed and imperfectly explained, but we see the seamy side of them, which in other cases is kept out of view. Bacon liked to call [...]
[...] wrong, but we cannot even guess what he would give us instead. Possibly we might find out further on in the book; but, as we said, human nature is weak. We see that names, generally in odd spellings, are thrown about, and that Italics are used as liberally as by Mr. Croker himself; we see that there is a great deal about [...]
[...] I think we are to see in these Extracts a succession of Suits to recover Lands from Peykirk which followed each other till the time of the Abbot Kinsinus—an intruder, not a canonical Abbot till loš1—and who ceased to [...]
[...] should not have been conscious that, whether or not his presence were illegal, it was at least grossly indecent. America narrowly escaped the scandal of seeing the President convicted by the single vote of his successor—a vote foreknown and assured beforehand, and universally taken for granted by fiends and foes. [...]
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