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Saturday review22.06.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 22. Juni 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] honours. The most conspicuous part of the Roman spectacle will be the display of obedient unanimity and of absolute submission to the authority of the Holy See. Modern Roman Catholic writers justly boast that the effect of revolution and of apostasy has been to discountenance religious variety and [...]
[...] present day are generally of humble origin; devotion to the Pope is now perfectly safe, except in Poland; and in almost every country a leaning to the Holy See involves the mild excitement of political opposition. By a singular though superficial felicity, Catholicism has become fashionable without [...]
[...] in which the weekly monitor of the working-man addressed his readers. And then he significantly urged them to attend next Monday at St. James's Hall, and see for themselves who these wretched grovellers could be whose description of themselves involved the incongruous combination of [...]
[...] time. They are at all times and under all circumstances watching, or watched by, one another; working out some command of their leaders, or seeing that it is worked out by others. We have seen what they can do whel, their plans are concentrated on matters affecting their own trades; [...]
[...] centre of every social orbit next morning. Nothing adds more to the pleasure of frequenting their company than to see how thoroughly they enjoy the noble position in which heaven has placed them. In early life most of them have been exposed to the [...]
[...] volt. There are nevertheless plenty of writers in the press, with whose views the Governor-General of India apparently agrees, who see no cause for the slightest apprehension. Their idea is that the country between the Russian and Indian frontiers, including broad tracts within both frontiers but interposing [...]
[...] Copen. 35l. GENTLEMAN. Then he got worse out of it than I did? Copse. Yes, Sir ; you see he was a better plucked one than you were. In reference to the farmer's son he said, “Did he do it well? mostly does. Oh! he is a clever man.” [...]
[...] and legends. His famous “Exhortation to the Greeks” consists almost entirely of an abstract of legendary poetry, with the one refrain of comment, “You see what absurd and immoral bosh this is l’ Just so the one lesson which the historian of philosophy can draw from his wide literary survey is, “You see how impotent [...]
[...] always had to horse themselves showed that they were not a Ritterschaft, as distinguished from the real Ritterschaft of the Normans, who, as one may see in the Tapestry, brought their horses, their inseparable companions, with them. But in this fact of the Danes horsing themselves the Professor sees a “special [...]
[...] THE GREAT PYIRAMID." (Second Notice.) F there is any one point which we should have expected to see definitively settled by the fullest and most precise measure ments in a scientific exploration of the Great Pyramid on the present [...]
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. [...]
Saturday review25.11.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 25. November 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] criticism. But at any rate this was the last occasion on which those who held this opinion had the gratification of seeing England act as they wished; and SALDANHA was the last victim of the dying policy of Lord CASTLEREAGH. [...]
[...] many vicissitudes, gained a firm hold in Portugal; and SALDANHA, as a patriot, may have had the pleasure of thinking he had lived long enough to see his country growing every year more peaceful, more respected, and more prosperous. Unhappy Spain sees her little neighbour [...]
[...] may not be so completely falsified as we could wish to see them. The right of Parliament to impose conditions when it gives its aid to a landowner to do something which, [...]
[...] E are glad to see some signs of sober reason and common sense being at last brought to bear on the sad problem of the drunkenness which degrades and ruins [...]
[...] promptly corrected by their successors, and thus in the long run the Roman See would always be on the side of truth, But this modified doctrine will not help us here. The Holy See is committed by the unbroken tradition of centuries to the principle [...]
[...] she first accidentally sees him in the carriage, “the shock, the delight, makes me wild”; when he calls upon her a few days after wards, “this,” she says, “was my patent of mobility.” But the [...]
[...] If any one will take the trouble to look to Mr. Parker's notes, he will see that every clause implies some grotesque misconception. But we were specially tickled with Claudius going to see the wild beasts fed—a harmless sight enough in some places. Surely this [...]
[...] But we were specially tickled with Claudius going to see the wild beasts fed—a harmless sight enough in some places. Surely this is not a grim joke, hen Mr. Parker speaks of “seeing the [...]
[...] After this she sees Nero left in the lane, lifts him over the fence, and returns to the “stump" of the tree where Julius is hiding in the branches; asks the dog if he belongs “to that horrible man at [...]
[...] tastes:— And look 1 o'er the meadow comes Walter, He smiles when he sees you are here. I think his expression would alter, If he found you had gone to the fair. [...]
Saturday review10.08.1872
  • Datum
    Samstag, 10. August 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] nions. Although the present occupant of the Holy See has not been found manageable, his successor may perhaps pursue a different policy. The contrast between the doctrines of [...]
[...] deficiencies of the country unless the persons for whose benefit the law has been made take some trouble in administering it or seeing it administered. Many of those on whose behalf [...]
[...] possible misfortune that she should be a roarer, for, if as sound in wind as in limb, the three-year-old prizes would apparently be at her mercy. It is a treat to see her galloping, but she gallops with her mouth wide open, and it is too likely that we are now seeing the best of her. Despite her infirmity, Cantinière [...]
[...] Various reflections, might be suggested, but at present we are content to remark that, in spite of Captain Burton and Mr. Hep worth Dixon, we see no reason ..". that polygamy in ūtah differs from what might have been inferred from a prior; speculation. [...]
[...] W WI2 have seen that the interruption of communion between the Church of Utrecht and the Holy See dates from the arbitrary deposition of Archbishop Codde, which the authorities, both ecclesiastical and civil, in Holland refused to recognize. This [...]
[...] and the pressing necessity thus created for providing against the extinction of the episcopate was met by the appointment and consecration of De Bock to the see of Haarlem; and some years later, in 1758, the see of Deventer was also filled up, both with the sanction of the Government. Several attempts were now made [...]
[...] consecrated in 1865, when he addressed an earnest and respect ful appeal for the restoration of communion with the Holy See to it.us IX., who in return “condemned and cursed with “. ...is power tº is new abortion of unrikuteousness” in a brief [...]
[...] Ami Rollant, prozdom, juvente bele, Cunjo serai ad Aisen ma capele. M. Gaston Paris (Histoire poétique de Charlemagne) sees in the former of these couplets a Capetian, and in the latter a Carlovingian, origin. Speaking generally, it is impossible to [...]
[...] the sufferer in purse as well as in reputation. On the other side are urged the cases of the novelist who wishes to dramatize his own novels and of him who does not wish to see them dramatized [...]
[...] see why the Messrs. T. should be left out, or even the printers Messrs. W.; and for ourselves, being inclined to give every one his due, we would make a point of finding out the name of the [...]
Saturday review25.09.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 25. September 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] ‘persons who see nothing “illegitimate" in the attempt to [...]
[...] “The argument that if an allusion to incest can be construed out of any passage of Manfred, everybody must see that Mrs. Stowe's story is true, and that Byron must have committed incest with his sister [an argument never adduced by any one out of Bed [...]
[...] he is little likely to have been familiar. His wife, to be sure, was a pattern, and the house was a scene of the domestic virtues; but we see appreciation of her master in the reply of his cook maid to the stranger who wished to see Wordsworth's study— “This is master's i. but he studies in the fields"; and also [...]
[...] retort, to compel him to silence under reproof, and yet to expect him to make our interests his main concern; it is idle not to see that he merely reconciles himself to silence and respect as Part of his contract, a condition to be submitted to till some [...]
[...] way as the Guliot Caves and Les Boutiques, and if you go there with the tide coming in under a stiffish breeze, and hear the roar of the waters and see the wild clouds of splashed-up foam as the waves are forced higher and higher into the funnel, making the ground tremble as they tear upward, you will hear and see some [...]
[...] authors, it ought to take good care of them, and not permit them to exhaust their valuable talent by incessant composition. It is much more entertaining to see a good play three times than to see three different bad plays. Mr. Robertson's plays do not deserve to be called bad, but they are so very moderately good that whether [...]
[...] —i by the student. The merest smatterer in speculative philosophy will See at a glance that the summit of the theory is that abstract Ensor. One which figures in so many systems; but what is the exact function of the Sephirah (pl. Sephiroth), which, though a divine [...]
[...] most beautiful doll to be had, that will undress,” as a present to the Chancellor's little granddaughter. Under the guidance of the Countess, we see the liestoration in rose-colour; “the days never to be recalled without a blush” appear as uncommonly pleasant and harmless days. - [...]
[...] dominion, and the battle which raised Severus to undisputed power, the great fight of Lyons, was fought on Gaulish soil. Dut we at once see the wide difference between this struggle and the earlier one. In the struggle of the first century we can easily see that the moral as well as the political yoke of iº had been so [...]
[...] IT may be “pleasant” to Lord Desart, and to other young noblemen, “to see one's name in print.” There are various ways in which such a taste may be gratified. The Police Courts furnish one channel through which this pieasure may be obtained. [...]
Saturday review24.06.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 24. Juni 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Bill would be direct compulsion. In the first instance, the child is forbidden to work unless he has been to school, and it is hoped that his parents will see the disadvantages [...]
[...] taken together, seem to make his election by the Senate a very natural event. It is easy to understand that many Senators may have wished to see him restored to public life without at all desiring to see the present Ministry overturned. They may have thought that his [...]
[...] ill support, although the public did not always show their value of the good thing while they had it. One could hardly form a hopeful estimate of the future of the British stage from seeing Mr. Alfred Wigan playing in the first piece of a night to an audience which had evidently come to secure places for seeing [...]
[...] waited on Angus, on Crinon, and on many another highbred i. that left the sale ring amid a tempest of cheers, we cannot elp regretting to see horses §, only be recovered by an exceptional run of good luck [...]
[...] Camden Professor of Ancient History in the University of Oxford, Canon of Canterbury. London: Longmans & Co. 1876. f See Saturday Review, June 21, 1873. [...]
[...] exact description of the wonderful sight she was beholding. §ºi pious persons came and knelt down behind us, but she only spoke loud enough for me alone to hear. The moment she opened her mouth and said “See, see, there is the Mother of God l’” I confess a cold shudder passed over me, and I dared not trust myself to look up. “I see there,” she went on, “just above [...]
[...] there is the Mother of God l’” I confess a cold shudder passed over me, and I dared not trust myself to look up. “I see there,” she went on, “just above the high altar, the Mother of God. Over yonder side-altar I see St. Joseph and the Holy Father, who looks as if he were much depressed. Over the other side-altar I see the Child Jesus. He is fast asleep.” She described [...]
[...] the visions of the school children, and with earlier visions in Lourdes and elsewhere. The speciality of the Wittelsheim miracles lies in the pretence of the illuminated that they see other persons besides the Lord, the Saints, and the Pope. Indeed the seeress claims to be able to see whole crowds of departed persons, [...]
[...] father and mother for giving so much of the family wealth to the Austrian monks. I now asked Frau Schott, “Do you see nothing in connexion with our monastery which we built a few years ago?” “I see the Mother of God,” she replied, “turning herself towards us, and at this moment she is blessing [...]
[...] erection of a second monastery, if it pleased the Virgin, and that he was anxious for some revelation of her will. The seeress then said, “I will direct my intention to that end ; perhaps I shall see something that will help you.” After a few minutes of silence she whispered to the foe of unbelief, “Now I see St. Anna, with the [...]
Saturday review11.09.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 11. September 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] he himself proposed this plan. Events have since shown that the Republic has still another trial to go through, and M. THIERs now wishes to see the scrutin de liste main tained, because it is of more importance that there should be no doubt as to the political significance [...]
[...] of Lord NorthBROOK and of Mr. Hope, who introduced the Bill, in the Legislative Council will enable us to see #. far either of these objections is sustained by facts. The Viceroy began by pointing out that the Govern ment of India must expect to see its financial policy [...]
[...] “revenue.” “Serious,” however, as applied to diminution of revenue, is entirely a relative term. Anything is serious, however small, which the Government does not see its way to replace. Upon this point Lord North BROOK spoke with perfect confidence, and we believe with perfect truth. “The [...]
[...] with in conveying his instructions unwarped and ungarbled to the understanding of a casual proselyte. He might well be appalled to see the grotesque shapes which his most lucid explanations take in many a note-book. Their perusal would constitute a first rate purgatorial torment. Confusion worse confounded results, [...]
[...] For fault but small, or none at all, It came to passe, thus beat I was ; See, Udall, see the mercy of thee, To me, poor Such an Orbilius mars more scholars than he makes. Their [...]
[...] duct of affairs in the North—he suggested a scheme of raising troops by private exertions on the part of the Scottish nobility and gentry—was rejected as unsafe. He lived to see the rebellion \º. at Culloden; and died, an eager politician to the last, in ay 1747. [...]
[...] wakes up. Miss Mervyn afterwards remarks of Guinevere, “I wish you could see her. She looks like ‘going’ all over; she jumps like a cat, . . . . . and I am the only woman who has ever been on her back.” It is the natural result of Kate Mervyn's conversation with [...]
[...] back.” It is the natural result of Kate Mervyn's conversation with Captain Bellairs that she should undertake to ride over to Newton the next day in order that he may see Guinevere, and that she may see the last of him, as he is going away on leave for six weeks. This arrangement having been carried out, it is also quite [...]
[...] what the original “ought to have said,” but for which unfor tunately there is no warranty whatever. Mr. Blaydes does not appear to see this. He has a perfect mania, uncured by sixteen years of experience since his first volume, for unau thorized alteration. In vv. 51-2 Athene uses in reference to [...]
[...] BaNoüara, “ having cast over his vision vexatious phantasies,” which is just what she is represented as having done. Because Mr. †: cannot see how hallucinations can be thrown over the eye, as well as the mind, we are invited to pick and choose among five conjectural resorts — namely, (I) Storqopov mpos [...]
Saturday review23.11.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 23. November 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] of Rome the population may very likely be anxious that the Pope should stay among them, for most of them live by foreigners, and the foreigners come to see the arts and the magnificence of Catholic Rome. It is clear that we cannot take up the Roman question from the [...]
[...] duces any conflict of policy between France and Germany. The KING, who counts among his subjects a large Catholic population, entertains a due regard for the Holy See; but it will tax the acuteness of Cardinal ANTONElli to discover how the Prussian Government intends to reconcile its “care for [...]
[...] fortunate emigrants, and he sees with pleasure that the eject ment of a few thousands of landowners would leave room for a million of cottage occupiers. The country people, as Mr. [...]
[...] We see a lion, and we take some comfort by instinctively forming a rapid piece of mental arithmetic; we roughly ..., how many leagues of jungle or forest must be required to fill [...]
[...] intelligent persons, who remain blind till some reporter comes down from a London newspaper. Why do they not stir themselves, it is said, and see that matters are managed rather better? This appeal amounts to condemning the system under another form; it reminds us of the remark occasionally made [...]
[...] tenth century they had retorted on the Popes by creating fresh sees, and introducing a fresh ritual throughout the regions of Southern Italy § had been won back by the arms of the Eastern Empire. Even this cause of irritation, however, had been [...]
[...] Eastern Empire. Even this cause of irritation, however, had been removed by the Norman reconquest of Calabria, and its restoration to the Roman See, when the fatal excommunication of the Legates of Pope Leo severed in one moment, and severed irreparably, the bonds that held East and West together. The excommunication [...]
[...] It is amusing to see the utterly mendacious form in wilich the Legates couched their charge as to the “filioque”, clause, in the Creed, but the mention of it has the interest of being the first [...]
[...] ives usin his preface asketch of the recent advance of the Irish oman Catholic Church, which is interesting in many ways. Those who see nothing but evil in all religious establishments will probably regard the large sums spent on spiritual pur poses in an unendowed and till lately an oppressed Church, as [...]
[...] States. Such Reports as these have this peculiar value, that they present us with the views of a class almost unrepre sented at the polling-booth and in the press, and enable us to see [...]
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