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Saturday review31.08.1861
  • Datum
    Samstag, 31. August 1861
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Acts of Congress during the brief session of little more than a month which commenced on the fourth of July. Nay, the mere titles of the measures would suffice to give a substan tially accurate general idea of the history of the period. [...]
[...] all, while the same canals which supplied the land with water would, in any case, have prevented 50 per cent of the relief fund being spent on the mere conveyance of food. [...]
[...] 1860. However, by eliminating these disturbing causes, Colonel SMITH satisfied himself that the depression was not a mere reaction from a period of inflation, and that its cause must be sought in more special circumstances. The famine was naturally suspected of having had a [...]
[...] WHF we say that London is empty, we merely mean that at the West End there are not quite so many people as there were a month or two ago; and so, when we say that there [...]
[...] pas in composition, any more than in morals, that it is “a very little one.” The distinction is one important to be made, because people often confound accuracy with mere minuteness. , Com plaints of inaccuracy are often thought to be pedantic or hyper critical because they are supposed to be merely complaints of the [...]
[...] minuteness to call a man vaguely an Eastern Christian, but it is inaccuracy to call him a Greek if he happens to be a Bulgarian. It is mere lack of minuteness to call a man generally a nobleman; it is inaccuracy to call him an Earl if he happens to be only, a Viscount. In all such cases, the mere lack of minuteness may be [...]
[...] as of any natural defect which cannot. Inaccuracy, therefore, is morally blameworthy. Muddle-headedness is something quite different from mere ignorance. Of course the best-informed and most clear-headed man will constantly come across things, even in his own range of [...]
[...] enunciation of moral truths. The plaudits of a theatrical public, when they denote not merely the admiration of talent, but the approval of sentiments, may be taken as a very fair index of the moral theory entertained by a people. “Man,” says Schiller, “is never so much in [...]
[...] may be possible for anything we know to the contrary, and mental power need not always be in operation; but to speak of any form of mental activity apart from consciousness is a mere contradiction in terms. It would seem rather a curious, though apparently an inevitable [...]
[...] matters which puzzle modern astronomers as much as they may have puzzled the earliest Chinese observers. Some would make them mere optical effects, without more substance of their own than a sunbeam shining in a darkened room. Newton made the tail a mere vapour thrown off by the heat of the sun; but neither [...]
Saturday review06.02.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 06. Februar 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] If the employers who so acted were never in any sense agents of any candidate, but merely distributed wages as they pleased in order to promote the success of the political party to which they belonged, no election could be affected. Em [...]
[...] ferred on the Bavarian dynasty, abolished the salaried Senate, established a single Representative Chamber, and endeavoured to cxclude Government nominees and mere place-hunters by declaring that mayors and officials, with the exception of Ministers and [...]
[...] of which is restricted to a definite time, place, person, or object— namely, annual Acts; Acts which, though passed for State purposes, relate merely to local or personal rights; and Acts which are merely legislative authority for doing a certain work. The “Public General” Acts would not only be passed for State purposes, but [...]
[...] series. There is no reason why an English lawyer should be com pelled to load his shelves with the Statute law of Scotland, any more than with the “Code Civil " of Lower Canada, merely be cause Scotland, like Canada, is subject to the Crown of England. It is a mere accident in the question that the Scotch Statutes are made [...]
[...] be in a position to address himself cheerfully to the next stage of progress–to attempt to arrange the Statutes in a rational, instead of a merely chronological, order. If law reformers could only by persuaded to define their terms [...]
[...] to make confusion worse confounded. Till they adopt a better method, the Statute-book must remain, like every other depart ment of English law, a mere chaos through which wayfarers are misguided by a cumbrous and itself chaotic index. [...]
[...] alternative of two remedies—he may either bring an action in the colony, , or bring an action here. The question was whether a colonial Act could take away, not merely the right of action in the colony, but the right of action here. “It appears to me,” said Lord Chief Justice Cockburn, “that the mere state [...]
[...] in that country.” Applying these words to the case before the Court, and treating Jamaica, as for this purpose it may be treated, as a foreign country, they merely amount to this, that Mr. Phillips would not be disabled from suing Mr. Eyre for damages for trespass committed in Jamaica merely because no damages [...]
[...] reasonings are not sufficiently cogent or searching; the assumed connexion between effects and causes, between scattered details and governing principles, is often merely conjectural. The causes which have induced art creations may for convenience be dis tributed under the distinctive divisions of race, climate, and chro [...]
[...] and not without views of landed property consistent rather with the French than the English theory; accustomed, moreover, to subordinate mere theoretical conclusions to practical expe diency; he was not likely to be betrayed into the hasty or pre judiced judgments of ordinary European critics. The time at [...]
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 review23.03.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 23. März 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] in many ways admirable, and has been characterized by that peculiar quality of thought and conduct which divides statesmanship from mere political ability. His mode of treating the various questions which necessarily force themselves on him at the outset is well worthy of [...]
[...] the most formidable power in the nation. For the present, Mr. JohnsoN's repeated refusals to sanction the measures of Congress are merely verbal protests which maintain his personal consistency. As soon as a veto Message is received, both Houses suspend their standing orders, and in an hour or [...]
[...] and in a rich light soil. These assertions of course imply a distinction, which will be readily admitted, between leisure and mere inaction. Indeed the difference between business and leisure is not really either in the nature or the amount of the things done, but in the pace at which [...]
[...] deserve the name of leisure of which the contents are in any way, or for any purpose, cramped or curtailed. And besides this, the mere strain upon the mind of any ulterior aim, the mere fact of the complication of feeling which it introduces, destroys the play and freedom and beauty of real leisure. And this brings us to the [...]
[...] costume had been different; but the costume did something. It made it easier for the popular imagination to summon him back, and to realize, even too well, that he was not a mere myth, accord [...]
[...] sloping pastures and lofty exuberant wood, full-foliaged, many stemmed, rising in two chief masses one above the other, like º aisles and clearstory of a cathedral. This scene is not a mere study from nature, but is truly an expression of artistic sentiment. [...]
[...] be observed that the great majority of the contemporary authorities cited in his Appendix are Cambridge tutors, who are protesting against the undue importance assigned to mere scholarship in the examination system of their University, which is quite a different question. We are by no means prepared to say that Greek and [...]
[...] Confederate war has given rise to nearly seven thousand books or pamphlets of greater or less value and pretension... Of these, of course, a large proportion are merely ephemeral publica tions, and pºly very few indeed are destined to be remembered ten years hence. Among them all there is scarcely one tolerable [...]
[...] notice are almost without exception partial and fragmentary in their nature, relating to particular operations or to single depart ments of the service, and constitute mere materials for the future historian of the war. Such is, for instance, the Campaign of Mobile", by Major-General Andrews, which relates the operations [...]
[...] Thus it appears that the hero (Sagoyewatha, he-keeps-them awake) was no warrior, but an orator; he was actually suspected or accused of cowardice, yet by mere force of eloquence he retained a high position among a warlike race, and eventually became their most powerful chief and leader, till drunken habits obscured [...]
Saturday review06.04.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 06. April 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] impossible it should ever sit. If the instructions went beyond what Mr. DISRAELI has conceded, they would really amount to a condemnation of the Ministry; if they merely re corded what he has conceded, the fact that such a record is thought necessary would establish how much the Ministry [...]
[...] proportion of poor householders will not like to save up their cash to lay rates when they can perfectly well escape the trouble by merely foregoing the franchise. But this is 199 all. There is a third diliculty which may be thrown, and [...]
[...] GLADSTONE have largely, and in some sense equally, contributed. Whether they have consciously or unconsciously brought about the change, or merely represent an irresistible tendency, it is impossible to settle, and it is therefore useless to inquire whether representative men embody or originate what is called [...]
[...] legislation could not have taken place without such phenomena in political providence as Mr. DisrAELI and Mr. GLADSTONE. Mr. DISRAELI is it is a mere matter of history—a political free-lance. Scratch a Russian, and you draw Tartar blood. A philosophic Radical Tory, his whole career has consisted [...]
[...] tribunal which condemned would be irresponsible, and yet there would be no real appeal from it to a higher. ot merely malice and uncharitableness, but deceit, and hypocrisy, would abound and flourish. But further than this, society, if it once abandoned its clear line of interfering only to protect its own [...]
[...] The West-Frankish Karlings are not descended from Lothar but from Charles the Bald. But things like these are, in a book like this, mere spots on the sun. In a book which contained nothing else they might be serious. Our only regret is that we have not space for several [...]
[...] dly fail to grow more and more disloyal to the institutions among which it lives, and thus to become a real danger to their secure development; while the habit of mere tacit and ineffectual opposition, and the loss of the healthy stimulus of political action, either dwarf it into mere aestheticism and effeminacy, or stiffen it [...]
[...] the feeling that Parliament was not reconstituted for nothing. It is this new stimulus to practical politics which the Essayists look for, not merely in the direct results on Parliament of its own reconstruction, but in the removal of influences which now prevent the natural play of existing institutions, and especially [...]
[...] under the excessive demands of Napoleon. The fourth chapter of the Duke of Aumale's essay opens with France disarmed and subject to the victor's laws. Her military institutions were not merely overthrown, but destroyed. A creation of completely new ones was required; and although the national condition of humiliation was [...]
[...] limited to Brazil. M. Tenré undertakes to supply the information which is wanting on the other provinces, and he gives in a series of chapters a number of details which, though of a merely sta tistical nature, are very valuable as showing the resources of America. [...]
Saturday review01.10.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Oktober 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] On two occasions Marshal BAZAINE has given the Prussians a good deal of trouble by sorties from Metz, and the mere knowledge ...that there are still French troops whom defeat has neither dis mayed nor demoralized may give some much needed encou [...]
[...] make no serious attempt upon the place for at least a fort night to come. The advance of a mere detachment on Orleans, followed instantly by the rumour of its cession to the Prussians, shows at once the present weakness of the French on the side of the [...]
[...] this part of the reasoning aloud, the advice is in nine cases out of ten nothing but the echo of your own predetermined course. Asking advice is merely a branch of the art known as fishing for compliments, or, in other and less offensive language, it is merely one method of appealing for sympathy. The advisee has made up [...]
[...] destroy, or at least to induce others to destroy, what he does not like. The Empire was partly of his own making. In his eyes it was a mere usurpation, of course; a mere continuance of the régime of iniquity and fraud which had robbed him and his ancestors of their rents since '89. . But still he never repented [...]
[...] whose i. and heads are in the business, who individually, from the general to the private, are capable of playing the parts. which may be assigned to them. Mere skill in the use of a weapon mere personal gallantry, mere technical knowledge of drill, wi not avail an army which may have to cope with the efficient [...]
[...] Robsart. The wonder is that with Kenilworth before their eyes the author and manager could have produced such a contemptible result. They have concocted a mere stop-gap to serve until the time comes to produce the pantomime, in which the dances now performed before Queen Elizabeth will be re [...]
[...] script and in the printed page, and checking each conjecture by these conditions. It is a curious example, not only of the con scientious exactness, but of the mere mechanical labour and inge nuity, called for by modern critical accuracy in dealing with ancient papers:– [...]
[...] either mainly or exclusively on the authority of the later manu scripts “without rigidly testing their critical value”? What living writer advocates resting on the mere numerical preponder ance of later copies, if the early uncials will but agree among themselves? But, divided as these perpetually are in the Gospels, [...]
[...] gaining experience from his own repeated failures that the critic learns to surmount his difficulties. Those who, like Dr. Tregelles, forego the attempt through mere despair of success, can have no claim to the highest praise. To conclude. If we are not wrong in supposing that the text of [...]
[...] trary to the very spirit of the book:— The chief secret of the success of the dramatic work of the old times was that such “characters” were not mere isolated figures in the piece—coming in merely for their own sake, and the more selfish sake of the actor who played them—but were real aids to the story. They were not formed so as [...]
Saturday review18.05.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 18. Mai 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] perhaps some slight deviation from strict impartiality, in asmuch as the French Government had commenced the dispute as a mere intruder; but the assent of Prussia to the Conference was equivalent to a promise of some concession, and the withdrawal of the garrison was the [...]
[...] URIOUS politicians pronounce that Mr. DisBAELI has been offering Parliament, in his Reform Bill, a mere im posture. The compound householder is injured, deluded, and deceived; and the wrongs of the compound householder are [...]
[...] of the local authority, and this undeniable evil takes in Scotland an aggravated form. For in England a body diffi cult to manage and act upon merely decides whether the Provisions of an Act of Parliament shall or shall not be adopted. In Scotland a Board answering to our [...]
[...] of reform as is supposed to be contained in their substantive recommendations. Passing over the merely negative decisions, we find first a proposal that Parliament should leave the incorporation and financial affairs of Railway Companies “to be dealt with under [...]
[...] prietors of the Times of any merely selfish motive as *. to their share in this transaction. No bargain of this sort is possible, at least on one side. But we are not so sure about the Depart [...]
[...] season, it is unnecessary to offer one word beyond the mere state ment that never has the music of Manrico been declaimed with more splendid vigour than by the gentleman whose voice now [...]
[...] and a thoroughly respectable position before his fellows. In the second place, Mr. Trollope always writes in earnest. He never treats his people as if they were mere puppets, nor his incidents as if they were mere dreams. They are a reality in his own mind while he writes about them; he honestly feels for them as if they [...]
[...] Messalina's marriage with Silius, supposing it not to have preceded by her divorce in due form from the Emperor Claudi they are merely a repetition of Mr. Merivale's comments, an therefore call for no new consideration. Both writers proceed upon the belief that the intellectual capacity of Claudius was b [...]
[...] by M. Stahr to prove that after death no traces of poison were visible on the body. The ingenuity of this conclusion is beyond us; and we merely note that an able writer in the Cornhill Magazine of July, 1863, while expressing his doubts on the story [...]
[...] to remind their countrymen of the treasure they possessed in Rückert. In some respects this extraordinary man stands alone, not merely among Germans, but among poets. As a nar rative and descriptive poet his place is high, as the lyrist of happy love he . rarely been surpassed, while his claims as [...]
Saturday review02.01.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 02. Januar 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] words, but mere meaningless sounds, we give him full leave in sounding them to place his accent and his accessory accent on any syllable that he may think good. [...]
[...] husband. Mr. Carlyle, if we remember, is quite unaware until the final discovery that the stranger in blue spectacles is Lady Isabel. Or the recognition may be not merely one-sided, but mutual, and yet unaccompanied by the consciousness on either side that it is mutual. Following this precedent, the disguised husband or wife [...]
[...] manners. To speak of it as modelled on the style, or composed out of the same materials, as the delightful stories of Miss Bremer, is merely misleading. The scene is laid almost as much outside Sweden as in it, and, except in the heroine's Quixotic attempts to obtain a divorce from her husband, there is nothing to invest it [...]
[...] July last. Had he given some scientific inkling of the inherent differences between the muscular organization of birds and that of men, instead of the mere random statement that man needs wings of a surface equal to 12,000 or 15,000 square feet, with which he would have to strike the air several times in a second, he might [...]
[...] “to non-professional men who are or were as if cocks of the roost or in other words Natives of high social status.” But all these honours were merely preparatory to the crowning glory of the High Court Judgeship: This was a Desideratum to him. The hope which he so long hatched at [...]
[...] to be, seeing that she has long passed the age of plasticity, and that she has been ºf throughout as a woman of inten tion, a woman of principle, rather than one of mere temper. Again, we think that Mrs. Erskine gives too much force to re trospection. No active-natured, strong-minded woman like Miss [...]
[...] kind of summary of the narrative itself. We must not expect to find here a scientific account of strategic operations, a book like those of Jomini or Napier; M. de Gonneville merely aims at giving a description of the principal incidents in the erratic life of a soldier who went through all the campaigns of the Republic [...]
[...] and “the Apostle of the Word of God.” If, he says, the Christian virtues of the Genoese sailor are not yet universally known, and if he is not enrolled in the Acta Sanctorum, it is merely because his biography has hitherto been written by Protestants, who, being the sworn enemies of the Church, were interested in misleading [...]
[...] Recapitulating, àpropos of M. Viardot, the arguments which he has developed in the course of his volume, M. Janet shows that, if mankind is merely the result of the brute forces of nature, it is im possible to account for the notions of liberty, justice, fraternity, and the like, which most free-thinkers professedly adopt as fer [...]
[...] or rather the adaptations of Shakspeare, and the efforts made to acclimatize on the French stage the masterpieces of one of the least French of authors. The versions designed merely for read ing are difficult enough, as we can see by reference to those of M. Guizot, M. Montégut, and M. Hugo; but when we come to the [...]
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 [...]
Saturday review24.06.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 24. Juni 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] of the present Ministry, been sufficiently threatened and un settled. A descent into the gulf of universal suffrage is not worth hazarding merely for the purpose of reviving a popularity which has been deservedly impaired. During the struggles of the last Parliament, Mr. GLADSTONE was [...]
[...] The revolt of the Commune or of the Central Committee of the National Guard was, according to the apologist, merely a measure of self-defence. The artillery which the Government attempted to seize was, it seems, the private property of the [...]
[...] debates, that the Trade Unionists are the whole people of England. There are not only Unionists and employers, but non-Unionists, and even on mere numerical grounds, being as seventeen to one, the non-Unionists are especially entitled to consideration. Picketing is a mode of coercion [...]
[...] predecessor Bishop Thirlwall. It is amusing to be told in the biographical notice in the Times that Bishop Thirlwall's work was not a “mere stop-gap.” This implies at least that there are or have been people who thought that Bishop Thirlwall's work was a mere stop-gap. Odd as such a state of mind is, we can con [...]
[...] THE British aristocracy owes its high position not merely to the intrinsic merits of its members, to the historical fame of its ancestry, and to the admirable mode in which it discharges its [...]
[...] country air, and glimpses of moors and forests and mountain tor rents. Perhaps we are mere ignorant Cockneys, whose gross vision cannot distinguish the charm which nobler eyes can detect in such amusements. If so, we shall be glad to be enlightened, and [...]
[...] Monarchy is driven to fight the Republic? It is clear that the prospects of Paris must be permanently injured by recent events. It is not merely the irretrievable destruction wrought among her historical monuments; that might be half forgotten, or set down to the impulsive crime which society [...]
[...] fires of Dido, and the books that follow are merely ingenious dis plays of the philosophic learning, the antiquarian, research, and the patriotism of Virgil. But it is yet more directly fatal in the [...]
[...] trouble. But the statement is not shown to be wrong by Dr. M'Corry merely lifting up his hands and pouring forth declama tions in the style of Peter Damiani. It really proves nothing when Dr. M'Corry “pictures to his mind the blessed spirits of the [...]
[...] Earlshope, are good and natural. We think her introduction a mistake; she is too violent for the general tone of the work; and as she does nothing to advance the story, as her mere existence is [...]
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