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Saturday review27.06.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 27. Juni 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] dictated by practical wisdom—namely, that this minority was and would be on the side of the reigning family. But undoubtedly the mere legal title of the Irish Church is unassailable, and may be safely rested on prescription alone. [...]
[...] have to set his mind against that of his Council, and to arrive at a conclusion which he could justify. He would merely have to be crammed, as other heads of Departments are crammed by their permanent sub ordinates. The control which the Indian Council possess [...]
[...] the petition, with estimating its value. We may say that from either side its importance may be easily exaggerated. On the one hand, mere arithmetical calculation an:ounts to but little. Defendit numerus is as poor an argument as Athanasius contra mundum. Majoritics and minorities are no [...]
[...] perhaps, perhaps a mere threatening of an attack that passed away without coming to actual onslaught; the second brings up the ar tillery; while the third or fourth lets all the forces loose, and sets [...]
[...] haunts of a great city. Then, as to employment. We thought that by this time we had got beyond the scheme of public works designed for the mere [...]
[...] instance of persecution on the ground of formidable ability, of humble origin, or of merely unpopular manners. Civilities are exchanged in Courts and at mess-tables with many persons whom the more fastidious members of the profession would not admit [...]
[...] to it half-an-hour afterwards with his hand wounded and traces of blood on his body. In answer to the driver's inquiries, he had merely stated that he had been “shot,” and at the next º Nuremberg) had continued his journey with another OStillion. [...]
[...] rationally, would be by no means unworthy of the labours even of a first-rate scholar. The first thing that such a scholar would do would be to eschew mere guess-work. He would [...]
[...] Surnames fall into two classes; but both of them, in different de grees, call for the same kind of treatment. In some cases there can be no doubt as to the mere etymology. You meet Mr. Taylor, Mr. Gibson, and Mr. Weston. There is no doubt as to the mere origin of any of these names. The first of the house of Taylor who [...]
[...] would think extravagant, the use of digests, and of treatises partaking of the nature of digests; and to warn the student against a too absolute respect to mere authority. The per vāding idea of the book is the necessity of active and indepen dent, thought on the student's part, in place of merely receptive [...]
Saturday review30.05.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 30. Mai 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] which turned out to be pewter just washed over with silver, could not be convicted—the judges holding that it was a mere misrepresentation of quality, and fell within the rule of caveat emptor. This iniquitous maxim is in deed neither more nor less than a judicial sanction to [...]
[...] are many. Those faults seem, however, to be rather on the increase than on the decrease; and it is easy to see that they are committed in matters of greater importance than mere organization and arrangement. Taking the one department of Missions to the heathen, we can discern that the true [...]
[...] They fasten their attention on the gross manifestations of Brahminism and Buddhism, and draw the hasty inference that mere courage, perseverance, and religious earnestness will arm the missionary with the power to combat faiths so monstrous and corrupt. But, though the effects produced [...]
[...] really entitled to represent the Christianity of the West, to match themselves against the doctors of the Eastern theo sophies. The current admiration for mere unlettered earnestness in religion is a danger of the most serious cha racter; and in Asia, as in Europe and in England, Chris [...]
[...] the liquor expenditure of the United Kingdom is very nearly twice its annual rental. Nor is this nonsense merely a foreign importation, and the customary rant of Exeter Hall. The Judicial Bench has been delivering itself of a jeremiad, and in Ireland Judge CRAMPTON [...]
[...] inculcating sobriety in drink as a virtue capable of being practised singly and alone. It is, of course, a mere waste of time to say that we agree with the temperance advocates on the main question that drunkenness is a great sin, and is the parent of many crimes. [...]
[...] to chance, but habitually selects the most incompetent for the function. “False slander mere foreign nonsense !” is the cry of the Authorities of the Horse Č.i. Of them alone, however, for no persons are more urgent for Staff Reform than the intelligent [...]
[...] .. accuracy of execution. For instance, Mendelssohn's beautiful part-song, “Oh, hills oh, vales of pleasureſ" was staccatoed nearly all through, as though it had been a mere sol-fa exercise, without the smallest regard to the feelings and ideas it expresses. “Rule Britannia” was taken prestissimo, to the utter [...]
[...] wise to generalize upon this, or straightway to draw, conclusions as to the change of political feeling in the old stronghold of legi timacy. We merely mention the circumstance to show the sºrt of facts which we should wish our tourists to observe. The [...]
[...] MANº. D'HARMONIE, Pratique et Elémentaire à l'usage des Pensionnats et des Meres de Famille. Ouvrage approuvé par le Con [...]
Saturday review28.02.1874
  • Datum
    Samstag, 28. Februar 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] ever; and the Peers would be quite prudent enough to fore see that their position hereafter would be almost untenable if, after having shown themselves mere partisans, they attempted again to exercise their restraining power. [...]
[...] willingness to accept suggestions for revision from every quarter when the reputation of the Ministry is no longer made to depend on the mere number of the Bills it gets through. That the Conservatives can hold office without proposing some measures of considerable importance is im [...]
[...] the dismemberment of France the natural and deserved punishment of her folly in declaring war will dismiss the action of the deputies as a mere outburst of childish irritation at an arrangement by which they are for the pre sent unavoidably sufferers. Those who regret that the [...]
[...] different from what it would have been if the word had been “states” instead of “admits.” The former is colour less; it merely tells what the contents of the Govern ment narrative are. The latter seems to imply that the Government has been forced to state this fact, though [...]
[...] dicables), he does not intend to state, with respect to genus and species, whether these subsist in mere conception only; whether, if it be otherwise, they are corporeal or incorporeal; and, finally, whether they subsist in or apart from sensible [...]
[...] the eternal ideas according to which the sensible world is created exist in the Divine Intellect alone, or form an intelligible world apart from the Deity, is one of detail, merely distinguishing two sects of Realists. During the first period of Scholasticism, Realism, though it met [...]
[...] commentary on Mr. Holman Hunt's last picture. Sometimes, again, the poet lapses into prosaic discursiveness by mere force of metrical fluency; he seems to run on with his story and comments without remembering that he is writing verse. [...]
[...] dwindling into a mere track which wound up the sides of the mountains. There was a bridge over a river that threatened to bar their passage, but —cosa d'España — the [...]
[...] is your faith vain.” And so we would say to a painter who declines to represent the ascending Saviour, “Your art is also vain.” The sacred narrative, if approached merely as an uninspired drama, needs [...]
[...] the same time, the State does not hesitate to vote consider able sums to them, on condition sometimes that one or more trustees shall be nominated by the Governor, sometimes merely that they shall submit to official visitation. In other cases, the State itself provides the institution—as in the instance of [...]
Saturday review28.10.1863
  • Datum
    Mittwoch, 28. Oktober 1863
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] themselves may be believed, abstinence from interference with other countries, is remote from their thoughts. They are always threatening to go to war with England for the mere gratification of revenge, to annex Canada, because they desire to possess an unlimited territory, and to settle the government [...]
[...] to acquit the Admiral, who only intended to silence the batteries, of intentionally setting the town on fire. The sagacity of mere landsmen is equal to the additional remark that a high wind has a tendency to render a conflagration more destructive, and philanthropic civilians might even [...]
[...] separate enclosure or a distinct quarter. It is perfectly intel ligible that an Admiral should report without special remark the conflagration of mere appurtenances to the palace which he was ordered to destroy; but English nerves must become less sensitive in an Oriental atmosphere if the destruction of a [...]
[...] It is not to be supposed that the statesmen of 1852 created a gratuitous complication through a mere love of officious interference. In return for their large concession of German rights, Austria and Prussia obtained a certain security against [...]
[...] been formed from it. “To prejudice ” is sometimes used when all that is meant is to “hurt; ” and “prejudicial” is constantly used as a mere synonym for “harmful,” “baleful,” and the like. This last is doubtless a mere abuse of language; it is one of those cases where a special, and as it were technical, word is taken and mis [...]
[...] sarily unreasonable. It may be a prejudice for a thing as well as against it, and the prejudice itself may be perfectly reasonable. So far as it is a mere bias, a mere presumption, sufficient to guide the judgment till evidence to the contrary is produced, but ready to yield the moment such evidence is produced, a prejudice either for or [...]
[...] mere prejudice. Such worthy people are best left to enjoy their prejudices undisturbed. All one can do is to be well pleased when their prejudices run for us, instead of against us — that is, when, [...]
[...] to be. The grounds of our difficulty are suggested by Mr. Doyle him self. His narrative is a mere chronicle of facts. “Relinquish ing the higher functions of the historian, he has been content to fulfil the humbler part of the painstaking chronicler.” So, just [...]
[...] Doyle wholly passes by, such important matters as “religion, laws, and social customs,” would surely be the things to interest them rather than a mere uninterrupted narrative of events. Such a mere narrative, without any attempt to make inferences of any kind, to refer results to their causes, or even to group events [...]
[...] This Edition is not a mere reprint of that which appeared in 1857; on the contrary, it will present a text very materially altered and amended from beginning to end, with a large body of critical Notes almost entirely new; [...]
Saturday review12.01.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 12. Januar 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] serious scratching, we mean, which would make her admirer's face look next morning as if he had been taking liberties with a . bride or a cat—is thought not merely unnecessary, but unfalr. This difference between civilized and savage woman may per [...]
[...] ought to have been settled beforehand; and this is a matter which is a good deal independent of the science of mere architectural design. Mr. Cowper should not, as he has done, have left to the architects a doubtful and hesitating alternative between top lights and side [...]
[...] they stand, the strongest and most paradoxical assertions. His comments are only those of passionate astonishment, indignation, and alarm. So that the dispute becomes a mere chimney-sweep's quarrel. Roth parties try which can do most in blackening the 9ther. The bystander may be amused or shocked, but we deſ [...]
[...] compelled to abandon that of judge, in view of the utter obduracy of the criminal; but we may . endeavour to discharge that of mere observers of curious literary phenomena. We may record Mr. Sala's performances, as astronomers record the flights of meteors, not in any hope of modifying them for the future, but [...]
[...] practice would enable him to fill any number of paragraphs and columns with the description. First, there is a whole volume of associations in the mere mention of the Regent. “Do you think,” he would begin, addressing his reader in the customary terms of affable familiarity, “do you think that the Fourth George, the first [...]
[...] torians, are the most undoubting believers in the Little St. Bernard; but a problem which has received so many contradictory solutions at the hands of scholars is not to be settled by mere authority. Mr. Law's two volumes contain a most exhaustive review of the whole controversy, and a very clear and candid argument upon the [...]
[...] taken part in the great events of the second Punic war. If Polybius explored and wrote in good faith, it is paradoxical to weigh against his evidence the mere opinion of the Augustan writer, who takes pains, moreover, to inform us that his opinion is diametrically contradictory to other more original evidence, such [...]
[...] odds and ends of book-lore that must have fallen in the way of so industrious an explorer in the by-paths of literature, from a mere vague dread of acting as involuntary pander to a few pruriently disposed folks, or of lending an unconscious puff to the forbidden wares of Holyweii Street. Connected with this [...]
[...] Charles Blanc knows these things as well as we do; and if he does, is it quite right to tempt idle people to try what is impossible, merely that they may buy M. Lalanne's book? Whatever may be said of delusions about the difficulties of art, the grim old facts remain—the insurmountable barriers eternally bar the way. [...]
[...] M. Lalanne seems to us to be in error when he says that other kinds of engraving can only be of use as a means of reproduction. This is a mere matter of custom. It is the custom for engravers with the burin to copy pictures by other men, but is it not con ceivable that a class of artist-engravers might arise who, like [...]
Saturday review11.07.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 11. Juli 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] hell of hatred is stirred up. And further, this view explains the icy self-possession of a prisoner under such circumstances. It is not mere bravado, not stupor, not unparalleled acting, not a mere superhuman effort of the strong will, which accounts for a guilty person supporting [...]
[...] well what a “sham” is, and all his ingenuity failed to prove that the LoRD-LIEUTENANT was anything more than a phan tom of authority. It is mere sophistry to say that the [...]
[...] habits and traditions of the Italian stage, unfavourable to Auber's music. It is, like Mozart's, too full of esprit to be rattled off like the platitudes of the Italian composers, as a mere exercise of vocalization. We have certainly seen more impression pro [...]
[...] volume of his first work.” We notice these slight defects and foibles, not because they really impair the merit of the work, but merely to avoid the appearance of concealment. In one way, perhaps, they may be serviceable. They will act as a test for readers; for we may be sure that, when special attention is [...]
[...] main facts of the novel might well occur without producing any very strong surprise amongst M. Flaubert's countrymen. If this be so, we can only say that not merely the facts and the lan guage, but the whole framework and tendency of the story, are symptoms of the most fatal kind. It is indeed lamentable [...]
[...] sages in #. or in Cook's Voyages, as to cry shame on Hale's Pleas of the Crown, or Taylor's Medical Jurisprudence. Are works of imagination, then, such mere toys that they ought always to be calculated for girlish ignorance? If Shakspeare had never written a line which women in the present day could not [...]
[...] faults. It has none of the obscurities, far-fetched conceits, or overwrought fancies that were so much in vogue in his day. In all that relates to mere form, it is irreproachable. It is musical, admirably versified—accents or syllables never have improper liberties taken, with them. Further than this, it [...]
[...] ground—the church, for instance—and this constitutes the first act, called the smotremić, or contemplation, because the principals, being too nervous to talk, merely look at one another. Then it is that the Svacha's generalship is called into play. She has to run from one to the other, dealing out eulogium and encourage [...]
[...] It is well that the Aquarium fashion should have existed, even if it be destined utterly to pass away. To not a few to whom it has brought a mere smattering of knowledge, it has given many ideas which may hereafter fructify, and which may tend perhaps to indispose them to various forms of error which are only too [...]
[...] not occur to him that, though bogs were cheap, it was no neces sary sequitur that the manufacture of them should be also cheap. It ñº een said that going to the moon is a mere question of finance; and many of the greatest scientific discoveries are in truth only more economical modes of doing what could have [...]
Saturday review03.06.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 03. Juni 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] there may be much difficulty in distinguishing between private crimes and acts of civil war. If the Tuileries had been burned, not in mere revenge and malice, but to delay the progress of the troops, an incendiary who might have escaped to England could not be surrendered without a viola [...]
[...] The EMPEROR, too, is not merely the representative of violent clerical antipathies, and of the hatreds and prejudices of a feeble and antiquated aristocracy. He might be trusted to think of [...]
[...] through spiritual competition and by social superiority. Mr. GLADSTONE would have accomplished a great act of statesman ship if, instead of merely suppressing an anomaly, he had used a part of the endowments at his disposal in purchasing the loyalty of parish priests and schoolmasters. Unfortu [...]
[...] and this Mr. Cole does not supply. Indeed the low standard of art in England is strongly shown by the im portance which mere busybodies are able to assume in connexion with it. The projectors of the Universal Art Catalogue appear to have seriously believed that Parliament [...]
[...] kind have formed a tacit conspiracy to impose upon us, and that events so horrible and so out of harmony with the character of the great pleasure capital of the world are merely a fiction invented by political philosophers for the purpose of pointing a moral in favour of order. [...]
[...] gravity. #. difficult it was to attack this stronghold of Satan may readily be imagined. - There is unquestionably something remarkable in merely form ing the scheme of invading such a fixed habit as this. He con tinues:— [...]
[...] f, however, the domestic press raves for the Cork shopboys and “godless” schoolmasters, its effervescence is but local; while the endless misrepresentations of the mere Irish which have crossed St. George's Channel have confused our judgment of the situation. We are surfeited with information, yet every year our [...]
[...] an almost superhuman degree of skill on the part of the invest ing army, and so forth—the real cause being apparently that the garrison consisted for the most part of , a mere rabble, the repulse of whose feeble sorties must have been mere child's play to the Germans after the business they had gone through of con [...]
[...] refer the reader to the volume passim. We merely indicate such things as the description of the gluttonous Goggs's peculiar mode of eating, and of the effect of low living on the boys' complexions. [...]
[...] the most useful amongst the subsidiary sources of information for the historian and the publicist; but it too often degenerates into mere spite, and many a clever writer, carried away by the desire of satisfying some private grudge, has forfeited beforehand all claims to be considered as a trustworthy recorder of the gossip [...]
Saturday review01.05.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Mai 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] are to get the glebe on paying off the charge; but where there is no building charge, they are to get the glebe-house by merely paying ten times the value of the site on which the house stands. This does not in any way represent the market value of the property; it is a mere nominal sum which the [...]
[...] in which this government, if secured, would be exercised. It is not as though the difference between the Opposition can didates were merely one of popularity. Probably, to many [...]
[...] the advantage of hereditary rank is withdrawn, it will be necessary to compensate for the defect of a modest economical condition by extraordinary personal qualities. Mere observers of social life, who have not the smallest disposition to become satirists, recognise the undoubted fact of the deference which [...]
[...] yisited KATE HAMILTON's hostelry for professional purposes. They might—so Sir WILLIAM BoDKIN is acute enough to see that the law might charitably presume—be merely paying a [...]
[...] framed for home life and for society; and they confess that, without woman's influence, they would soon degenerate into mere savages, and be no better than so many Choctaws before a [...]
[...] very place where the pamphlet is urging that it is necessarily ineffectual. We may leave the writers' admissions to answer their arguments. Upon this head we will merely add, that it is stated that the disease is chiefly maintained in French ports by importation from England; that the difference between the per [...]
[...] that those who have not been deterred by the risk become degraded, and form the nucleus of a debased population. It is surprising how soon such topics, become a mere matter of jest, and the necessary consequence is a moral as well as a physical degeneration. - - - [...]
[...] life, which gives such a strange charm to Oxford. The future Antony-a-Wood who sets himself to describe the true and not the merely official history of Alma Mater will find himself face to face with the most º because the most rapidly changing, panorama in the world. Without stirring the [...]
[...] an aesthetic point of view”; but with all his affectation Lepidus is quietly changing this old world into a new. If Oxford is to educate Englishmen, and not merely to drill them, to act as an intellectual, and not merely as a social force, it is time that she knew something and taught something of Turner and Alfred de [...]
[...] has the frankness to acknowledge this in the preface to the amusing book now before us. The Mémoires in question are merely a compilation, the materials of which have been borrowed from various quarters, and worked up into a kind of narrative which, published originally as a series of feuilletons in the Consti [...]
Saturday review23.10.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 23. Oktober 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] propose vast changes in Irish tenure, not as if they were introducing a necessary revolution, but as if they were merely making a handsome and considerate concession to friendly farmers. Just as a landlord like Lord RossLYN announces, amidst the applause of his hearers, that [...]
[...] constituencies which have probably taken part in the recent insurrection. The present form of government so nearly re sembles a republic that merely political rebellion could only be attempted by pedants. Some of the leaders were probably speculative enthusiasts, but the mass of the combatants must [...]
[...] to restore the Habeas Corpus on the eve of the Fenian insur rection. It is time that the party, if it is not now too late, should cease to be a mere cabal. [...]
[...] investigation would, we are sure, induce the Commissioners to modify their proposal that the summary adminis tration decree should follow immediately upon a mere writ indorsed with the baldest possible particulars, instead of requiring a statement of the case in the first instance, as since [...]
[...] human type, in which all intellectual and moral excellence is re garded merely as a useful condition towards º his athletic capacities. #. may be various ways of explaining a social phenomenon so singular and so little suited to the general spirit [...]
[...] silver, of iron, of bronze, and even of lead. A cluster of a score or so of stars of the first magnitude blaze out in the firmament, but these give way before minor galaxies, and presently to mere nebulae and utter obscurity. [...]
[...] during the Elizabethan age was of quite another sort from that of either the Augustan or the Medicean age. It was essentially a display, not of mere scholarship and imitation, but of the boldest original genius. It is somewhat strange that the writer makes no reference [...]
[...] By careful and minute consideration of every step, the march was made to appear to hasty observers a mere triumphal promenade. But it is really an example of ars celare artem. }. more the conduct of this campaign is examined the better it will be appreciated, and [...]
[...] separates reading from education. Academies and the three IR's have achieved at least the very definite “results" of showing that the outside and merely mechanical appliances of education may be brought to a very respectable degree of perfection without any corresponding development of intellectual power. A multitude [...]
[...] Lake George, and other favourite resorts of American tourists during the summer season; a work intended and adapted for merely practical use, and as uninteresting to the general reader as it will prove convenient to the traveller who may meditate a visit to the Atlantic States. [...]
Saturday review14.02.1874
  • Datum
    Samstag, 14. Februar 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] colleague of the PRIME MINISTER merely contended that the motion was premature; and although on a later occasion Mr. GLADSTONE himself defended the Church in a powerful [...]
[...] questioned. It was at least evident that it was unnecessary to anticipate the ordinary time of the Parliamentary Ses sion for the mere purpose of inviting retrospective criticism. Even if the policy of the Dutch Treaty deserved condemna tion, it was still indispensable to punish the Ashantee [...]
[...] can persuade themselves that there is a long lease of Parlia mentary life still before them, they can afford to show some independence. The mere thought of an appeal to the electors is usually enough to impress them with the para mount importance of supporting the only “Government of [...]
[...] successful:— God the first garden made, and the first city Cain. The remark is pointed enough, but it is now a mere conceit. Cowper has much the same thought, but softens the antithesis, and makes it a general statement instead of a Scriptural allusion:— [...]
[...] Barcaple upon this said, “I think that these statutory provisions are of such a kind that it would require that something much more should be made out than merely that they were transgressed in good faith without any serious consequence to invalidate the election.” [...]
[...] Similar ideas have, no doubt, at different times and in divers places independently developed into similar narratives; and therefore the mere resemblance between two stories is not a proof that one has been borrowed from the other. But it is very impro bable that any such independent development should result in the [...]
[...] . . I hope you will excuse all the faults, as I am ignorant of the rules for writing properly. - In any other man in his position it would have sounded as mere affectation to profess himself indifferent to the social advancement [...]
[...] teacher and the learner of the rudiments of history, was indeed a boon devoutly to be wished. It could not be the less such as coming from the hand of a distinguished historian whose mere name was a guarantee for much at least of what was wanted being actually supplied. [...]
[...] Aº. the artistic signs of the times may be counted the multiplicity of treatises on etching; and that it is not merely a passing fashion amongst amateurs, the serious cultivation of the art by many accomplished artists and the formation of schools of [...]
[...] communion, which he had accepted in the first instance, seemed to lack the countenance of the New Testament. The Evangelical theory, which makes the Church a mere combination of individual pious men and women, struck him as equally wanting in this respect. Consequently he was thrown back, by a process of [...]
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