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Saturday review19.07.1873
  • Datum
    Samstag, 19. Juli 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] new vent, involving an intenser form of emotional life than this innocuous hilarity. Hence the familiar spectacle of harmless mirth passing into anger, crueltaunting, or some other mischievous impulse. This phenomenon is conspicuously seen in cases of alco holic stimulation. Excess of good temper and extreme irritability [...]
[...] there no subsequent º for the subject of these exalted states of mind, the fact that they are always contiguous with the regions of anger, malignity, and wanton power should be sufficient to banish them from a refined and humane society. In this case, then, conventional propriety appears to have a solid basis of reason. [...]
[...] does not escape until he goes back to the publicity of debate in full session. There is everywhere something infectious in the enthusi asm or the anger of crowds; and the Frenchman catches fire with peculiar quickness from contact with the glow of passion [...]
Saturday review20.03.1858
  • Datum
    Samstag, 20. März 1858
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 1
[...] his first childhood—a man who had derived much real help and consolation from his belief in these gods—who had abstained from committing crime, because he was afraid of the anger of a Divine Being—who had performed severe penance, because he hoped to appease the anger of the gods—who had given, not only [...]
Saturday review15.10.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 15. Oktober 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] great events of the present year have given it a peculiar interest which its author certainly did not foresee when he dated his pre face at Angers last November. M. Mourin writes the history of the tenth century, and it is really amazing to find so large a por tion of the history of the tenth century acted over again in the [...]
[...] ation which the tissue has undergone, we have appetite, hunger, lust, &c.; instinct, such as to make fire, build honeycombs, houses, dams, &c.; feeling—anger, gratitude, hope, &c., and intelligence overlaid.” We should expect to find Dr. Bird on the side of Dr. Pinel and other French physicians, who have maintained that [...]
[...] again before him in about a }. time as does the judge when he sentences some hardened housebreaker. But just as the judge's anger would be greatly roused if the housebreaker in the dock were to announce his intention of continuing the very burglary for which he had been arrested, so is the critic not less incensed [...]
Saturday review11.09.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 11. September 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] done in anger. Say not now in thine heart, I am the lord, my Will is Law; but rather let this be an occasion for humbling thy valour, and the lower. ing of thy self-esteem. Look to it that thy new dignities be not the means [...]
[...] the despised “omnific science,” was a demand, and here was a dealer capable of the most unlimited supply. Why then—we ask it more in sorrow thanin anger—did he take to recommend abortion and child murder? Why does he ridicule marriage, and why does he astonish his readers by the Great Focal Luminary of Truth? The capital : [...]
[...] spoilt his own market? We can scarcely be angry with him; we much more pity him. He evidently expects that the reviewers will rise in anger against him, and he thus guards himself from their fury in a Notice signed “The Author”:—“What we have written has been conceived in a spirit of philosophic dispassionate [...]
Saturday review29.04.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 29. April 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] science. We saw last week how much anger had been aroused by the presumption of the Government in assum ing that the Republic would be in being two years hence, [...]
[...] of the peasants, who happens to save her life. Indeed she begins to think that, with but a little change, the state of men might become almost enviable—as, for instance, if anger, strife, and death were done away with, and all men were like Waldmar. But, she asks herself, where would then be room for heroism and self [...]
[...] important, is almost maddened with the thought of her Joseph, about whose new exploits all the world is talking, throwing him. self away on a maidservant. She vents her anger on all around her; if she cannot be loved, she will be feared and hated; she rejects with scorn all her, suitors—nay, she conquers them in fair [...]
Saturday review29.06.1872
  • Datum
    Samstag, 29. Juni 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] not the best. In the preface and during a large part of the second volume he is very angry. We are far from blaming him for his anger. When a man has to write about such things as some of the doings of the Communists in Paris, he does well to be angry. But, as a rule, a man who writes when he is angry, even [...]
[...] on new truths and new views of things. But Mr. Reeve is simply angry, and nothing else. Instead of stirring him up to anything like eloquence, his anger stirs him up only to a further use of those big, unmeaning, Latinized words whose use half-educated people take for grand writing. As for new truths and new views, [...]
[...] Upon this idea the Duke acts. He takes the handsome young Digby to Court, in the hope that he may attract the Duchess of Portsmouth sufficiently to excite the jealousy and anger of the King—neither a pleasant idea for a story nor a dignified position for a hero. The process by which Charles Digby is placed under [...]
Saturday review11.05.1861
  • Datum
    Samstag, 11. Mai 1861
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] ORD PALMERSTON'S vigorous epithets have powerfully stirred the susceptibilities of Berlin. The Prussian Chambers have taken up the Macdonald question, partly in anger, but much more in puzzlement. They are indignant that such language should have been used of them and their institutions; but they are still [...]
[...] fastidious ears, while the more pathetic melodies were not only pleasing in themselves, but frequently accompanied words that, rather in sorrow than in anger, hinted at the miseries of slavery, and therefore accorded with the serious convictions of many of the audience. The form of the entertainment, too, was [...]
[...] that his moral sense was perverted. He accepted the absurd story that Tiberius had exhorted the Senate of Rome to place Christ among the gods, ascribed his cruelties to his anger at their refusal, and dwelt upon them with some complacency as the visitation of God upon his enemies. In the same spirit [...]
Saturday review15.08.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 15. August 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] result. There are men of genuine distinction of mind who pass their days and nights in sheer purgatory because they are consumed with anger against a world which does not crown them everlastingly, with bays, and pour money at their feet. They forget that the pre-eminence of their quality is the very reason [...]
[...] he had on other occasions so accurately reckoned had changed into the most serene and intrepid indifference to his promises or his anger. What is to be said of Pius VII. is that he was exposed to a trial of which it is difficult in our day to measure the real force— [...]
[...] ing its claims upon us with all the severity of didactic common place. . This is plainly a fault. When your heart is torn with the anguish of a noble-minded woman, and inflamed with anger against her ruthless betrayer, it is a piece of unspeakable bathos to ask us, directly or indirectly, to lend our ears to garrulities [...]
Saturday review26.04.1862
  • Datum
    Samstag, 26. April 1862
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] prejudices which exercise the , most universal influence over English opinion. When the country is taunted with its inferiority, threatened with the anger of France, and exhorted to acquiesce patiently in acts of injustice and oppression, the party which relies on such arguments and [...]
[...] Ariadne mourning for an English Theseus in his own country—is a more passionate utterance of sorrow and indignation. Nothing can be more natural than a burst of anger against the Northern climate and landscape; and perhaps Mrs. Browning was glad of the opportunity of venting, with dramatic propriety, the morbid [...]
[...] men of j and partizans, before they gave a poetic im mortality to their favourite theories and factions. Mrs. Browning, like Shelley, regarded public affairs with a querulous anger, as the scene of an unintelligible conflict between abstract right and em bodied wrong. It might be natural for a lady of enthusiastic [...]
Saturday review13.08.1864
  • Datum
    Samstag, 13. August 1864
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] ſorces, and those schemes of a common policy, which are indis pensable to an Opposition entering on a peaceful struggle with the Government. M. GARNIER PAGEs had braved the anger of the authorities by successfully contesting a Pâris election; and M. GARNIER PAGłs, as a man of some mark, and as [...]
[...] The Northern Americans have themselves to blame for the anger and suspicion with which their dealings are sometimes regarded in England. Although the recruiting agents of the sea-port towns only want to make money, they know that they [...]
[...] We have kept clear of the whole race of melodramatic and tragic smiles, whose very last design is to express or to convey pleasure— as, for example, the smile of scorn, anger, hate, despair. Nor do we touch on that milder and more domestic provocation, the smile of incredulity, which many besides Thackeray have found “a [...]
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