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1224 Treffer
Suchbegriff: Angering

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The ramblerRambler 24.04.1750
  • Datum
    Freitag, 24. April 1750
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] Nor Dindymene, nor her prieſts poffeſt, Can with their founding cymbals fhake the breaft, Like furious anger. FRANC1s, [...]
[...] of the feven fages of Greece, left as a memo rial of his knowledge and benevolence, was xóns xpºrsi, Be mgfier of thy anger. He confidered anger as the great difturber of human life, the chief enemy both of publick happinefs and private tranquillity, [...]
[...] us to conjećture. From anger, in its full import, protraćted into malevolence, and exerted in re venge, arife, indeed, many of the evils to which the [...]
[...] protraćted into malevolence, and exerted in re venge, arife, indeed, many of the evils to which the life of man is expoſed. By anger operating upon power are produced the fubverfion of cities, the defolation of countries, the maffacre of nations, [...]
[...] and only aćting with lefs vigour for want of the fame concurrent opportunities. - - * - But this gigantick and enormous fpecies of anger falls not properly under the animadverfion of a writer, whofe chief end is the regulation of com [...]
[...] themfelves by their general ufe. Nor is this effay - intended to expoſe the tragical or fatal effećts even of private malignity. The anger which I propofe now for my fubjećt is fuch as makes thoſe who indulge it more troublefome than formidable, and [...]
[...] nities of exercifing their patience and boafting their clemency. - Pride is undoubtedly the original of anger; but pride, like every other paffion, if it once breaks Joofe from reafon, counteraćts its own purpoſes. A [...]
[...] till he has a full convićtion of the offence, to pro portion his anger to the caufe, or to regulate it by prudence or by duty. When a man has once fuf fered his mind to be thus vitiated, he becomes one [...]
The Englishman02.04.1713
  • Datum
    Sonntag, 02. April 1713
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] as Covetoufnefs, Gluttony and Luft; one, which taftes of nothing but Pain, as Envy; the rest have a Mixture of Pleaſure and Pain, as Anger and Pride. But when a Man confiders the State of his own Mind, about which every Member of the Chriſtian World is fuppofd at this [...]
[...] but if thy good Prºvidence has ordered it ºtherwife, and thou. feest that I ſhould prove one of thoſe Kings whom thou'givef? in thine Anger, take from me, o merciful Gºd my Life and my Crºwn, make me this Day a Sacrifice to thy Will let 7 Death end the Calamities of France, and let my Blood be [...]
Annals of oriental literatureNo. 2, P. 278 1820
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Januar 1820
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] had, by his own valour, quite annihilated the tribe of Kshatri, he formed at Samanta-panchaka five lakes of blood. We are told that, his reason being overpowered by anger, he made offerings to appease the manes of his ancestors with blood, standing in the midst of the sanguine waters of those lakes; [...]
[...] ye would bestow some favour on me, although the whole of the race of Kshatri have been exterminated by me, while under the influence of anger, the boon I ask is this: that I may be absolved from the evil which therein I have com mitted; and that the lakes, which I have made, may become [...]
[...] his mother Sarama', being hurt at the affliction of her son, went to the place where Janame'jaya, with his brothers, was performing the long sacrifice. She said to him in anger, "This my son hath committed no fault. He hath neither looked upon, nor tasted the oblations, wherefore then hath [...]
[...] effect upon me!" Paushpa, in answer said to him, "I too am not able to withdraw my curse. Even now my anger is not appeased; but this is not experienced by thee. The heart of a Brahmana is mild as new churned butter; while, in his [...]
The tatler25.03.1710
  • Datum
    Dienstag, 25. März 1710
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] woman dumb for a week together. But, if you ever enter into this state, you will find that the soft sex as often express their anger by an obstinate silence, as by an ungovernable clamour. “Those indeed who begin this course of life with [...]
[...] me, ‘Whether we did not call hops broom in our country?' I quickly found they did not ask questions so much out of curiosity as anger: for which reason I thought fit to keep my opinion to myself, and, as [...]
The ramblerRambler 13.04.1751
  • Datum
    Dienstag, 13. April 1751
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] the inftinćts of animal : ; but unhappily he that fixes his attention on things always before him, will never have long ceffations of anger. There are many veterans of luxury, upon whom every noon brings a paroxyſm of violence, fury, and exe [...]
[...] or a feather on the floor, that the reft of the day may be juſtifiably fpent in taunts of contempt, and vociferations of anger. She lives for no other purpoſe but to preferve the neatnefs of a houfe and gardens, and feels neither inclination to plea [...]
The ramblerRambler 23.04.1751
  • Datum
    Freitag, 23. April 1751
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] obſervation : yet it happens, that as thefe pro pofals are generally made with a fhew of kind nefs, they feldom provoke anger, but are at worſt heard with paticnce, and forgotten. Theyinfluence weak minds to approbation ; for many are fure to [...]
[...] when ſhe talked of female anger, and female cun ning. Well, fays fhe, has nature provided that fuch virulence ſhould be difabled by folly, and fuch [...]
The tatler30.03.1710
  • Datum
    Sonntag, 30. März 1710
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] shows, how anger, revenge, and other habits which [...]
[...] defence Achilles is not more bitterly lamented among us than you. Impute not then your death to any one but Jupiter, who, out of his anger to the Greeks, took you away from among them: let me intreat you to approach me; restrain the fierceness [...]
The ramblerRambler, Inhaltsverzeichnis 03.1750/04.1750/05.1750/06.1750/07.1750/08.1750/09.1750
  • Datum
    Sonntag, 01. März 1750
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 1
[...] 11 The folly of anger. The mifery of a peeviſh old age. 6o 12 The hiſtory of a young woman that came to Londºn for [...]
Saturday review13.05.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 13. Mai 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] tained. Notorious as women are for the want of logical faculty, there has been no manifestation of that want more striking than the anger with which they receive the blows incidental to a fight, though they have voluntarily thrust themselves into the midst of that fight against the advice and warning of their best [...]
[...] ANGERS. [...]
[...] To the English traveller Angers is, in point of historic interest, without a rival among the towns of France. Rouen indeed is the cradle of our Norman dynasty, as Angers of our Plantagenet [...]
[...] is the cradle of our Norman dynasty, as Angers of our Plantagenet dynasty; but the Rouen of the Dukes has almost vanished, while Angers remains the Angers of the Counts. The phy siognomy of the place —if we may venture to use the term—has been singularly preserved. Few towns have, it is true, suffered [...]
[...] blow to be replaced by the dreariest of squares; the tombs of its Dukes have disappeared from the Cathedral. In spite, how ever, of new faubourgs, new bridges, and new squares, Angers still retains the impress of the middle ages; its steep and narrow streets, its dark tortuous alleys, the fantastic woodwork of its [...]
[...] f the Cathedral rising sharp against the sky, the stern belfry of St. Aubin. Angers stands in fact on a huge block of slate-rock, thrown forward across the valley from the heights that bound it, and closing up to the river in what was once a cliff as abrupt as that [...]
[...] fecture—above all, a Romanesque arcade fretted with tangled imagery and apocalyptic figures of the richest work of the eleventh century. St. Serge still stands to the north of Angers; its vast gardens and fishponds turned into the public gardens of the town, its church spacious and beautiful, with a noble choir that may [...]
[...] the pretty ruin of Toussaint, not at all unlike our own Tintern, †: well cared for in the gardens of the Museum. But, interesting as these relics are, it is not ecclesiastical Angers that the English traveller instinctively looks for; it is the Angers of the Counts, the birthplace of the Plantagenets. It is only in [...]
[...] that Geoffry Plantagenet must have brought home his English bride along the narrow streets hung with gorgeous tapestries and filled with long trains of priests and burghers. To Angers that day represented the triumphant close of a hundred years' struggle with Normandy; to England it gave the line of its Plantagenet [...]
[...] Change. Professor Munro on Latin Pronunciation. The Sacred Sex. The Religious Movement in Germany. Political Caricatures. Angers. Hap-hazard Legislation. The Royal Academy. The French Comedy Company. [...]
PunchTitelblatt Bd. 061 1871
  • Datum
    Sonntag, 01. Januar 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 1
[...] “O, this is too much," said MR. PUNCH, rather in sorrow than in anger. “Has CHRISTMAs taken the Pledge?" [...]