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Saturday review[Beilage] 16.07.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 16. Juli 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] “It would be impossible, we imagine, to give a book to a schoolboy which could prove more welcome to him than this. It is a work to be consulted upon every emergency and upon every question of interest that may arise out of school hours."—Pull Mall Gazette. FREDERick WARNE & Co., Bedford Street, Covent Garden. [...]
[...] “Mr. Musgrave is a man of considerable information and good powers of observation. His look is interesting and amusing."—Pull Mall Gazette. [...]
[...] By ALSAGER HAY HILL. “Some of Mr. Hill's poems have a freshness and felicity of their own, a genuine idyllic ring such as to distinguish them from the ordinary sort of descriptive verse."—Pull Mall Gazette. “A volume which is sure to find a large public."—Westminster l'eview. [...]
Saturday review29.05.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 29. Mai 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] cult for a Minister to have his course more plainly marked out for him than M. BUFFET has now. He cannot resign without pulling down, or running the risk of pulling down, the whole of the constitutional edifice which it has cost so much to build up. It is admitted that Marshal MACMAHON [...]
[...] entries about churches in Domesday are so capricious that it would be equally unsafe to infer from this either that no churches were }. down or that all were pulled down except one or two. omesday, however, shows that afforestation did not imply, as no rational person would think that it did imply, the complete de [...]
[...] descriptions. We need not stop to discuss the figures which some of them give us, the number of churches which were pulled down, or the number of miles over which the devastation was spread; one of the first things which the historical critic learns is to distrust all figures, whether in those times or in [...]
[...] devastation was spread; one of the first things which the historical critic learns is to distrust all figures, whether in those times or in his own. If two or three churches were pulled down, they would be multiplied in common belief into twenty or thirty. And it is quite certain that the Forest district, as a whole, could never have [...]
[...] have been pulled down, it would be possible to trace their founda tions. People do not seem to know that even stone buildings were often built without any foundations, and that, in this district of [...]
[...] speed brought Galopin home an easy winner by a length. Repentance colt was, on sufferance, an indifferent third, and then came a cluster of pulling-up horses, among whom were Earl of Dartrey, Seymour, Garterly Bell, and Bay of Naples. Balfe, as might have been expected, failed to stay, and the moderate quality [...]
[...] listed as a soldier. The Clerk was ignominiously displaced, and did not long survive the transaction. Some years afterwards, his house was pulled down to afford room for extensive improvements and new buildings in the village. [...]
[...] whom her father familiarly calls Teazer, by the word “Halt 1.” “uttered in a loud, clear, imperious female voice”; and the next instant a pistol shot passes so close to his head that he pulls off his hat expecting to find a hole in it. This is º the beginning of the mystification to which he is exposed. The man-servant, [...]
[...] treats him accordingly. . He never takes his eyes off him during dinner, and at night, always by Theresa's orders, he enters his room twice, to pull down the blind and keep the moonlight, so fatal to lunatics, from coming on to his bed. When her father asks Theresa to sing, as it seems she can do well enough when she [...]
[...] tainly not be of the kind to develop later into the charming, frank, graceful girl who wins Charlie Hargrave's heart as easily as a man puts on a new glove after pulling off an old one. There were a thousand ways of repelling an unwelcome lover brought down to come, see, and conquer, beside the outrageous eccen [...]
Saturday review[Beilage] 23.10.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 23. Oktober 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] “The best handbook of the city and environs of Rome ever published........ It cannot be too Inuch commended."—Pull Mall Gazette. [...]
[...] tive, and has imaged the vicissitudes of empires, arts, and superstitions with a breadth of intelligence and a confident zeal eminently suited to a time º. antiquarian research has obtained many marvellous triumphs.”—Pull Mall Gazette. “Mr. Todd's poem is simple, almost severe, and thoroughly pure in style, tone, and treat ment. We have met him before in paths of poetry, but were hardly prepared for an effort so [...]
Saturday review[Beilage] 12.12.1874
  • Datum
    Samstag, 12. Dezember 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] “We heartily welcome this excellent translation."—Saturda” ferrer. “His cause was the cause of the whole modern world, and it never had a truer or more generous chainpion.”—Pull Mall Gazette. [...]
[...] “Those who see the importance of translating the precents ºf physiology from a scientific 'tong, c nºt understanded of the people' into plain and forcible English, may well rejoice that Mr. Kunz-ºw has en up the cause.” – Pull ºf ariſ (, , , sette. "lºt markahle for the variety and interest of its contents. It is impossible within our space to do adequate justice to this attractive volume.”—Spcctator. [...]
Saturday review[Beilage] 09.08.1873
  • Datum
    Samstag, 09. August 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 1
[...] "A clever and interesting book: The characters are all hit off with ease and dash, and tº dialogues are smart and pointed.”—Saturday 1:eview. ... A very pleasant story.”—Pull Mall Gazette. “A carefully written und interesting story.”—Spectator. [...]
Saturday review03.04.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 03. April 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] show itself capable of everything, and determined to hold on and win in the race at every cost. But it was a great pull upon their strength and nerves and pluck. They bore up manfully, but they had much to endure. Now all is ease and pleasure with them. They have no difficult [...]
[...] fies the means, who makes his unlearned flock believe that a can didate, perhaps of special ecclesiastical tastes, is chiefly anxious to pull down the churches, who even teaches that Mr. Gladstone's ac cession to power involves a return to slavery, and the immediate beginning of autos-da-fé in the market-place. What, on the [...]
[...] unknown. One thing which struck many people at the late election, besides the absurd fear of pulling down churches, lighting the fires of Smithfield, and such rubbish, was the way in which a more rational dread about the Irish Church had aftected classes which [...]
[...] private judgment among country fools of all classes, as well as tº make a serious inroad on the constitutional rights of the bankrupt publicans who get them up, the blacklegs who pull their horses at them, and the lawless and predatory classes who attend them. [...]
[...] he was entrenched and fortified; it was his Sunday castle; and out of it, by fair means or foul, he must be made to come. If he would help to pull it down, so much the better; if not, it must be pulled down about his ears. It is doubtful, in deed, whether the Oxford enthusiasts of the last generation would [...]
[...] it must be pulled down about his ears. It is doubtful, in deed, whether the Oxford enthusiasts of the last generation would have been so eager in pulling the castle down, had they not been quite certain that the middle-class British householder, was in it. As he was there, however, and made no secret of his pre [...]
[...] growth of London. James I. had scarcely come to the throne when he ordered all such houses as had been erected contrary to Elizabeth's proclamation to be pulled down. In 1617, and again in 1622, all nobles, knights, and gentlemen were ordered to go hence, with their wives and families, and to remain in their [...]
[...] plosion, and the blazing wreck sinks hissing into the water. Of course the lad is assumed to be burnt or drowned, and the boat pulls into shore. When news comes to Portlappock of his loss, the Lindsay distress culminates, and Jeanie marries Robin Gray. But the Robin Gray of the book and the Auld Robin Gray of the [...]
Saturday review23.05.1874
  • Datum
    Samstag, 23. Mai 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] Manchester from the old church to a new one; still less are we sure that, if it be thought desirable to do so, it at all follows that the building of the new church need involve the pulling down, or worse than the pulling down, of the old one. That Manchester Cathedral is something very inferior to, or to [...]
[...] tunity. And the prospect is yet more fearful, if the form of the scheme which seems to have won most favour should really be carried out. This is not the comparatively harmless process of pulling down the present church, as St. Wulfstan did at Wörcester—thoug to be sure he wept when he had done it—and building up the new one [...]
[...] sticking on him the mane and tail of his more majestic cousin. Barbarous as would be the notion of utterly destroying the existing church, it would be less barbarous than the notion of pulling it about in this reckless fashion, in the vain hope of changing it into womething which it is not and never can be. [...]
[...] ture:— The Duke of Wellington generally rises at about eight. Before he gets out of bed he commonly pulls off his nightcap. . . . . The Duke of Wellington's pockets are in the skirts of his coat, and the holes perpendicular. He wears false horizontal flaps, which have given the world an erroneous opinion of [...]
[...] Those great thick ropes to tow the barges with. In vv. 479-80 occurs a difficulty which has been felt by many critics and commentators, where, in the pulling-match to get Peace out of her cave, Hermes takes exception to Trygaeus's observation, that the Laconians pull lustily: [...]
[...] forgers” as a class, who were disposed to leave the prisoners of Spacteria still in bonds, whereas the relatives of the prisoners, the best blood of Lacedæmon, would pull with their might, and justify their zeal as well as their designation, Gao-gyovrat row &Mov... Mr. Paley, whose volume was published a month or two [...]
Saturday review[Beilage] 04.03.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 04. März 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] recorded in history. There is a vein of pºetry running through the ok which makes it exceedingly attractive. The tale is fresh and animated thrºughout, and cºntains some briz.: bits of description over which the reader will be tempted to linger."—Pull Mall Gazette. [...]
[...] * Mſ. Barham goes out of his way to fetch a §. when it seems worth the bringing. We it, "t only have stories of Hook and Cannon, but stories told by Hook and Cannon, and thus the look is agreeably desultory and chatty, as such books should be."—Pull Mall Gazette. [...]
Saturday review[Beilage] 25.11.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 25. November 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] “walter crane with his well, ºf imaginative fresco-looking designs has stamped his tnakon the old ſuiry tales.”—Pull Mall Gazette. [...]
[...] Introduction on the Religious Difficulties of the Times. 2 vols. demy Svo. 24s. “Well worth reading by all who value kindly sentiment and delicate appreciation of the iiterary and theological tendencies of the age."—Pull ſail Gazette, “If we were asked to point to any one book containing what is most characteristic of the higher English thought and life in the nineteenth century, without hesitation we would point [...]
Saturday review[Beilage] 15.05.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 15. Mai 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] made with well-water which was anything but pure, and some of which was dangerously im pure.' All this certainly does pleud rather strongly in favour of the use of a pure, natural effervescent water.”—Pull Mall Gazette. [...]
[...] are rich, varied, and poetic : the historical and political ideas interwoven with the dialozuc are bold and striking ; while over all breathes nameless charm which tells us we are in the presence of genius.”—Pull JI, tº tº a cert. “It is not only in delineation of human nature that the mºuthor excels. pnssages are magnifice: t. and nºt times there is a power about them which pºsitively touches the [...]
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