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Saturday review24.07.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 24. Juli 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] RAIN WATER. [...]
[...] that the public can be induced to take much interest in its removal. Yet for one summer when we get the heavy rains which have lately been witnessed, there are many in which there is very real suffering from want of [...]
[...] “furnish water enough for the whole year, if they could “only be laid up till they were wanted.” It did not then seem likely that what is always true of winter rains would eleven months later come to be true of summer rains as well, and that Mr. BAILEY DENTON would be able to write [...]
[...] “conserved, supply the entire population with water for “ domestic and other purposes for a whole year.” Even at this moment, he goes on, notwithstanding all the rain that has fallen, “there are places where an insufficient “ provision of water exists.” If any aggravation. of the [...]
[...] Whatever be the future of English drainage, there is no probability that the climate will so alter as to make the ordinary winter rains and the occasional summer rains less bountiful than those to which we have been accus tomed. Wells may be dried up, pools may be left empty, [...]
[...] watercourse—all the obstacles to a continuous water supply which we formerly enumerated may increase and multiply with the progress of agriculture, but the rains will still come down. Under these circumstances the really prac tical course is not to wait until the whole question of [...]
[...] Sartorius, ed Coomassie four or five days after the burning of that town. At that moment Sir Garnet Wolseley, anxious to repass the swollen rivers before the rains should beget a pestilence among his English troops, had to guard against some possible attack from the unbroken portion of the enemy till peace was made at [...]
[...] talk and a good deal of love-making. It was the late Sir Arthur Helps, we believe, who defined love as a week in a country house and rain. Silvia Fleming is also staying in the house with Paul and Nell, and although she is carrying on a desperate flirtation with another [...]
[...] but the former includes the whole of the latter. The scarcity of rain is the one disadvantage of California, which might otherwise be, if not now, yet at no distant period, really the terrestrial paradise which it is sometimes called. The tendency of [...]
[...] Mr. Gladstone on Economy. The French Assembly. The Agricultural Holdings Bill. Colonists to Order. The Cobden Club. Rain Water. District Universities. [...]
Saturday review[Beilage] 27.03.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 27. März 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] word concerning God, I emphatically denyi and I call upon the Dean and his friend either to substantiate the charge, or publicly to acknowledge its injustice. The reviewer says, -"The prayer for rain on Carmel, so thrilling and solemn with intense emotion, the great scene of the Baal altars, the wonderful vision in the rock, the fiery chariot.— all is degraded." There is not one word of prayer for rain on Carmel on record in the whole of [...]
[...] all is degraded." There is not one word of prayer for rain on Carmel on record in the whole of the Bible. Judge then of this clergyman's truthfulness in describing it as being “so thrilling and solemn with intense emotion!” St. James tells us that Elijah prayed for rain; but where he prayed, and in what language he prayed, we are not told; therefore, to state that I have degraded “the prayer for rain ou Carmel, so thrilling and solemn with intense emotion," is to [...]
[...] he prayed, and in what language he prayed, we are not told; therefore, to state that I have degraded “the prayer for rain ou Carmel, so thrilling and solemn with intense emotion," is to state what is utterly false; for as there is no prayer for rain on Carmel to be found in the Bible, so neither is there in my poem. To proceed:—“the great scene of the Baal altars.” Here is another instance of this clergy [...]
[...] the spiritual insight of a Robertson, nor the intuitive art [" intuitive art” I suppose that we shall hear next of acquired instinct] of a Mendelssohn, therefore [mark the logic of the sequence) his prayer for rain [I have already remarked that there is not, in the history of Elijah, any language of prayer for rain, either in the Bible or in my m] is feeble rhodomontade [the dunce does not even know how to spell. He is evidently ignorant of the fact that the word [...]
[...] ,, . I.- In the Scales. - ., 12. "A Cruel Parting." RAIN SONG. Illustrated by R. Newcombe. speNcert CARLTON'S LOVE STORY. STUDIES FROM LIFE AT THE COURT OF ST. JAMES’S. Drawn by the [...]
Saturday review25.06.1859
  • Datum
    Samstag, 25. Juni 1859
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] THE CAUSE OF RAIN.” [...]
[...] number of observers who note, with greater or less accuracy, the variations of the barometer and thermometer, and measure every, inch of rain that falls throughout the year, is almost countless. Perhaps there is no scientific subject which receives so much attention of every kind, from the most philosophical down [...]
[...] to the most casual observations, as meteorology, and especially that branch of the science which treats of the phenomena connected with rain. And yet nothing, or almost nothing, is known with certainty about this universally studied science. The nearest approach to an explanation of the cause of rain which is to be [...]
[...] observed phenomena. The field has long been open for discovery, and Mr. Rowell has come forward with a theory which he believes sufficient to solve the whole mystery of rain and snow, wind and hail, lightning and tempest, which has baffled the world till now. Nay, he even goes so far as to suggest a scheme by which rain [...]
[...] ripe fruit of his investigations, which had already been given to the world in a pamphlet, published in 1841, with the startling title, Conjectures on the Cause of Rain, Storms, the Aurora, and Magnetism : with a Suggestion for Causing Rain at Will. Probably the reader's first impulse will be to laugh at [...]
[...] * An Essay on the Cause of Rain and its allied Phenomena. By G. A. Rowell,. Honorary Member of the Ashmolean Society. Oxford; published by the Author, is 59. [...]
[...] at all times, and are buoyed up into the air by their coatings of electricity; when, if condensed, they become positively electrified, but are still buoyed up by the electricity, till, on the escape of the surcharge, the particles fall as rain. [...]
[...] to doubt that the concurrent testimony gained from the pheno mena of evaporation, the suspension of clouds, the formation of rain and hail, the peculiarities of thunder-storms, and other natural phenomena, can only be accounted for by the supposi tion that the hypothesis involves certain elements of the true [...]
[...] The production of rain by artificial means is, upon the author's ...] es, the simplest thing in the world. Rain, he says, is caused by the abstraction of electricity from the vapour floating [...]
[...] ...] es, the simplest thing in the world. Rain, he says, is caused by the abstraction of electricity from the vapour floating in the atmosphere. Thus mountains cause rain by acting as conductors, and not, as commonly assumed, by condensing the vapour—an explanation which, as Mr. Rowell justly observes, [...]
Saturday review15.03.1873
  • Datum
    Samstag, 15. März 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Restoration of Charles the Second. Baeda and Cosin come alike within the sphere of Surtees editorship. The volume which Mr. Raine here gives us belongs to an intermediate stage. It has to deal with perhaps the most famous of the Archbishops of York in the thirteenth century. Walter Gray is, we suspect, best known [...]
[...] though there is another—also from the province of York, though from the diocese of Durham—now printing in the series of Chroni cles and Memorials. To the Register itself Mr. Raine has added by way of Appendix a great number of other documents in which Walter Gray was concerned, gathered together from [...]
[...] great many of the entries are . onl .# a formal kind —records of institutions and such like ministerial acts. In these cases Mr. Raine has not thought it needful to reprint the whole of these documents, which of course include a great deal of mere legal phraseology which cannot differ greatly in each par [...]
[...] dangerous. We believe however that Mr. Raine may be trusted to settle what is worth giving in full and what is not, and certainly, for all general and for most local purposes, it is enough to have the [...]
[...] document itself could not have been any fuller, and we see how everybody was described, who was “Dominus” and who was “Magister.” Mr. Raine's “Mr.” has a singularly modern look as applied to these thirteenth-century personages. . But as he uses it throughout as a received abbreviation for “magister,” there seems [...]
[...] throughout as a received abbreviation for “magister,” there seems to be nothing to be said against it. Mr. Raine in his Preface gives a general sketch of , the state of things during the time that the see of York was held by Walter Gray. e must remember that during the fifteen [...]
[...] documents is the jurisdiction of the Archbishops of York over the Archbishops of Scotland. Mr. Raine sets forth his private opinion on this matter in a shape which to many will sound startling:— It is sometimes said that the Northern Convocation is too small in [...]
[...] .# called after the elder, and the children after the newer, fashion. We quote the following passage from Mr. Raine's preface:– In one instance only do I find the archbishop mentioned in connection with education, and that is in the gift of a house in Oxford, called Black [...]
[...] therefore of the University of Oxford.” The University began in the twelfth century, the Colleges in the thirteenth. quite jº. Raine when he says:— In the infancy of cathedral institutions the bishop resided at the cathedral church, and was its head, an abbat acting under him, with the title of [...]
[...] not designed by him standing over it. In the true Palace at York —now utterly forsaken for the rural retreat—he built the chapel which now forms the library where Mr. Raine so worthily pre sides over the capitular treasures. [...]
Saturday review06.12.1873
  • Datum
    Samstag, 06. Dezember 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] into one huge wet field of unbroken cultivation, and to enable the higher lands to produce two successive and distinct crops in one twelvemonth, some sixty to eighty inches of rain are almost in dispensable. But Bengal, and indeed India generally, must have, to use a Biblical expression, the former and the latter rain in [...]
[...] of October. Perhaps the happiest distribution is when there is never more than a fortnight or three weeks of sunshine with out rain during that period, and the worst is when all the supply is exhausted before the middle of September. Better that the dry heats of May should be prolonged till the middle of July than [...]
[...] was reaped in March. In most years the bright, exhilarating, and not oppressive sunshine of the cold season is now and then obscured by clouds, and rain generally falls for a couple of days at any time [...]
[...] visitation has nothing tropical about it. The drops descendplay much as they do in moderate autumnal showers in England. T. crops, if the rain be unaccompanied by hail, look better than ever, Ryots shiver in their scanty clothing of American or Manchester workmanship; and Englishmen encamped in the interior of dis. [...]
[...] f course the coming February, must present a picture in lamentable contrast to this. Not that Bengal will ever be re duced by failure of rains to the aridity of an African or Arabian desert. The ground, indeed, will become hard as iron, but verdure will still conceal the village, and all sorts of worthless herbage [...]
[...] will still conceal the village, and all sorts of worthless herbage will spring up unbidden, from the copious night dews or from the slight winter's rain. But it must not be imagined that any timely fall at Christmas can enable the Ryots to recover their lost ground. The tropical downpour, which floods a vast area, has [...]
[...] penny, with the absolute certainty of reaching their destination, one hundred miles off, at the rate of ten miles a day. This season, owing to the failure of rains, the plains on either bank of the Ganges must be open to carriage traffic at an earlier period than usual, and they will continue passable to the middle or [...]
[...] than usual, and they will continue passable to the middle or end of May. The difficulty of internal transit only begins with the periodical rains; but the Indian Government need hardly be warned to commence purchasing and storing before that date. Then, although the rice crop has failed, the cold-weather crops of [...]
[...] with dust, and its fitful visitation of water is a sudden deluge re peated at uncertain intervals of many months; for two years may pass in some districts, with scarcely a drop of rain. In happy contrast to this forbidding view of the void and waste expanse, still partially unexplored, which makes in our maps a doleful [...]
[...] passing that we grudge the half-page which he has devoted to a meteorological parallel between Roman and Victorian Britain quá rain and fogs, seeing that readers might naturally ask for more about Caractacus and Boadicea. To the consideration of the monograph on the Manners of the [...]
Saturday review25.05.1861
  • Datum
    Samstag, 25. Mai 1861
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] RAINE'S HISTORY OF BLYTII.” [...]
[...] THE name of Raine is in itself a sufficient guarantee for sound scholarship and archaeological knowledge. We have great pleasure in recommending to our antiquarian readers the volume [...]
[...] * The History and Antiquities of the Parish of Byth, in the Counties of Nottingham and York. With Introduction, Notes, and Appendix of Docu ments. %. Rev. John Raine, M.A., Vicar of Blyth, º formerly Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. Westminster: Nichols. 1860. [...]
[...] as the “Wathwood coal” of the Derbyshire and South Yorkshire coalfields. Leaving geology for history, Mr. Raine finds numerous British names of places in this district. He instances the rivers Don, Trent, and Derwent; the brooks Maund, lale, and Meaden; and [...]
[...] resting to persons unconnected with the place than the more general matters which we have already touched upon. Mr. Raine, who is exceedingly fortunate in the abundance of materials ready to his hand, pursues, with true antiquarian relish, the manorial changes of the several honours, or estates, contained in [...]
[...] solution—of the palace of the Archbishop of York at Scrooby and of the manorial successions of a host of subordinate town ships. Referring the professed antiquary to Mr. Raine's pages for all this, we will merely select a few curious matters for notice which struck us on perusing the volume. [...]
[...] the receipts and expenditure of the house at Blyth. From this a clear idea may be formed of the “corrodies” and pensions chargeable upon the income of the fraternity; and Mr. Raine dwells, with pardonable fervour, on the hospitalities and charities and peaceful religious lives of his predecessors at Blyth. [...]
[...] Nottinghamshire has had as yet no county historian. Mr. Raine has shown, by his able treatment of a part, that he is better qualified than any other man to attempt the whole. [...]
[...] The Red River Expedition. Proverbs of the German Jews. Raine's listory of Llyth. London : Published at 38, SOUTHAMPTON STREET, STRANT, W.C. R. HOWARD GLOVER respectfully announces that his [...]
[...] -- --- * --- - - THE BEST DEFENCE AGAINST DUST or RAIN, for G. NTLEMEN, is NICOLL's CAPE COATs. For LAD1 Es, Nicoll's slº. EVE CL0AK WITH HOOD, these are Shower (Not Al R} prºof, the cost hein. One Guinea each. [...]
Saturday review04.01.1873
  • Datum
    Samstag, 04. Januar 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] struggle piteously through a sea of filthy mud. Ordinary people, accustomed to think more of their own immediate comfort }. of next year's crops, have certainly found the ceaseless rain suffi ciently unpleasant and depressing; and the Archbishop may be excused for imagining that a little fine weather would probably be [...]
[...] and there is no reason to suppose that alternations of d and wet seasons will not continue to the end of time. It may be well to be thankful for rain without wishing that it should rain for ever. Mr. Denton adopts a more popular line of argument when he points to the statistics of public health as [...]
[...] Archbishop of Canterbury for his letter to the clergy observes contemptuously that the prayer which His Grace recommends was written when men were so ignorant as to º that rain was a mere watering-pot contrivance adapted to local wants, and that there could be rain in one parish without reference to the [...]
[...] of the planets. In the meantime enough is known to show the connexion of meteorological phenomena throughout the world, and to remove the rain-clouds from the sphere of parish politics. Perhaps the most satisfactory frame of mind to cultivate in regard to the weather is to take it as it comes, and try to make the best of [...]
[...] the dictation of an Archbishop. If the Church went in for fair weather, the Dissenters would have no alternative but to pray for rain. Indeed we rather wonder that the Liberation Society has not already sounded a note of alarm. It is quite conceivable that, armed with the Registrar-General's figures, [...]
[...] conceivable that, armed with the Registrar-General's figures, the Dissenters might be able to make a strong appeal to the prejudices of town populations. The rain, it would be urged, [...]
[...] ament has perhaps been adopted in consideration of the early closing of public-houses, and certainly, when an evening begins with rain and goes on to tears, it may be desirable to fortify oneself against the influence of damp by a drop of gin or brandy before going to bed. The “new and original play" called False Shame [...]
[...] a moment ceases to modify the configuration of the globe, not only by its wasting violence, but by the agency of its clouds, its rains, and meteoric influences at large. Manifold as are the atmospheric agencies by which the mountain summits are riven and worn down, the rocks dissolved and hollowed into [...]
[...] veins and veinlets which carry back to the reservoir of the ocean the waters distributed over the soil by the great arterial system of clouds and rain? As for climate, upon the varieties of which all that lives upon the earth depends, does it not follow from movements of the ocean, at least as much as from the distri [...]
[...] of this water being carried away by the trade-winds and other aerial currents, notwithstanding that much of it falls back into the sea, in the shape of rain, an immense void is made, into which rushes the superabundant mass of water from the polar basin, where the contributions of snow, rain, and ice, exceed the loss in vapour. [...]
Saturday review22.04.1865
  • Datum
    Samstag, 22. April 1865
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] RAINE'S PRIORY OF IIEXIIAM." [...]
[...] and Prior John to be edited just as Florence of Worcester or Matthew Paris should be edited. And surely, after all, Mr. Raine outdoes his brethren; at least we do not remember that Mr. Walbran, in editing the Chronicles of Fountains, ever quoted Thomas Moore. [...]
[...] †. several ways . The modern Hexham is a contraction of Hextoldesham, which begins to appear in the fourteenth century. But the older name is Hagulstadt; so at least Mr. Raine writes it, but the termination has a strangely High-Dutch and un English look, and in two manuscripts of the Chronicle the forms [...]
[...] it, but the termination has a strangely High-Dutch and un English look, and in two manuscripts of the Chronicle the forms are Agustald and Hagustaldes-ea. According to Mr. Raine, both names come from neighbouring brooks, Hextold and Halgut or Hallgarth. Latinizing writers seem to have fancied the name had [...]
[...] that is altogether another doctrine, and is one that has much to be said for it. But Wilfrith's church is thus described by Prior Richard in the twelfth century, when, as Mr. Raine shows, it was still standing:— - Parietes antem quadratis, et variis, et bene politis columpnis suffultos, et [...]
[...] Mr. Raine goes on with the history of Hexham at length, but after the great Scottish inroad, from which the house seems nexºr to have thoroughly recovered, there is nothing so remarkable [...]
[...] age of Grace. Mr. Froude leaves out the actual scene at Hexham, though he describes with his usual glee the bloody vengeance of Henry. The whole story, as told by Mr. Raine, and especially the clever rascality of one John Heron of Chipchase, is well worth reading. Mr. Raine has also printed a great number of docu [...]
[...] reading. Mr. Raine has also printed a great number of docu ments illustrating the fall of the Priory. The principal chronicles which Mr. Raine has here edited have both been already printed in Twysden's Decem Scriptores. These are the works of two Priors—Richard, who was Prior from 1 141 [...]
[...] sub corum patrocinio vivimus, quorum honori diei hujus gaudia dedica Wanavis. It strikes us in one or two places that Mr. Raine is rather inclined to take liberties with his manuscripts. It his author, or even his transcriber, was so poor a scholar as to make the perfect [...]
[...] might either have got all the Hexham matter intº a single volume, or at any rate that the revised chronicles might have appeared in one volume, and all that Mr. Raine has to tell us in his own person, architectural or historical, in another. [...]
Saturday review14.11.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 14. November 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] way to dispose of the two principal obstacles. There is no dispute as to the possibilities of the scheme. It is not possible to provide for the whole of the rain-fall by any system of sewers, because channels constructed to carry off all the water that falls in a day of pelting rain would be not [...]
[...] All the engineers are agreed in this; and the only difference between the rival plans is, that the one proposes to suffer the mixed rain and sewage to flow into the river during ten or a dozen of the wettest days in the year, while the other claims the privilege of polluting the river for about ten [...]
[...] horses, and waggons, and many other things about which we know nothing. But towards us he had no ‘.... He gave us nothing, except the assegai, and cattle, and rain making ; and he did not give us hearts like yours. We never love each other.” Then, when the missionary comes to enforce practical and posi [...]
[...] Besides insisting on the suppression of º Dr. Living stone also #. his efforts to put down war, and to get rid of the practice of calling in rain-doctors to end a drought by incan tation. With .# to both these subjects, we find matter that shows us the difficulties a missionary has to encounter, and the [...]
[...] the necessity of fulfilling the Christian duty of punishing rebels. If these things are right for us, how can they . wrong for the heathen P. As to the charms used to make rain, we do not see that it is a religious question at all. Dr. Livingstone gives a sketch of the arguments used by a rain-doctor whom he attempted [...]
[...] that it is a religious question at all. Dr. Livingstone gives a sketch of the arguments used by a rain-doctor whom he attempted to reason into abandoning his trade. We must say that the rain doctor seems to us to have had the best of the controversy. He ... urged that Dr. Livingstone gave medicines which sometimes [...]
[...] answered, and then the credit of success was claimed, but which also sometimes failed. He, too, used his charms, which were some times followed by rain, and sometimes not. The charm consisted in slaughtering a sheep and burning it with frankincense, the vapour being supposed to communicate with the clouds. . The only [...]
[...] that the hoped-for consequence will follow, they surely are bound to use human means for obtaining their ends. The true answer to the rain-doctors is to be found, not in the New Testament, but in the logic which will be gradually instilled among the natives by intercourse with the scientific nations of Europe. [...]
Saturday review08.06.1872
  • Datum
    Samstag, 08. Juni 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] and diminished the attendance at Mr. Beecher's church. We wish by the way that the earth could, with any approach to accuracy, be de scribed as thirsty in London. In consequence of the rain there were several vacant chairs and a prevailing “masculinity” among Mr. Beecher's congregation. The places usually occupied by ladies [...]
[...] attendance at each of the twenty-six Catholic churches of Brooklyn at the morning masses of 19th May was not perceptibly diminished on account of the rain, as the weather rarely influences the num bers of worshippers at mass. There are people who will believe almost anything that a newspaper tells them, particularly if it is [...]
[...] DR. ANG US SMITH ON AIR AND RAIN." [...]
[...] * Air and Rain; the Beginnings of a Chemical Climatology. ... B Robert Angus Smith, Ph.D., F.R.S., F.C.S. (General). Inspector # Alſº Works for the Government. London: Longmans & Co. 1872. [...]
[...] portions of his inquiry we have neither time nor scope to follow our author. Nor can we do justice to his ingenious and pains taking observations upon Rain, the result of twenty years' accu mulation and analysis of facts. Few people have any idea how complicated a substance what we call rain practically is. [...]
[...] how complicated a substance what we call rain practically is. Fully a hundred tables are taken up with the analysis of samples of rain-water collected from various districts of the United Kingdom. The researches of MM. Robinet and Bobierre, supple mented by our author's own experiments, are brought to bear [...]
[...] Kingdom. The researches of MM. Robinet and Bobierre, supple mented by our author's own experiments, are brought to bear upon the chemical constituents of rain at different altitudes, inland or by the sea, in country districts or in towns most widely differ ing in conditions. Not only chemical tests, but the microscope, [...]
[...] and even the spectroscope, are employed to determine the acid and other elements of impurity. In the series of illustrations the reader's eye is shown the variety of crystals deposited by the rain of Manchester, London, and Newcastle, in contrast with the less contaminated Row Rain from the Gareloch, on the Clyde. To [...]
[...] of Manchester, London, and Newcastle, in contrast with the less contaminated Row Rain from the Gareloch, on the Clyde. To imitate the action of rain, by the process of artificial washing applied to the air, formed a natural sequel to an analysis of this kind. The author was himself surprised to see the figures of the [...]
[...] The Royal Academy. Rook's Life of Archbishop Parker. Dr. Angns Smith on Air and Rain. Hermann Agha. [...]
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