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Saturday review[Beilage] 12.08.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 12. August 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] See MUDIE'S LIBRARY CIRCULAR for AUGUST. Postage free. MUDIES SELECT LIBRARY-CHEAP Books—see [...]
[...] CONSTRUCTION of HIGHWAYS.—See THE BUILDER [...]
[...] ENGLISH LAKE DISTRICT, Lancas ter, Preston, Burnley, Accrington, &c.—See Sheet 4, LARGE SUALE RAILWAY and STATION MAP of ENGLAND and WALES. 1s. plain ; 1s. 6d. coloured. [...]
[...] LEEDS, York, Bradford, º &c., and Surrounding Country. See Sheet 5, GESCALE RAILWAY and §§on MAP of ENGLAND and WALES. 1s. plain : 1s. 6d. coloured. [...]
[...] SCARBOROUGH, Hull, Whitby, &c., and Surrounding Country.—See Sheet 6, LARGE SCALE RAILWAY and STATION MAP of ENGLAND and WALES. Is... plain ; 1s. 0d. coloured. [...]
[...] NORTH WALES.—See Sheet 7 and 8, LARGE SCALE RAILWAY and STATION MAP of §§§so and WALES. 1s, each plain ; ls, 5d. [...]
[...] SOUTH WALES.–See Sheets 12, 13, and 14, LARGE SCALE RAILWAY and STATION MAF of ENGLAND and WALES. 1s. each plain ; [...]
[...] BIRMINGHAM, Leamington, Rugby, Warwick, Oxford, &c., and Surrounding §§ See sheets º' and is, i.A.RGE | SCALE RAILWAY and STATION MAF of ENGLAND and WALES. Is. cach [...]
[...] BRIGHTON, Worthing, Newhaven, East. §º Gºgºłºść§ § try.—See Sheet 22, LARGE. SCA1, - .."{{Riº" ºf fººn. WALíš. 15. plain; is. 6d. coloured. [...]
[...] PLYMOUTH, Falmouth, Pºlº, § —See Sheet 24, LARGE | SCALE_RAII. in. STATION MAF of £NößANíjand WALES. is plaini ls. 6d. coloured. he [...]
Saturday review01.02.1862
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Februar 1862
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] ARCHIDEACON GREGG AND THE SEE OF CORK. [...]
[...] MOVING IN SOCIETY:—See Early [...]
[...] See Earl [...]
[...] —See Early Numbers of the Monthly, Magazine—LoNDon SocIETY. [...]
[...] Tale of Character and Society.—See Early Numbers Richly [...]
[...] See §§ Illustrated Shilling Magazine. [...]
[...] LONDON CLIMATE. — See Early [...]
[...] ENGLISH CLASSICS.—See Early Numbers of LoN Richly Illus [...]
[...] THE DAZZLED BACHELOR.—See M [...]
[...] AESQPIN PICCADILLY-Sée Early [...]
Saturday review15.04.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 15. April 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] so far on the right road that, instead of copying the mere forms of Parliamentary government, they have begun to see its real meaning, and to see that it, or whatever may be deemed worthy to replace it, can only rest on the desire of men at once to act for themselves and to make fair allow [...]
[...] duty of the Government to see that the law is equally enforced in all cases, without respect of persons. As far as the public has any evidence before it, a mere reprimand [...]
[...] most instructive piece of history. Latin words began to cree into Greek to express purely Roman things, as soon as Greeks an Romans had much to do with one another. We see it in the New Testament; we see it in all the Greek writers under the Roman Empire. They translated when they could; they often adopt with [...]
[...] Men went on talking the natural Greek of tea-things, it is ridiculous to see sets of cups and saucers ranged on [...]
[...] from the interest excited by it must be imminent. Except the few scores of persons who occupy the attendant steamers, nobody now sees much of the race; but they see as much as they see of the Derby, and they understand more; and if weather favours, the consumption of chicken and champagne proceeds equally at both [...]
[...] this is a very strong position for the sort of idolaters of whom we are speaking to take up; and as long as they keep to it they are safe. They see what they see in their object of worship, because they bring to the study of it certain prepossessions and convictions which enable them to see it, or fancy they see it. Everybody [...]
[...] setting sun. Only enthusiasts of this kind had, perhaps, better not call the attention of sober, practical-minded people to their romantic fancies. Where one sees a hawk another sees a whale, and the picturesque castles on rugged promontories are detected as mere smouldering cinders. Moreover, this sort of isolated satisfaction [...]
[...] doubt what they say, cynics may scoff; but they can always reply, “Yes, that is all very well, but you do not know what you are talking about; we do; we hear a voice you cannot hear, we see a hand you cannot see; and we cannot think of letting ordinary R. into the sanctuary.” This is the Spiritualists' game. [...]
[...] wonderful to see how mild his Caesarism looks by comparison. He has no sympathy whatever with the paradoxical school whose greatest exploit is to turn Catilina into a popular hero. Yet, even [...]
[...] John Martin of Worcester he made wee, Be it known to all that do wee see. [...]
Saturday review01.10.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Oktober 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] city arose under the shadow of the cathedral—just as Peterborough . St. Edmundsbury arose under the shadow of the abbey— while at York and Lincoln the Bishop's see was placed in an already existing city. At York indeed the establishment of the see, and there with of the metropolitan church, does at least date [...]
[...] tion came along with the military one. In Ioyo began the change by which, as had already happened at Exeter, so many ºpiscopal sees were transferred from smaller to greater towns. The land from the Thames to the Humber still formed one vast diocese, the see of which was still at the Oxfordshire Dorchester. [...]
[...] chamber is left unfastened on the outside and the supports of the falling trap are removed, so that it keeps its level only by a slight adhesion. In another moment we shall see what we shall see. The part of Amy is performed by Miss Neilson, a young lady who has achieved distinction in the parts which old playgoers [...]
[...] how Foster, the accomplice of Varney, looked down into the abyss, and awe-struck at the deed in which he had shared, exclaimed, “I see only a heap of white clothes like a snow-drift. O God, she moves her arm.” We could not expect by any possible arrangement of the stage to see the body of Amy both falling [...]
[...] Congress... We should have a difficulty in saying whether we should prefer to see Amy Robsart a second time, or to hear, a few papers upon drainage and woman's rights. [...]
[...] We will, however, undertake to go and see Amy Robsart again if the author will add to the four acts of which it now consists a fifth act, in which we may see what happened [...]
[...] Katharine of Aragon. As regards the author's mutilation of the story, we will refer readers to the passage where Leicester says, “I see above me the pinnacle which I cannot reach; be [...]
[...] when he runs alone, Mr. Saunders is very liable to inaccuracies, as where, in p. 1 of, he quotes, as a translation of Ringwaldt, two stanzas beginning “Great God what do I see and hear,” one of which, the second, is an English original by Dr. Collier (see Book of Praise, p. 481); and where again, in pp. 164–5, he makes [...]
[...] My eyes are dim, I cannot see; [...]
[...] Publisher will be happy to answer inquiries respecting the Terms of a Half-yearly or Pearly Subscription for sending the Paper by post direct from London.—See also Advertisements, pp. 442. [...]
Saturday review[Beilage] 19.08.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 19. August 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] See eulogistic Reports on Labels from every Medical Paper in England. In Bottles, ls, each, from Chemists and Grocers. Introduced and prepared by KINMOND & CO., Leamington. [...]
[...] See MUDIE's LIBRARY CIRCULAR for AUGUST. Postage free. MUDIES SELECT LIBRARY.-CHEAP BOOKS.—see [...]
[...] Cuses in illustration of their nefarious practices. “... Detector" hºº ºne his wºrk ºl. Wººlwise the nulliº to purchase these Re - and see how the disgusting trite of sham doctors are pilioried and their doings reº “blic Opinion. [...]
[...] EW THEATRE in ATHENS.–See THE BUILDER of this Week for View ; also View of New Circus, St. Petersburg, end the Hungarian Academy. Festiſ, A History of the Suez Canal–Saracenic Architecture in India–Archie [...]
[...] ORSE BREEDING, TRAINING, SHOWS, &c.— Fºr practiºn, Articlº and fullest, Reports see LIVE STOCK JOURNAL and FANCIERS’ GAZETTE. To be had of all News Agents, every Friday, price 3d. [...]
Saturday review13.11.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 13. November 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] proportion as a people is under the influence of “enervating “ constitutionalism,” it wants the taste for those “abstract “principles” which he wishes to see riding roughshod over [...]
[...] Far-seeing Republican politicians will prefer to wait for the overtures which may probably soon be addressed to them by their most formidable opponent. Notwithstanding his profes [...]
[...] the perfection of our nature, yet it is not experience that tells us that this is the case. The argument, as each man must put it to him self, is rather the converse of this; not, “I see that such and such a line of conduct will make me happy, therefore I ought to pursue it"; but, “I see that my nature for its orderly and continuous develop [...]
[...] were planning a run from London to Lucerne. We see him sitting with his guides, marking down the time-table of his route, ascer taining the amount of meat and wine which will be required, dis [...]
[...] mental depression. In this, as in other matters, it is the first step which, as it has its special difficulties, has also its special re ward; and we all trust that for the future we shall see more of the Queen. The experiment cannot fail of success. Nor is this all. Of late years we have been unfortunately accustomed to see [...]
[...] opening ceremony be performed, and the illustrious visitors be safe in their respective palaces, and the army of workmen be disbanded, and then we shall see what we shall see. The local deities, unless they are carefully propitiated, will begin by inviting the River Nile to resume his ancient course, and to flow [...]
[...] borings in the shape of a “heifer” (and not “a ring,” as Aubre took “bucula” to mean, probably from its likeness to the £. word “buckle”), and set it up on the tºp of a pillar (see c. vi., § 3, and compare Aubrey's Misc., p. 48). The dream in which Caius Gracchus seemed to see his brother Tiberius predicting for him [...]
[...] We know their acts, as we know the acts of all their countrymen, only through the reports of enemies, but then those reports of enemies certainly enable us to see qualities in them which reports not more hostile do not enable us to see in other Punic com manders. To call Hamilcar and Hannibal generals of the first [...]
[...] by various base arts, and who sometimes broke out into open rebellion. In Hamilcar and Hannibal, on the other hand, we see the most long-sighted combinations, not only of general ship but of what we may call military statesmanship, and we see the most wonderful power of attaching and adapting men of all [...]
[...] Mr. Newman has also singularly forestalled—if he has fore stalled—some of the particular points insisted upon by some of the best later historians. Thus we see in him the germ of Mr. Grote's defence of Cleon, at all events with regard to the expedi tion to Sphacteria. We see also the germ of that more favourable [...]
Saturday review04.01.1862
  • Datum
    Samstag, 04. Januar 1862
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] ODERN CHIVALRY.—See Early Numbers of London [...]
[...] EISURE MOMENTS OF A HARD-WORKER.—See [...]
[...] HE ART OF EXTINGUISHING BORES.—See Fºly [...]
[...] OUSEKEEPING IN BELGRAVIA.—See Early Numbers [...]
[...] ROMANCE OF THE PEERAGE.-See Early Numbers [...]
[...] IN GULAR FAMILY CHRONICLES.–See Earl [...]
[...] Goś ABOUT LUCK IN FAMILIES. — See Early [...]
[...] HA. HOURS WITH QUIET MEN.—See Early [...]
[...] VENING AMUSEMENTS. — See Early Numbers of [...]
[...] SOP IN PICCADILLY.—See Early Numbers of [...]
Saturday review05.06.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 05. Juni 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] NEW SEES. [...]
[...] Albans not yet existing) represented in their varying areas the long and eventful history of their gradual formation. "The primi tive sees, such as Canterbury, London, and Winchester, for in stance, recalled the regnal arrangements of the Heptarchy. Lincoln crystallized more than one chapter of English history in its see, [...]
[...] advise a tourist to time his ". so as to be present at one of these merry meetings. Still, should accident chance to send him thither, he may see a good deal that is not undeserving of notice, [...]
[...] getting drunk under the eyes of their parish or when there is work to be done, feel that at the ſeeing market they are almost bound to break out. Beer-drinking unfortunately is not their habit; they indulge patriotically in the strong national [...]
[...] have been felt in her family as a jar to other temperaments. She was not satirical, and owns to “no quick perception of the ludicrous.” Thus we see that in her salon people of different habits and train ing would feel safe and at ease. She was naturally a talker—“the i. of seeing is to tell” being a favourite quotation with her—and [...]
[...] ood:— Stay your steeds, O my brothers! take me up behind you, that I may reach Christian towns, may see again my father and my mother. Thus he cries as, with tears streaming from his eyes, he holds on to their stirrups. [...]
[...] Cº. exacting critics have said that they can see nothing to admire in Dr. Kennedy’s “Birds.” It is not, in their opinion, so adapted to the tastes of the man of cultivation, who [...]
[...] New Sees. Mr. Jenkins. [...]
[...] 1875. Arrangements for the issue of 1st and 3rd class Tourist Tickets will be in force from May 15 to October 31, 1875. For particulars, see Time Tables and Programmes, issued by the Company. [...]
[...] ( THROUGH HOSIERS AND DRAPERS, &c., EVERY WHERE. See the words “J. & J. Cash's Patent Rough Towel,” woven on each. [...]
Saturday review27.08.1864
  • Datum
    Samstag, 27. August 1864
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] moment whatever. Here is a Sovereign of a sort—not a very imposing or venerable sort, but still a Sovereign—who comes to Paris and sees a fine review in a soaking rain, and the whost splendid possible fireworks in more rain, and all the city is agog to see and look at him, and the occasion is admirable [...]
[...] us for good or evil is invariably different from that which we ourselves calculate upon. We look out from the windows of a house and see one thing; those who look at the house from outside see another. In this case we have only to walk out and to look at the house ourselves to see the same thing. But who can walk [...]
[...] and sloth, and he adds:— It is certain that reason, when purged of these vices, and truly attentive to its object, will never err, because then it will either see clearly, and what it sees will be true, or it will not see clearly, and then it will be certain that it ought to doubt till light appears. . The understanding is never [...]
[...] being must be the truth itself, and nothing but truth, and it is from it that truth flows to all existing objects external to it. It is, then, in this being, in a manner to me incomprehensible, still it is in this being that I see these eternal truths, and to see them is to turn to Him who is unchangeably true, [...]
[...] dered the chief design of Providence and the one great divine institution—namely, the Church: Thus, when you see passing before your eyes, I do not say kings and em perors, but the great empires which made the universe tremble — when you see the earlier and later Assyrians, the Medes, the Persians, the Greeks, and [...]
[...] human affairs. The concluding words of the book are to the same effect: — As you see them fall of themselves, whilst religion sustains itself by its own force, you will easily see where solid grandeur is, and where a man of sense will put his trust. [...]
[...] y functionaries is permitted to exist. Reasonable liberty of individual action is the first condition of a free community. Unlike His Imperial Majesty, M. Lanfrey would desire to see liberty at the base instead of the summit of the political edifice. [...]
[...] one of those men whose dress and the cut of whose whiskers are exactly in the English form, but adopted with such emphasis that it is easy to see their wearer is not an Englishman. When Camilla is going to Paris, she tells her mother that every note in Paris brings in a Napoleon, and she already sees Meyerbeer coming [...]
[...] regarded as a distinct organ. But while, in touch, the impression of coexistent objects gives no impression of the interval º them, in sight, on the contrary, we are compelled to see the interval between any two points by the fact of our seeing those points. So much for superficial extension as given by sight. But sight, Mr. [...]
[...] than ordinary power of expressing what he sees or feels. w natever he says is to the puriºse, and said well, often remarkably, well, and with much natural vivacity. mºre effective iu. not being witten for effect.”—Bauminer. [...]
Saturday review28.06.1862
  • Datum
    Samstag, 28. Juni 1862
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] they speak it, and so the foreigner can mostly get on. We are glad to say also that the foreigners like both our cooking and our way of living when they see them under advantages. Frenchmen are not such fools as not to see that roast beef taken from a real fat ox [...]
[...] least one success. When lately interrogated in Parliament about the state of Trafalgar Square in general, and the fountains in particular, he bid us to wait. We should see what we should see—he was about to astonish us. This promise he has certainly redeemed. The fountains, as improved, are an astonishment. Again to recur [...]
[...] on the payment of a shilling, realize their position as men of mark; but Mr. Robson and Mr. Redpath are, for the present at least, debarred by the penal laws of their country from seeing how that country preserves the memory of their deeds. [...]
[...] returning again and again to those which strike us most. No criticism can replace the thoughts which the actual survey of the pictures suggests, and no guide can teach us what to see and what to avoid. It can only teach us what to see most and what to see least. But good criticism is a most valuable help to those who [...]
[...] stand by themselves as the peculiar gems of the gallery, not to be confused with the pictures around them. They charm us just as much when we see them at the end of a day's picture seeing as when we see them the first thing, and they always awake the same feeling—that of a wonderful charm and gracefulness quite [...]
[...] Raphael youthful, very pale and delicate, and with such inward aspirations, . longing and wistfulness in the mouth and eyes, that it is as if you could see into his very soul. That he cannot succeed in expressing all that he sees and feels, and is thus impelled to go forward, and that he must dic an early death — all this is written on his mournful countenance. [...]
[...] but TWO, this (Saturday) Afternoon, June 28. The Programme will include the celebrated Sonata Appassiºnata, Op. 67, and Sonatas, Ops. 54, 78, and 79. Vocalist, Madame Lemmens-Sherrington : Accompanyist, Mr. Harold Thomas. For full particulars see Pro [...]
[...] C ists, and others; and wholesale of J. McCA 1.f., & Co.. Provision Stores. 137 natindsditch. N.e. SEE INTERNATIONAL, EXHIBITION. CLASS 17. EETH and PAINLESS DENTISTRY. — The greatest improvement in the construction of artificial Teºth is acknowledged to have been effected [...]
[...] FRENCH SYSTEM OF RELIEVING THE POOR. JOURNALISM. SEEING WITH THE EYES, SHUT. THE FRENCHMAN IN LONDON. SURNAME AND ARMS. [...]
[...] We see on all sides periodical literature bearing away the ripest mental fruit of our ablest thinkers, and attracting our most finished writers; but the Church of England, embracing amongst her leaders some of the noblest and best [...]
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