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Saturday review01.01.1859
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Januar 1859
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] completeness in all civilized countries, upon a social footing of equality.” Mr. Hope sees clearly that the claim which may be urged for journalism, may also be put forward on behalf of º other ways of earning an honest livelihood which are of great public use, and [...]
[...] which require for success high intellectual qualities, but which are not within the list of professions which give the conventional standing of a gentleman to their members. Mr. Hope sees, too, that if all professions are to be thought gentlemanly, it must also be thought that gentlemen can condescend to enter them. So he [...]
[...] retaining the connexion between the House of Peers and the land which already exists. But the real question for those who wish to see new professions raised to a social level with the old ones, is whether they wish to see the system of life-peerages introduced. [...]
[...] being in cold rooms. At last I determined on falling entirely into the hands of God, who is very merciful and of tender compassion, and I decided on having, at all events, the brickchamber opened, to see the extent of the damage, and to see whether the boiler might be repaired, so as to carry us through the winter. The day was fixed when the workmen were to come, [...]
[...] leave the New Orphan House for my home, I was informed at the lodge, that the acting principal of the firm whence the boiler-makers came was arrived, to see how the work was going on, and whether he could in any way speed the matter. I went immediately, therefore, into the cellar, to see him with the men, to seek to expedite the business. In speaking to the principal of [...]
[...] buildings? Exeter Hall is notoriously ill provided with means of exit; and within the last week a new theatre, the Adelphi, has been opened with, as far as we can see, no improvement on its old entrance—the width of a single house in the Strand. Indeed, this seems to be the mode of building theatres, judging from the [...]
[...] by the magic art of his pencil. The Etudiant, the Grisette, and the Carnaval are now things of the past; yet we need but open Gavarni to see them live and move before our eyes. These Etudes d'après Nature fully sustain a reputation which it would be difficult to increase. - [...]
[...] suffers, the one heroic character of his world. The better natured among his fellows, accept him as such. They deplore the strange infatuation which sees ideal womanhood in a village girl, and expects gratitude and reformation from galley slaves; but they can understand and appreciate the collateral [...]
[...] such an editor may be found; and if we may venture on naming one whose previous studies have peculiarly prepared him for the work, we should be especially glad to see it in the hands of a member of Strype's own college, the present Christian Advocate, Mr. Hardwick, [...]
[...] NDUCATION IN, GERMANY.--BONN ON THE RHINE.— Mr. MORSBACH, Principal of an Establishment at BONN, will be in England the beginning of January, when he will be happy to see the friends of his English pupils and attend to new inquiries. Messrs. DickINson, 114, New Bond-street, will supply references or prospectuses, and give any necessary information. [...]
Saturday review01.01.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Januar 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] lates have shown the Apostolic Letters which nominate them, pso facto incur suspension from any receipts from their benefices, during the pleasure of the Holy See. [...]
[...] Labourers. From that moment the bulk of our rural population have remained till now in a state little raised above the praedial servitude of the middle ages; but it is interesting to see how the same economic restrictions told upon the towns. The Black Death fell heavily, as Charter-House remains to witness, on the [...]
[...] that our citizens, who as it were usually dispense their ser vices on all realms, are no longer able in person to visit your most holy See, even though they should be involved in cases which are reserved for your Court, without a ruinous expense, while the present wars are going on.” But the merchant class [...]
[...] natural tone...To these seven pages the author affixes a couple more filled with reflections of his own, although, as their strain is identical with all that precedes, it is hard to see why Frederick should not have been suffered to exhaust the subject he had started. There is not a shade of difference between the family [...]
[...] all before them, and Mr. Dean's excellent ones are “outwitted,” as the author phrases it. Finally, the attached menial who relates the story sees that the crafty baronet has set his guest before a looking glass, and under the eyes of the assembled party, and through their bodies we may suppose, has been reading off the hands he holds. [...]
[...] Richard in accents that must have brought down at ontine theatre; “Secure him,” shouted back the gentlemen who had been looking on, seeing or saying nothing; “Fire, murder,” shrieked the ladies. “Fire will not break out till that mirror falls in a thousand pieces,” prophesied the daring domestic solemnly. “The [...]
[...] off; one of the shots broke his foreleg, and he went up to the flat above the cliff, crossed a corner of it, and went down the cliff again. These cliffs rose nearly perpendicularly, and on looking over I could see the stream running hundreds of feet below me; narrow ledges traversed the face of this awful precipice in various directions, and here and there were jutting [...]
[...] perhaps be disposed to say that the sudden feeling of repulsion with which the mere name of Bonaparte is mentioned arises from an abstract love of freedom; but when we see what the his tory of our neighbours has been for the last fifty years, how one form of government after another, has endeavoured to [...]
[...] French readers have until very lately been deluding themselves with the belief that they know something accurate about the literature of other nations. And yet, when we see what resources they had at their disposal, we must come to the conclusion that their imagined knowledge was little better than absolute ignorance. Letourneur, [...]
[...] Tablet having a distinctive, Tint and Perfume, the whole forming a Glycerine, &c.—each Price 3d. per Tablet. See the combination of colour, form, and fragrance entirely unique. Name cn each. Wholesale of [...]
Saturday review01.01.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Januar 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] world, that we see the noblest forestalling of the long arcades of the Christian basilica. It is with thoughts like these, thoughts ressing all the more upon us where every outline is clear and every [...]
[...] lorg time divided the East from the West,” and this because “writers on the Greek side have said that “the dispute was not about the Creed, but about the Sees'—i.e. the absolute authority claimed by the See of Rome over the Eastern Patriarchates, so different from the relations of earlier times.” But there is no con [...]
[...] Church " were doing a work the fruit of which would be hereafter manifested. The Ultramontane journalists of the day covered him with their bitterest ridicule, but he may yet live perhaps to see his words come true. If Liberal Catholics are silenced, their rivals may be pretty sure that they are neither converted nor convinced. [...]
[...] fancy that Macbeth or Othello had a tendency to encourage murder. The distinct moral of each play is to show at once the folly and agony of yielding to a murderous impulse. Any one who sees Othello , feels impressed with a deep sense of the danger to which even a naturally generous and loving nature is exposed [...]
[...] performers will appear in any play, that will suffice; but we venture to think that, at least as regards. Othello, something more might be expected. If the public wish to see a foreign actor in this play who comes to England for a short time, they way put up with a [...]
[...] in the battle were against the Persian cavalry, which we may sup }. to have choked or ruined the sacred spring; “and it is at east easy to see how the fate of Masistius and Mardonius on their Nisaean chargers and the rout and carnage of the mounted Im mortals may have been brought into connexion with interference [...]
[...] the last stage. Surely, before the results of such a collection appear in a book, labelled as a glossary of a particular district, the collection should be sifted to see what really does and what really does not illustrate the dialect of the district. It may happen that the collector may be able to go through this process of siſting for [...]
[...] next. Nobody expected him apparently, or paid the least attention to him.” But a young lady driving a pair of ponies down to the #. sees and compassionates his forlorn condition. Learning from im that he is, as she has guessed, the guest expected by Miss Lyle, she drives him up to Miss Lyle's house, where he is met by [...]
[...] Midland line to Manchester, or something like it, taking in Leicester and Burton. The London and North-Western Company did not exactly see it. The simple mention of all Sir John Rennie's various engineering tasks, and of his unfulfilled schemes, or those º: by other [...]
[...] the favourite theories of the materialists is that the destiny of nations depends on their physical constitution; MM. Littré, Taine, and Vacherot consider this as an axiom ; they see nothing beyond, and in their fondness for physical causes they ignore facts as patent as the daylight. M. de Laveleye meets them with objections [...]
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 review01.02.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Februar 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] because some thousands—or, as it is said, hundreds of thou sands—are starving, or likely to starve. In the immediate interest of watching Mr. Corbett's attempt to see whether some consistent and common-sense plan cannot be devised for checking the profligate waste of charity which is now going on, [...]
[...] the two widely different classes of society who front one another over the length and breadth of England; and we frankly confess our reluctance to see this sacrificed to a mere pedantic love of system. In our present remarks we have confined ourselves, as our readers may perceive, simply to the point of compulsory [...]
[...] Take me away, That sooner I may rise, and go above, And see Him in the truth of everlasting day. We have only been able to indicate by a few extracts the general features of this remarkable poem, which seems to prove, whatever [...]
[...] even carry the analogy further. As Earl Simon's great institution sank for awhile into abeyance, so some of Jones' immediate suc cessors did not see so far as Jones himself had done. Jones, for instance, put forward, though somewhat hesitatingly, the con nexion of the Celtic languages with Sanscrit, Greek, and the rest. [...]
[...] haps positively reject very little. But there remains a vast mass between these two extremes on which we simply wish to sus pend our judgment. We see that the science is new and ten tative; we see that there is a great deal in it, but we are not prepared to accept, everything at once. We at once admit the [...]
[...] out, in some cases by Professor Müller, in others by §. Cox, but we must confess that it does not always bring conviction. We do not see either that anterior probability or that positive evidence which we see in the case of Apollo. We trust Professor Müller will not set us down as hardened [...]
[...] to the gallant game-cock, and a capital set-off at a pigeon levee to the burly 1&unt, which might be an ambassador from Brob dingnag, seeing that the Brunnen weighs eight ounces, the Runt two pounds and a half. Next follows the common Tumbler, tl “feathered Goody. Two-shoes” (according to the pleasant, if in [...]
[...] gradually increasing gyrations until having descried some familiar object they recollect their route, and fly straight ahead. The objection that no pigeon can possibly see for two hundred miles ahead is met by the details of aeronautic experience. Mr. Glaisher, half a mile aloft in air, could embrace in his “bird's-eye” [...]
[...] a street in the great manufacturing town of Oresbridge. The two places are very close together, so close that Sauntering through Lyneton Abbots after nightfall, you might see the hot breath of a hundred furnaces lighting up the castern sky as with the glow of some tremendous contiagration. And when all was still round the [...]
[...] of these arts may be considered as supplying respectively the characteristics of certain definite epochs; and, with M. de Laprade's º thus stated, we do not see what fault can be found with is second assertion—namely, that “music is the sensual art par ercellence.” If it is a paradox, it must at least be admitted that [...]
Saturday review01.02.1873
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Februar 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] rival Powers. If he shares the acuteness which is attributed to his countrymen, he will not undervalue the resources of England because he will see but a handful of soldiers in the capital. - Among other disquieting rumours are statements of move [...]
[...] next week. It is not quite so easy, however, to see how the majority of the Committee can make the adoption of this proposal consist with their dignity. If they succeed in [...]
[...] Saint advises caution, reminding him that “marriage is an order in which profession goes before the novitiate; if there were a year's probation we should see fewer professed.” He was a sayer of sayings; probably not all of them here re corded were designed by him for perpetuity; but all leave the [...]
[...] from a possession which for long had been a growing source of danger and weakness; but it is natural that her soldiers should desire to see the reputation of their army vindicated. For the old spirit of gallantry and camaraderie clings to the Austrian ser vice, despite repeated misfortune and changed administration; and [...]
[...] HARE'S WANDERINGS IN SPAIN.” THERE are three ways of seeing Spain, according to the tastes and powers of as many different classes of travellers. You may follow beaten routes, say from Irun to Madrid and [...]
[...] Delicia. h.e., “a rake, feeble and resolute only in his lusts.” Here again those who refer to the usually printed text will see that the latest editor has not chosen the least difficult reading. In deciding upon questions of various readings Mr. Mayor has [...]
[...] left Scotland. When a second edition of the “Prehistoric Annals” became due, he found that he could not do it justice without returning to Scotland to see it through the press. There can be no doubt that anything accomplished on such a hurried visit would give but poor results in comparison with the rich harvest [...]
[...] blessed. We lay stress on this character-painting of young wives in ladies' novels, for in it we see that tone of mind in the sex which is the cause of half the unhappy marriages afloat—those marriages which begin well and end ill, no one exactly knows how or why. [...]
[...] wolves of society, a man marked dangerous, and of whom young lady lambs would do well to beware. He is a good fellow, however, in a way; and when he sees poor Eugenia pale, thin, and half-dying for his sake, he es compassion on her, and, impelled partly by ". partly by pique at Roma's [...]
[...] before a court against powerful enemies who, in attacking him, were endeavouring ipso facto, so he thought, to put down the spirit of reform. It is amusing to see him compare the freedom which Molière enjoyed under the absolute rule of Louis XIV. with the restrictions which the police of Louis XVI. imposed upon such [...]
Saturday review01.03.1862
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. März 1862
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] thing not in their way, in another world than theirs, they are ready to plume themselves on their want of sympathy as a sort of dis tinction, and to find it meat and drink to see a fool. Thus, severely practical minds enjoy their contempt for every effort of imagina tion. People who cannot see a joke have a contempt for fun. [...]
[...] ness and independence of political vision. In both again we lack something of the vivid brilliancy of some other writers, which we would fain see added to their existing merits, but on no account exchanged for any of them. And again we see in each something of the result of those temptations which beset the real political [...]
[...] * See Saturday Review, June 28, 1856. [...]
[...] subjects, though rather late, to assist the Spaniards. And for this M. Lafuente has the hardihood to denounce him for having acted as a bad Catholic. (See vol. xiv. p. 239.) [...]
[...] Curious as it is to see the history of an Italian religious house written by one of its own members, the details of the narrrative could have but little interest for our readers. It will suffice to say, [...]
[...] scandal. M. Jung-Treuttel's collection is still receiving fresh develop ments, and we are glad to see it gradually extending beyond the limits of merely imaginative literature. M. Erckmann-Chatrian's tale, Le Fou Yégof", has already appeared in the pages of the [...]
[...] london at these Concerts on Mt NDAY EVENING NEX see Programme at Chappell & Co.'s, 50 New Bond Street. [...]
[...] THE COMMON SIGHTS IN THE HEAVENS, AND HOW TO SEE AND KNOW THEM. By Captain A. W. Drayson, R.A. “A very beautiful and useful little book. Captain Drayson carefully avoids all [...]
[...] see special commeSpoRDENCE, FROM AN ENGLISH TRAVELLER, [...]
[...] See SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE, FROM A FRENCH POLITICIAN [...]
Saturday review01.03.1873
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. März 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] choice but to submit to the inappropriate and technical pro cedure in favour with Courts of Law, and to sit silent and powerless, and see the jurisprudence which they understand and reverence, but are no longer to administer, gradually fading away under the influence of alien traditions [...]
[...] tical capacity Mr. BRUCE is at least not unfriendly to Trade Unions; but when he speaks of the production of coal, which he thoroughly understands, he sees at once the connexion between the Unions and the strikes of workmen. [...]
[...] * See Saturday Ileviºus for Sept. 28 and Nov. 16, 1872. [...]
[...] one. Professor Bauer, of Mannheim, wanted to see sweeping reforms at once taken in hand, and especially attacked compulsory celibacy and auricular confession; and Kaminski was hardly less violent in [...]
[...] death was an awful tragedy, and his resurrection—why, that is a miracle! So far as we can see, Mr. Arnold has not arrived at any valuable results by distrusting special studies and trusting the Zeit-Geist. Culture and literature are admirable things, and give, no doubt, [...]
[...] reasoned truth; but, as we have seen, his literary method con ducts him a little way, and then fails him utterly. He soon reaches a point at which he can see nothing distinctly, and then he stands still, and distributes freely his censures on ignorance and blindness. [...]
[...] like it in other human societies. As the Irish past is more and more laid bare and the false representations of it set aside, we see that nothing in fiction could have been stranger than the domestic and political life of the governing classes, nothing more pathetic than the existence of the [...]
[...] done both to her heart's content is not very clear, seeing that she had more liberty than was good for her, and lived in a country house. She is not a comfortable kind of child. She begins by [...]
[...] when the abbés de cour could be seen exclusively in vaudevilles or comedies. It is curious to see how frequently the interval of a few years thoroughly alters our impressions, and places both books and authors in a totally new point of view. M. Sainte-Beuve's [...]
[...] M. Guizot's most recently published volume is not, strictly speaking, a new work", for we fancy we remember seeing his sketch of Calvin as forming part of a serial issued fifty years ago under the title of Galerie du protestantisme français. [...]
Saturday review01.04.1865
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. April 1865
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] themselves, nor to accept any co-ordinate endowment. They have resolved to confine their whole aspirations in ecclesiastical matters to the one object of seeing their rivals turned out of [...]
[...] not be the Moskoe doctrine; and if the question of the establishment of the Empire of Mexico is fairly and tem Perately, discussed in America, the Americans will see that the [...]
[...] disagreeable than a person who, instead of giving him back a flat denial, as a good hater would, has no opinion at all about the paradox until he has thought over it, and then sees something [...]
[...] ting this good soon. We are getting into habits of thought utterly alien to it. We are learning to make allowances, to notice the force of circumstances on character and conduct, to see how much good there is in everything bad and how much bad in everything good, to see how often moral worth has gone with intellectual [...]
[...] the amiable purpose of inflaming the dowager's envy. The gallant captain, who has partially succeeded in toning down his military swagger to the level of drawing-room manners, would see that he was retained for purposes of general utility, to go errands, and see lawyers, and manage jobs in the City. And the spoilt child of [...]
[...] not citizens. Now the proletarii were citizens, and those who were distinctively called proletarii were not quite the lowest class of citi zens, seeing the capite censi were below them (see Aulus Gellius, xvi. 10). And moreover Sallust (Bell. Jug. 86) does not use the word proletarii, but speaks of Marius as enlisting the capite [...]
[...] genuine American mind, which could see in the mysterious city of [...]
[...] of FICE, is FI.EET STREET, LONDON. THE HIDDEN SIN: * , A Nºw Nerº. see THE DAY of REST. No. II. now ready. Price one Penny weekly. Monthly Parts 6d. THE WHISPERING GALLERY: [...]
[...] weekly. Monthly Parts 6d. THE WHISPERING GALLERY: A New Gossip on Science. Literature, Art, and Things in General. See THE DAY OF REST. No. II. now ready. Price One Penny. London: Ward, Lock, & Tylen, 158 Fleet Street. [...]
[...] “Very finely, fairly, and distinctly does Dr. Hook narrate the stru gle which m imediaeval periºd between the Pope and England. In every chapter ºff. º lº. be traced. We see its birth in the homesteads of Englishmen its growth 5. society —and its increasing strength when Wiclif knocked at the gates of Canterbury."-Athenaeum. See also Saturday Review, March 4 and 18. [...]
Saturday review01.04.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. April 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Mr. Goschen has judged rightly in putting this require ment at the head of our shipbuilding necessities. We should be sorry, however, to see the notion prevail that enough has been done to complete our ocean and Channel fleets. A very few years of inaction would see our supposed [...]
[...] Councils aims at supplying a real deficiency in the ex isting ecclesiastical system. Its author sees, naturally and rightly, that great ill feeling is often, and may be at any moment, engendered between a clergyman and his parish [...]
[...] to work a great reform in the teaching of these matters. If we have pointed out a few things which we think might be im *:::::: it is with the hope of seeing them improved in another edition. [...]
[...] our own point of view we are very glad to study the mind of one in Mr. Wood's position—a promising student, we presume, of the University of Cambridge—to see how far correct views are spread ing, how far they are understood, and what hindrances they have to fight against. [...]
[...] midable to him at the outset; and it must have needed resolution and perseverance to attempt, in the presence of competing claims upon his time, a labour of no small magnitude, seeing that it involved, besides translation, accurate verification of references, judicious addition of explanatory notes, and here and there im [...]
[...] + See Saturday Review, vol. xviii. p. 608. i See Saturday Review, vol. xxiv. p. 196. [...]
[...] the common verb triarstºw, and the division for catechetical pur poses, as well as the whole wording of the text, is identical with our own. (See Karixmaic ric divarouxſic ixx\naiac, published at Athens, 1837. Fifth Edition.) We are not prepared, however, to subscribe to the opinion of [...]
[...] Church, and the Abbé Raynal possessed almost the same autho rity as the four Evangelists put together. The Abbé Morellet was one of these men; it is amusing to see him in one chapter of his memoirs denouncing the revolutionary Government for con fiscating as national property the colleges and other foundations [...]
[...] disciples of D'Alembert, and he did not see that the guests who came to his déjeuners liked him only for the very inconsistency of his life. The memoirs of the Abbé Morellet were published in [...]
[...] Manufactured by J. C. & J. FIELD, Patentees of the Self-fitting Candles. Sold by Chemists, Oil and Italian Warehousemen, and others. *** Use no other. See Name on each Tablet. [...]
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