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All the year round02.08.1873
  • Datum
    Samstag, 02. August 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] ladyship for her night's trip across the down. Again I was compelled to be a mere useless bystander, forbidden to take active part in the scene. Rosetta was herself once more. She [...]
[...] Music of the Olden Time—is of opinion that these choruses or burdens were “mere nonsense words that went glibly off the tongue.” He adds (vol. i. page 223), “I am aware that ‘Hey down, down, [...]
[...] signifying, ‘Come let us haste to the oaken grove' (Jones, Welsh Bard, vol. i. page 128), but this I believe to be mere conjecture, and that it would now be im possible to prove that the Druids had such [...]
[...] german sherry, since, if too much tam pered with, it is apt to be rendered not merely deleterious, but nauseous into the bargain. Its merits in some cases of ill ness are indisputable; it often forms the [...]
[...] $ologne. It has long been a recognised truth that anything, from a white country Wine at six sous the litre, to mere sugar and water, will pass muster as champagne, and that silvery necks, rose-coloured foil, [...]
[...] But in the instance of wines that are expensive but not genuine, mere vinous charlatans | under borrowed names, the bouquet, the flavour, the very softness may be due to [...]
[...] prise.” Both the colours had for some years been mere bundles of ribbons, and the colour thus saved was eventually placed in the church of Alverstoke, Hants. Colonel [...]
[...] coming hours, she felt sure, than they had ever seemed. The tension of her nerves was such that the mere sound of her step father's voice, raised in its ordinary house hold tone of fretful fault-finding, made her [...]
[...] reign. “I ought to go and put away that tat tered, mutilated grey bundle of mere shreds, about which fond memory clings in a most ridiculous way,” Harty thought; “but I [...]
[...] indifference or design, whether she was playing a part in order to storm him into thinking about her, or merely suffering herself to be seen by him just as she was, out of carelessness as to whether he thought [...]
All the year round08.01.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 08. Januar 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] endure: they picture manners, and manners ..change; they become possessed at last of merely an archaic sort of interest, and fail to please playgoers, who are not anti [...]
[...] critics hastened to applaud her exertions. Nor was her triumph, as Tate Wilkinson points out, merely the whim of a winter. * She remained the unrivalled Wildair during her life. . . . She appeared with [...]
[...] culed, and even reviled as a visionary, and thwarted where even some faint glim merings of success have appeared, he has still held on his way, supported by a faith and an enthusiasm that seems miraculous. [...]
[...] heel. It is, therefore, futile to recom mend our countrymen to make soup while they can get beefsteaks; mere absurdity to recommend pot-au-feu to a man who can command a feast of tripe and onions. [...]
[...] cannot be denied that the vast majority of Englishmen despise the food cast annually at their door. Salt fish is regarded merely as a breakfast or supper dish—as a whet or as an absorbent. There is no occa [...]
[...] brother—tells us that nothing is more simple. You are not to use whole fish for this purpose, but mere odds and ends, together with various and sundry vege tables. The latter consist of sliced carrots, [...]
[...] sat down, being indeed unable to walk farther, but feeling a sensation of suffo cation at the mere thought of returning to the house. She fancied she could not breathe there. A steaming mist was [...]
[...] Castalia heard, scarcely listening. The words flowed by her like a tune that brings tears to the eyes by mere sympathy with its sad sound. Presently a man passed before her, [...]
[...] a miserable sinner, she might have turned from him in disgust. As it was, she felt merely the unwillingness to be disturbed, of a creature in whom the numbness of apathy has succeeded to acute anguish. [...]
[...] desk brought down from his own room, and had been fingering the papers in it, reading some, and merely glancing at the outside folds of others. He now looked up at Castalia without recognising her. [...]
All the year round16.04.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 16. April 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] sum was an insignificant one after all; and could he have looked upon the circumstance as a mere instance of carelessness and for getfulness on the part of Mr. Frost, he would have been irritated and annoyed by [...]
[...] formed a purpose, never permitted himself to discuss whether or no he should carry it out; he merely considered how he should || fulfil it, which was one of the results of the smallness of his faculty of imagination [...]
[...] “I had heard nothing ! I had no idea! Perhaps you are mistaken. Mrs. Frost has merely gone on a visit—for a time. It can't be ſ” “Well, sir, I'm afraid you'll find it is [...]
[...] some papers over the box that stood on the table. He had expected to see the servant merely. When he recognised Lovegrove, his face changed, and he looked at him fixedly. Lovegrove had no need to ask a [...]
[...] acknowledged his fraud in depriving Hugh Lockwood of his rightful inheritance during so many years, merely suppressing—with a lingering trait of the generous honour he had once possessed, and which he had for [...]
[...] “notice” he treats of what we may learn from the various kinds of meteors—a term which, in its Greek original, means merely something hanging aloft. Spectral analysis has enabled us to study [...]
[...] fall, are found to be burning hot. But they cool with very great rapidity; a proof that their high temperature was merely superficial, and had not penetrated their entire mass. As to their form, it is coarsely [...]
[...] usually dull, but sometimes shining like a varnish. The merely superficial heat of ačrolites at the moment of their fall, and the thin, black crust which covers them, clearly [...]
[...] sacrifice which can be rendered by a noble nature to a desperate cause. It was not merely his life that he offered up on the altar of a nation whose leader he had ceased to be. It was not merely the legitimate claims [...]
All the year round09.10.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 09. Oktober 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] where he goes, so far as his health is con cerned,” said I. “It seemed to me, when he left the Rectory, that it was merely a ques tion of a few weeks, more or less, of life.” “Well, the doctor at Sandibeach,” re [...]
[...] if you are so very simple as all that, I am afraid we shall never make a lawyer of ou. These are merely dummies, my good fellow, which are kept here for reference— the real deeds are not to be got at quite [...]
[...] under present circumstances by his devoted relatives. “Well, it is merely a matter of form. Since my brother cannot go to town, the secretary must needs come down to con [...]
[...] vince himself of his being alive, before making the quarterly payment. Yet, merely passive as is the part our poor patient has to play, the idea of it agitates him in the most absurd degree. Though [...]
[...] larger share of the work of the office devolved upon himself. Our two as sistants were mere copying-clerks—little more than boys in age—whose copying (from John's example, perhaps) included [...]
[...] was her too great charity with regard to that woman. “I believe Mrs. Raeburn's attentions to him are merely mercenary, and arise from the lowest motives.” “Well, at allevents, they cannot be ‘mer [...]
[...] patchwork counterpane, stood in a corner. The sheets were ragged, of very coarse texture, and not merely damp—they were wringing wet. Fortunately, I possessed a good supply of railway rugs, which I could [...]
[...] was seated in her lounging-chair by the fire, but she was not altogether reclining in it—merely leaning a little back against the cushions. A small writing-table stood in front of her. It was covered with [...]
[...] as a judge. She didn't see it at all. The fact is, poor Cassy's sense of humour is merely rudimentary.” Minnie joined her hands together on the table, and thus supported, she leant a [...]
[...] amount to ? A few pounds would cover all I owe. The whole of our budget is a mere bagatelle. The fact is, you have attached too much importance to the chatter of these thick-headed boobies. [...]
All the year round24.07.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 24. Juli 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] agreement which you made with him at parting. When a man comes from Peru, he is not likely to have merely secured a competence. We must give a dinner-party or two, to introduce him to our neigh [...]
[...] born joker, such as John, and one, too, so absolutely devoid of delicacy of feeling, would have been mere waste of breath; moreover, I was young myself, and to a joke at Mrs. Raeburn's expense I could [...]
[...] kind. According to them, the service never was so badly or so inefficiently recruited. The men are too young as to age; mere weeds as to stamina; and unfit for even a tolerably long march on the high roads. [...]
[...] where every man knows something of, and every man loves, a horse. The officers, too, are not mere scientific prigs, like too many artillery officers of other armies, who think it derogatory to look after the [...]
[...] cavalry, even at the odds of three men and horses to one. I do not assert this as a mere idle boast; I am convinced of the truth of what I say. The only drawback to the efficiency of our cavalry is its [...]
[...] of a volunteer corps of four or five hundred strong when marching to exercise; but they dwindle down to a mere nothing when compared with the ninety-seven thousand three hundred and seventy-nine [...]
[...] the greater, by far the greater, number of men I saw in the infantry barracks were mere “weeds.” It is true that some three [...]
[...] both came to grief—the attempted opera tion being an utter failure. There is little doubt that the loan was merely a pretext, on the part of Casanova, to get clear of Paris, as we find him collecting in [...]
[...] one, Casanova shone more brilliantly among the minor adventurers—like a paste diamond among mere cut glass. We find him, a few days after his last interview with Voltaire, at the Baths of Aix, in [...]
[...] “I do not say that Castalia might not have a right to ask such help of me; but I merely assure you that it will be out of my power to grant it. You, perhaps, scarcely realise how poor a man may be [...]
All the year round17.07.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 17. Juli 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] posed Margaret had no objection.” Mar garet had strong objections, but did not think it politic to say so just then, so merely intimated that she would be happy to see Mr. Joyce whenever he chose to come. [...]
[...] sister-in-law the fact that Joyce's visit was to her, Lady Caroline, and that she had merely mentioned his coming as a matter of politeness to her hostess, which did not tend to increase Lady Hetherington's re [...]
[...] crushed and vanquished by Marian Ash urst's conduct, would have subsided into a mere drudge without energy or hope. Yes, all the good in his life he owed to the friendship, to the kindly promptings of that [...]
[...] line. “I have every reason to know it, and my last words were merely a foolish utter ance of society-talk • * [...]
[...] you cannot be ignorant of what is absolute fact; that to your advice and encourage ment I owe not merely recovery from that wretched state, but the position to which I have since attained l’’ [...]
[...] cessors of the Báb had prepared the way for his successor, but in the }. himself it was no longer a mere prophet who had come down upon earth, but prophecy itself, of which he was the culminating point, and which he exer [...]
[...] not idle. Pamphlet followed upon pam phlet, treatise upon treatise, book upon book, in such profusion, that the mere cata logue of them would occupy pages. But in addition to his writings in support of [...]
[...] Assure yourselves, had not Providence found out other and unlooked-for supplies by mere wonders of goodness, you had long ago had the desire of your hearts—to starve him out of this employment. But, [...]
[...] established what even now is sometimes called the “new” police. What, after all, would mere statesmanship be, if genius had not gone before it, preparing the way, and accustoming the minds of men to the new [...]
[...] is too much for me. My heart is too full.” This would be very tragical if true. It is equally tragic if it be the mere phan tasm of a strong mind weakened by old age, hard work, and disappointment. Mr. [...]
All the year round16.01.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 16. Januar 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] are the only poet-philosophers that have risen amongst us for many years, and boys shout, as men would, at the mere sight, at the mere taste of a lord! How they like to roll “your lordship' round their mouths, [...]
[...] Mr. Byrne, with a radiant look which his face but seldom wore, averred that he not merely understood what was meant, but that he could recommend the very man whom his lordship required, a young man [...]
[...] Independent of its surpassing beauty, the diamond strikes the imagination by its value. The re-cutting merely of the Koh-i-moor is said to have cost eight thousand pounds. Other grand diamonds have required a proportional [...]
[...] exist—we get, according to Mr. King, a bad shaped, because too shallow, modern brilliant, a mere lady's bauble, of but second-rate water, for it has a greyish tinge, and, besides, inferior in weight to several, being now reduced to one [...]
[...] utmost depth and purity, refined from that gross intellectual alloy with which every mascu line theologist—save only One, who merely veiled himself in mortal and masculine shape, but was in truth divine—has been prone to [...]
[...] sistency of physicians can overcome. And re membering all this, he feels that there is an honour greater than mere skin-deep beauty even in her wrinkles and her loose lines, her stiff joints and her spoiled complexion. [...]
[...] notice. But the truth is, I am in a sort of ela tion, for I did more than mere rapid preaching this day. Speech may be silvern, silence golden, but action is, after all, a [...]
[...] What I delight in is his contemptuous treatment of the crew of croupiers, whom he treats as though they were mere scaven gers or night men, not fit to be addressed, or as you would a dependant. He tosses them [...]
[...] “That's like having you, my friend,” said the boy to me. “But, apart from mere verbal quib [...]
All the year round09.10.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 09. Oktober 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] gle with his own temper, “it is worse than useless for us to jangle. You are too sen sible a woman to have come here merely for the pleasure of dunning me. Tell me what has induced you to take this step P” [...]
[...] “To go abroad ſ” “Temporarily. For a few months merely. It is a question of obtaining a concession for some important works from the Italian government. If the affair suc [...]
[...] “Stay ! Where did I hear of her? Oh, I have it ! Lovegrove is trustee under her mother's will. She has a mere pittance secured to her out of the wreck of her father's fortune. Besides, those kind of [...]
[...] taught me to know !” - “Humph Just now this love on which Hugh has “set his heart,’ was a mere sur mise on your part. Now you declare it to be a serious and established fact, and “God [...]
[...] and immortal soul? Dost—” “I cannot tell what to say, my lord,” stam mered poor tormented Dunne. Jeffreys: “Good God, was there ever such an impudent rascall Hold the candle up that [...]
[...] outside the door, suckling little Isaac. From Southampton to the New Forest's sixty-four thousand acres, is a mere flap of the wing to the crow at his best speed. The beech glades, alive with countless squirrels, the [...]
[...] with a profound uncertainty as to the time and manner of my coming off again—the mere notion took my breath away ! I determined to make cautious inquiries among men who rode. They were not all [...]
[...] mated by the guiding intelligence of which it becomes the servant and a part. With out its rider it consists merely of a couple of wheels and a crank or two, and looks like a section of broken cab as it lies help [...]
[...] in London as in Paris, some forty years ago, as a graceful but not vigorous violoncello player, who wrote pleasant mesic, not merely for his instrument, but for the voice. Nothing much more meek, nothing much less marked [...]
[...] certain disorderly order who has appeared on the stage in our experience. When her Lisette (Béranger's Lisette), her Grande Mère, her young Itichelieu, and a score besides of dis tinct and perfectly finished creations, are [...]
All the year round06.06.1874
  • Datum
    Samstag, 06. Juni 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] face, and there is passion in his glance. But a deadly pang of conviction that it is all evanescent—a mere flash in the pan— assails her. She knows in this moment [...]
[...] conviction that Captain Bellairs feels a stronger interest in Kate than men usually feel in a mere acquaintance at bay. “Yet she is mere acquaintance of a few hours' standing only, they would have mentioned [...]
[...] coins were ever put into actual circu lation, as in all probability they were merely patterns for an intended issue. It was not until the latter portion of the reign of Queen Elizabeth that her half [...]
[...] the truth is that passivity is force re strained, just as activity is force exerted and manifested. Mere capacity is a form of power, and, in a sense, it is quite as true to say that wood has power to be [...]
[...] time he might have been a Wat Tyler or an Artevelde. But coming in the Wel lington epoch, he arose a mere ugly spectre to warn the coronetted obstructives of the danger of the eternal stagnation of [...]
[...] before his door; but, nevertheless, no attempt was made to force an entry. They merely asked what fire-arms he had, and learning that he had a rifle piece and a fusee, they asked him to give it [...]
[...] questioned, born of the desire to postpone, as long as possible, any chance of meeting Mr. Ramsay, or was it a mere fancy of the luxury-loving nature of the creature, to endeavour, for once, to secure twelve con [...]
[...] more silent than ever; while Elfie was more than ever garrulous, whether in mere careless indifference to the gloom which so often rested so heavily on Allan's face, and made it almost for [...]
[...] of the change in her husband? If so, was she angered by it, or grieved by it? Or did she merely take it for granted, as the ordinary change from lover to husband P That she was conscious of enough to pique [...]
All the year round15.01.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 15. Januar 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] country town; very dull, I daresay, ac cording to the notions of people who merely passed through it, and had big bustling standards of comparison in their minds whereby to measure it. But I liked [...]
[...] was to write a description of it, you would not think anything of it at all. It is a mere cottage-kind of house, with a little lawn and a little orchard set rather prettily close by a gentle hill-side; not [...]
[...] so pretentious as the places which people { call villas nowadays, and comfortable for a cottage—but merely that. “There are hundreds of thousands like it . scattered all over England; but the Dingle [...]
[...] In the dialect of Westphalia, the day in question is still named “Godonstag.” The mere residence of Odin on the Fichtelgebirge confers thus no excep tional honour on the chosen spot. It is [...]
[...] of the above-mentioned goddesses, Perahta, or Berahta—that is, the “shining one " who has degenerated into a mere bogie. In some places she still givesaname to Twelfth [...]
[...] fact, a living proof that it is not always safe to judge by appearances. Their loud barking and tearing at their chains is mere sound and fury, signifying nothing but the naturally doggy desire to be spoken [...]
[...] of bull-dogs and mastiffs, employing them in hunting big game, and also for mere show. It is not uncommon to see French and other foreign gentlemen, smitten with admiration for the customs [...]
[...] a horse-show, now, they would enjoy them selves immensely; but here, where they have nothing but mere two-legged creatures to gaze at, there is nothing to excite the Dalmatian mind. Mount St. Bernards [...]
[...] It must not be imagined that all the dogs at Mr. Rotherham's are in evil case, as many are merely recovering themselves from the fatigue of a recent dog-show, among whom is that most “gentlemanly" [...]
[...] lady—yes, a lady! A far better lady than you are!—of whom you take it into your head to be jealous, merely because she is pretty and admired by everybody. By me amongst the everybodies. Why not ? I [...]
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