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Galignani's messenger23.07.1822
  • Datum
    Dienstag, 23. Juli 1822
  • Erschienen
    Paris
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    Paris
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] concur in any vote which went to impose any, even the slightest punishment upon Mr. Hope. He should vote for the motion, because it embraced a mere matter of fact. - - Mr. COURTENAW, as he conceived the present mo [...]
[...] fact. - - Mr. COURTENAW, as he conceived the present mo tion merely consequential upon that which had been agreed to by the House on a ſormer evening, had not thought it necessary to state what was the ultimate [...]
[...] }. disclaimed it himself; and he therefore should no tice the symptoms of approbation which had been shown on the examination of Mr. Hope, merely to say, that he did not see the propriety of them. When he had first brought this subject under the consideration [...]
[...] uufair to assume that Mr. Hope intended to attack the privileges of the House. His object appeared to be merely to defend himself. As he (Mr. C.) was per fectly aware that there existed a strong feeling upon this subject which did not generally lead to a sound [...]
[...] called the explanation of Mr. Hope. For no one of these reasons could he think that they were dealing with a case similar to that of a mere report on the de bates, or a mere reſerence to the debates, or a mere com ment upon them. In either of these cases the slightest [...]
[...] have larger authority than thºse in it”. He thought the House would confound offences which were Per ſectly distinct, if they treated this as a mere illusiºn. The question, however, was, hºw to deal with it. His Hon. and Learned Friend (Mr. Courtenay) proposed to [...]
[...] every allowance for tle wounded feelings of a person of honour. But his Learned Friend had not to com: plain merely of the speech of the Hon. and Learned Member (Mt. Abercromby). He had ſo feel the weight of authority which belonged to the Hon. and Learned [...]
[...] mo tritling consideration: If one Member of that House imputed motives to another, he would only be called to º and be therefore trusted, that the merely repel ling of motives, charged without foundation, would not be visited too severely. The House would not forget [...]
[...] power; for he might see that the House would not stand by him, even though he was a Member–Hear.) He would waive all private feelings, and merely go with that spirit which he conceived due to the diguity of the House. It was a declared breach of privilege, [...]
[...] Mr. AIBERCROMBY explained. He had said, with reference to signatures of Iſope and Mi'Neill, that the use he had made of that paper was merely to show that as coming from the Lord Advocate's Depute it forced Mr. Stuart upon the couise of proceediug he had [...]
Galignani's messenger19.05.1819
  • Datum
    Mittwoch, 19. Mai 1819
  • Erschienen
    Paris
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    Paris
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] had been obliged to resort to the funds of their friendly societies; and he was sorry to say, that not merely had these funds heen exhausted, but also the funds of their saving banks, which were now becoming a mere mockery. The hon. [...]
[...] masters he held to be most impolitic. Mr. Ellice contended that only a few years ago a measure of mere expediency had been granted for the relief of the agricultural and landed interest ; and why was it unfit that some [...]
[...] dismissing them at night, introduced nothing but licentiousness, debauchery and prostitution. With regard to the remedy, it was merely the extension of a law at present in beneficial ope ration; for he (Mr. B.) had been instructed to [...]
[...] With regard to the corn bill, it was quite un fair to argue, that the object was to raise the Price of grain : it was merely to protect the [...]
[...] who, as he thought, greatly to his credit, observed to the Chancellor of the Exchequer, that if he consi - dered his own interest merely, he must agree with his brother contractors—but if he were to consult the advantase of the country, he should advise the appli [...]
[...] the powers of a government, was a violation of that neu trality which this country had hitherto professed to ob serve. He wished merely, to give this country the right which every country should always have to prevent its sub iects from 7. the neutrality existing towards acknow [...]
[...] deuleanour, and on the second ſor a felony. Sir J. MACKINTOSH said, that if he could consider the present measure of his hon. and learned friend merely as the introduction of a reform into our criminal legisla tion, he would not, on the present occasion, have made a [...]
[...] these statutes a general character, as applying tº all tim” and circumstances; but if he had looked into history, he would have seen that they were intended, merely for th: temporary purposes—namely, to prevent the formation of Jacobite armies, organised in Spain, and France, against [...]
[...] ihe Pacific, to bring home the 3 or 4,000 seamen who were now on board the vessels of the new Republics? He rose merely to express his dissent from the bill, and to declare that at every stage he would give it his decided opposi tion. [...]
[...] we suppose his Brazilian Majesty to have con ceived some susp cions that the ultimate object of these Gentlemen may extend beyond a mere philosophical survey of his Dominions. A French Paper remarks, that several of the [...]
The connoisseur10.06.1756
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 10. Juni 1756
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] influence on young minds, who learn to love, as they do every thing elfe, by imitation. , Young creatures, almoft mere children, have been con fumed with this fecond-hand flame lighted up at another’s paffion ; and, in confequence of the [...]
[...] “ fuch eyes! fuch a neck and breaft ! fuch “ oh, ſhe’s a rare piece !” Their ideas go no farther than mere external accomplifhments ; and, [...]
[...] are in perpetual danger of lofing them. A rafh, or a pimple, may abate their affećtion. All thofe, the objećt of whoſe adoration is merely a pretty face or a fine perſon, are in the power of the like accidents; and the fmall-pox has occafioned [...]
[...] “ never yet run fmooth :” the ill-judged am bition of a parent induced the father, out of mere love to his daughter, to refufe her hand to the only man in the world with whom ſhe could live happily, becaufe he imagined that he [...]
Saturday review13.04.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 13. April 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] necessary that the augurs, should not laugh when they meet each other, if only that they may behave properly before the people; if they are mere actors, the mask will be sure to drop off in time. ...Therefore we must not merely have a good heavy leaven of stupidity throughout, but it is highly desirable that we should [...]
[...] and prevents them from ever closing; probably he is run through the . himself, but as it is in a merely logical sense, he is per fectly insensible to the wound. In short, the presence of a few fools on such occasions dulls the force of the blows delivered. [...]
[...] They act the part of the compound which, when mixed with gun powder, renders it non-explosive : and society, which, if exclu sively formed of clever men would be a mere arena for intel º gladiators, becomes tolerably tranquil by reason of its ools. [...]
[...] been merely considering the stupid variety of a fool. It must be admitted that the clever fool does not possess this admirably tranquillizing influence. On the contrary, he is one of the dis [...]
[...] success of the Christian religion. But in reality it acquired no less a shock than the French Revolution to turn men's eyes from the mere appreciation of the outer aspects of national or political life to a perception of the º forces from which these mere outer phenomena proceed. History shared in the change that passed [...]
[...] conviction of the superiority of man in himself to all the outer circumstances that surround him. We are, of course, far from classing the History of the Norman Conquest with the mere “drum and trumpet histories” which 1)r. Shirley so pun [...]
[...] that the four sons are mentioned in order of Fº in Matt. xiii. 55; and that James and Joses (Joseph) are selected to designate their mother merely as the two elder sons, without reference to any connexion of theirs with the apostolic body. Again, the writer says:— [...]
[...] from mere individual peculiarity, have been given in all ages; and, once given, often stick. How often do we meet Rufus, Niger, Paetus, Ahenobarbus, and the like, in Roman biography P Nay, in our [...]
[...] of the word airoij is, no doubt, to refer it to the principal subject —namely, 'Idrofloº, not to & Kipiac, introduced thus parentheti cally by way of illustration merely. The presumption of lan guage is, therefore, in the Dean's favour. But now, in order to test this mere verbal inference, let us turn to Eusebius iii. 11. [...]
[...] We would err grievously, however, if we were to conclude from this variety of elements, which constitute the idiom, that it is a mere farrago of dis cordant material, or even a mere continuation of one or more of the parent stocks. As a living organism English is an entirely new individual. It is [...]
Nature03.08.1871
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 03. August 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] necessarily slow 2 There is but one answer to these questions. Science teaching in our schools is as yet potential merely. It rests with those whom we are addressing to make it actual. Observers most conversant with the difficulties which have [...]
[...] and Cayley, according to which symbols of operation become the subjects not merely of algebraic combination, but of differentia tions and integrations, as if they were symbols expressing values of varying quantities. An even more marvellous development of [...]
[...] methods a judicious choice of coordinates is often of immense importance in sinplifying an investigation ; in Quaternions there is usually no choice, for (except when they degrade to mere scalars) they are in general utterly independent of any particular directions in space, and select of themselves the most natural [...]
[...] and others; and wherein Clerk-Maxwell has employed the pro perties of an imaginary incompressible liquid (devoid of inertia) to illustrate not merely these theorems, but even Thomson's Electrical Images. [In fact he has gone much further, having applied his analogy to the puzzling combinations presented by [...]
[...] statical distribution of electricity is proportional everywhere to the condensation produced. Again, Green's celebrated theorem is at once seen to be merely the well-known equation of continuity expressed for a heterogeneous fluid, whose density at every point is proportional to one electric potential, and its displacement or [...]
[...] the old Greek Arithmetic—or than the well-ordered subdivisions of the metrical system with the preposterous no-systems of Great Britain, a mere fragment of which (in the form of Table of Weights and Measures) form, perhaps the most effective, if not [...]
[...] tions, and fighting the self-same battles under slightly different banners, which is merely another form of stagnation (Kinetic Stability in fact). “A little ſolding of the hands to sleep” in chuckling satisfaction at what has been achieved of late years by [...]
[...] hand, there is a numerous group, not in the slightest degree entitled to rank as Physicists—though in general they assume the proud title of Philosophers—who assert that not merely Life, but even Volition and Consciousness are mere physical manifestations. These opposite errors, into neither of which it [...]
[...] geological structure and history of Edinburgh and its neighbour hood, dwelling more especially on those parts which have more than a mere local interest, as illustrative of the general principles of our science. It would be as unnecessary, as it would be out of place here, [...]
[...] In the first place, then, scientific men will not, cannot admit the validity of a “new force" (of the nature of that which Mr. Crookes calls “psychic") which rests merely on the results of two experiments made in the presence of three or four persons, [...]
The lounger30.12.1786
  • Datum
    Samstag, 30. Dezember 1786
  • Erschienen
    Edinburgh
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    Edinburgh
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] be fuffered chiefly by him whom ignorance, or want of imagination, has left to the grofſnefs of mere fenſual enjoyments. In this, as in other reſpećts, the love of let ters is friendly to fober manners and virtuous [...]
[...] the common-place reflećtions againſt fome par ticular departments, it muft be allowed, that in mere men of bufinefs, there is a certain pro feffional rule of right, which is not always honourable, and though meant to be felfiſh, [...]
[...] The moral beauty of thofe difpofitions may perhaps rather provoke the fmile, than excite the imitation, of mere men of bufineſs and the world. But I will venture to tell them, that, even on their own principles, they are miftaken. [...]
[...] tained, in that reft and retirement from his la bours, with the hopes of which his fatigues were lightened and his cares were foothed, the mere man of bufineſs frequently undergoes fuffering, inſtead of finding enjoyment. To be buſy, as [...]
Nature14.07.1870
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 14. Juli 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] through some omission, not easily to be explained, if it be not the effect of a mere accident, geographical proficiency has never hitherto been adequately encouraged. Consequently, the Geo graphical Society has thought it right to step in to supply the [...]
[...] these enter into new combinations.t It may be said, however, that such changes do not take place by , the mere action of physical forces upon the un stable molecules of the dissolved tartrate of ammonia, and that Living ſerments are necessary for the initiation of such [...]
[...] within my experimental flasks. These observations were, how ever, extremely interesting, because I was thus able to trace all the stages in development, on one and the same plant, from mere granular abortive-looking Zºothrix threads, only grºwn" in dia meter, which gradually grew into a distinct conſervoid-looking [...]
[...] appearance of all signs of life in the bacteria. All their peculiarly vital movements have at once ceased, and they have henceſorth displayed nothing but mere Brownian movements.” M. Pasteur approaches the solution of the discrepancy in this way. His attention was arrested by the fact that milk was an [...]
[...] And if, starting from this fact, which cannot be denied, the evolutionists see reasons which induce them to assume the possibility that, in addition to mere growth and deve lopment, an actual origination of Living things may have taken place de novo, they would also be likely to suppose [...]
[...] number of organisms found in equal bulks under similar conditions, can almost always be notably increased in either one of them by the mere addition of a few drops of liquor potassic, so as to render it neutral or slightly alkaline. This, as I previously pointed out, may be interpreted [...]
[...] high temperature. What we know concerning the precipitation of albumen in urine is quite in harmony with this view. When albumen is present, and the fluid has an alkaline reaction, mere boiling does not cause its precipitation, though, if the re action had been acid," the albumen present would have been [...]
[...] tity of acid, in conjunction with an elevated temperature, is seen to be capable of producing results which cannot be produced by the mere elevated temperature alone. But [...]
[...] * Provided this was not due to the presence of a mere trace of nitric acid. [...]
[...] the truth of his own views. Unfortunately for the cause of Truth, people have been so blinded by his skill and precision as a mere experimenter, that only too many have failed to dis cover his shortcomings as a reasoner. But it will already have been perceived by the attentive [...]
Punch08.09.1855
  • Datum
    Samstag, 08. September 1855
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] | EMPEROR OF Russia, who can swallow any quantity of train-oil, is thrown into fits by the mere mention of a box of Sardines. [...]
[...] sea at its bluest,--but now, as the sea, they are deep. HER MAJESTY has devoured so many wonders, that she has become, exalted beyond mere Britannic royalty. She has eaten and drunk of the ambrosia and nectar of Paris, and her mien, her looks, declare the influence of the celestial fare. So speculates and resolves, the philosophic mind of [...]
[...] to a Chasseur, a mounted Don Cossack is no more than a monkey on pony-back-Nothing can beat the good-temper of these fellows: they crack a skull as a good joke; and to their teeth bullets are merely sugar-plums. If there be “dogs of war,” then are the Chasseurs war's playful puppy-dogs! The review ended, and, it is said by some who [...]
[...] And not till our moses bleed after collision, Do we feel we’re entitled to say, with decision, “Yes—it is solid stonework, and not a mere vision,” [...]
[...] “But hold”—say the theorists—“mortars, 'tis certain, Will wear out with firing—the fact is well known,” We can’t rest on mere random asserting; [...]
[...] So, too, said the charts; but John BUIL’s not so flat As, without some more practical proof, things to swallow, On mere word-of-mouth and eye-witness, like that So of man-of-war stations our Whitehall assigners, Send into the Baltic our first-rates and liners ; [...]
[...] That Russian forts to the pounding of mortars (Though they mock point-blank fire) soon “peccavi" would sing. Mere reasonings that gunboats are needed, we scout them! Let’s have practical proof, first, by trying without them: To show long guns won’t knock the ſqºs' casemates about them, [...]
[...] The #. kind of messenger to send Those, who to no discourse Save that of mere brute force, Their stupid, savage, servile ears will lend. [...]
[...] and uxorious builders have wives of that name. As for John Street James Street, William Street, Alexander Street, Henry Street, Edward Street, and all the other streets with mere praenomina, they must pre pare to take less ridiculous appellations. A Christian man may be entitled to be called a brick, but bricks are not entitled to the Christian [...]
[...] and the interest only of another's capital; the entire property of Jones, and merely a part of [...]
Saturday review08.04.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 08. April 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] If nothing were at issue but a mere verbal nicety, if we were in the position of little boys making Latin verses, and had to look out in the Gradus and choose between two epithets, [...]
[...] would have been better “to wait until Louis gave proof that he entertained the ambitious projects ascribed to him,” nor accept the osition that “a war undertaken merely upon suspicion cannot be justified to heaven or to man.” For the proof would have been merely a repetition, in favour of the now acknowledged King [...]
[...] book, we are inclined to say that they do, "...". very fact of migrating from private into public, pretend to be something more than mere leaves. We doubt whether the most eminent of scholars would have any right to give us mere leaves from his mote-book during his lifetime; his literary executors might, or might not, do [...]
[...] book is to be found in them, and not in the story. The story, nevertheless, has considerable merit. It is vivacious, and often powerful; the characters, too, are life-like, and not mere puppets. [...]
[...] HEATHCOTE'S REMINISCENCES OF FEN AND MERE.” [...]
[...] * Iteniniscences of Fen and Mere. London: [...]
[...] engineering skill. Take the earlier aspect of the district. In 1805 we read of a cutter from the Norfolk Broads water-stressed in the Mere, and actually sold in situ because, the water sinking, it could not be got away. The Mere was utilized thenceforth for sailing and fishing parties, and one chapter in Part II, gives full parti [...]
[...] stocked with fish from the rivers, especially from Bevill's Seam. The author mentions a picture of a giant pike taken in Whittlesea Mere weighing fifty-two pounds. Amongst other forms of sport, which the undrained Mere afforded, were coot-shooting with a large gun (sixteen at a shot), from November to March, and wild [...]
[...] into the river for passage, thence to the sea, followed without delay; and it did its work so well that it finally drained the bed of Whittlesea Mere in 1850, and when in 1852 a flood burst the banks, and once more “drowned” the Mere, it again discharged the water effectually in a given time. Passing over the curious [...]
[...] Leaves from a Word-Hunter's Note-Book. The Manchester Man, Kirkman's philosophy without Assumptions. ... Memoir of Caroline Herschel. Heathcote's Reminiscences of Fen and Mere. The Red House by the River. [...]
All the year round18.12.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 18. Dezember 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] duty to itself and society, may grow up better than the present, and the race of mere savages, may diminish amongst us. [...]
[...] Loch PHLogIBECH is a large and solitary mere, in the heart of a melancholy place. Around it the land undulates into small hills, with bogs and marshes between, and [...]
[...] flats, the ever-sombre sky. There is not a tree or shrub : instead of underwood, stones and boulders strew the waste. The mere itself is black as lead : small islands rise [...]
[...] water of life. All this life only deepens the desolation of the mere. There is a hollow sadness in the air, which the weird screech of the birds cannot break. [...]
[...] school, was renewed like AEson by the rough process of nature herself. To the weary and exhausted; not to the merely [...]
[...] brought all these to bear, with a result that leaves nothing to be desired. It was not merely a question of replacing displaced tombs, raising fallen columns, and mending statues, but the notions of former govern [...]
[...] and try to bring us this excellent lady.” “Excellent!” said the lay sister. “Not exactly, ma mère. She has not the slightest shadow of religion, but smokes like a dra goon and swears like a waggoner.” [...]
[...] several times; Sister Henriette picked it up. Everything in her gestures and manner betrayed something worse than mere vul garity. Madame Ludivine kept her promise of allowing this precious acquisition the [...]
[...] cence in my views, or as a determination to disobey my orders?' “‘Ma mère, I should be thankful if God had spared me the grief and the shame to which a mere accident has exposed me. [...]
[...] make use of the same means to induce her to fulfil her religious duties.’ “‘Ma mère '' “‘I have told you I will suffer no obser vations: I must have obedience, pure and [...]
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