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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 [...]
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. [...]
Saturday review19.01.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 19. Januar 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Parliament, which was the same over again except that a few members from the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man were included. The second Parliament must be a mere nominal institution, or the two Parliaments would soon come into collision. [...]
[...] the different colonies had scarcely a special interest in common. The Lower Provinces had manifested a strong preference for an absolute Legislative Union over any merely federative scheme ; but the peculiar position of Lower Canada, with her distinct race, religion, and language, put a [...]
[...] which was personal and perhaps accidental, will be permanently found º, by respect and custom, amongst vast multitudes of people. The mere whims of an influential man may thus be often detected floating down the stream of time in company with his express doctrines and sentiments. Rational explanations will, [...]
[...] by the explanatory programme of the Jury. Translated into the language of common men, when the Jurors say that they will not reward the mere “spirit of charity and beneficence,” this is ; a courteous way of saying that they are not concerned (whic nobody ever supposed) with mere eleemosynary efforts. The [...]
[...] deed an unwise notion of his own, which he persists in trotting out before his constituents, that the use of Hyde Park was refused to the Reforming operatives last summer merely because it was reserved for the pleasure and amusement of other people. How he got this notion does not appear; but he [...]
[...] in the higher ranks of life as with burglars, casuals, watchmen, or marqueterie-workers. He consequently plagues us with a mere phantasm and her daughter, who move about amon the real flesh-and-blood characters with painful unreality, an who take up an unreasonable amount of room, considering the [...]
[...] are inaccurate and feeble; but, even if they could be justi fied, the matter would not be mended. We see that the author is merely copying a conventional figure, not making a study from life; and, in contrast with the really vivid de scriptions of the lower sphere, this shadowy glimpse into the upper [...]
[...] forms that ancient literature has proved so wofully inadequate a means of education. ... We should not expect any more satisfactory result from science, if here too the teacher stopped short at mere outside facts and laws. But there are many signs that the reign of the specialist is drawing to its close, and when that result is [...]
[...] quoting the vigorous words of Mr. Huxley—“is steeped in science; it has made its way into the works of our best poets, and even the mere man of letters who affects to ignore and despise science is unconsciously impregnated with her spirit, and indebted for his best products to her methods. . . Physical science, its [...]
[...] Die Geraubte Schatullet, by E. D. Mund, is a novel of incident, with no pretensions to literary merit, but mere readable than is usually the case with German novels. The “Last Tears” f is a pretty, sentimental story, accompanied with some clever illustra [...]
Saturday review25.08.1866
  • Datum
    Samstag, 25. August 1866
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] so far as his temporal power went, a mere vassal of [...]
[...] thoroughly with the democratic element in the south of Europe. There is a difficulty about this. Democracy in these times is no longer merely a form of government. If it merely meant this, the Church of Rome might be democratic in politics to-morrow. Modern democracy, however, can hardly [...]
[...] nents. The rudeness, the injustice, the undiscriminating contempt of that memorable diatribe made everybody who read it a Tory dympathiser by mere reaction. And is it surprising that the Tories [...]
[...] amount for which it is nominally given. In present times the practice has become . inveterate, and even judges who did not fail to see its absurdity have conformed to it merely because [...]
[...] of Doctrine suggests a comparison with such a book, for instance, as Reuss's Théologie Chrétienne. . We expect in it not merely the chronological sequence of facts, but something of an attempt to show the relations of these facts to one another, to group and [...]
[...] of course forgery, of Henry Stephens; the other, to which he is more inclined, that some of the Greeks who came over to Italy when threatened by the Turks may have written it as a mere exercise of literary skill. Neither guess is very felicitous. [...]
[...] in which nicer shades of meaning are missed or left untranslated, we can but think through simple neglect on the translator's part to penetrate below the mere surface of the Greek. In Medea, 724, where Creon tells Medea in her distress, | [...]
[...] However, it is not mere logic that we complain of A writer [...]
[...] MERE'S MEMOIRS and CORRESPONDENCE, from his Family Papers. By the IRight Hon. MARY Viscountess CoMBERMERE, and Captain W. W. KNoLLYs. 2 vols. 8vo. with Portraits, bound, 30s. [...]
[...] more than a mere narrative of travel, as they contain a variety of [...]
Saturday review25.09.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 25. September 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] maintained a distinctive character in the midst of the dis tracted States to the south and to the west. Exempt from military revolutions, and with a merely nominal constitu tion, they had lived in peace and apparent prosperity, and the family which had long exercised supreme power seemed [...]
[...] demning, when directed against their own Government, what they have praised when directed against other Governments. To politicians who hold that the mere caprice or fancy of a people is a sufficient justification for the overthrow of its Government or the transfer of its allegiance, this contradiction [...]
[...] all events it is a charge which, as one easy to bring and hard to disprove, ought not to be brought against any man without very strong grounds. . Inconsistency, self-delusion, mere irreso lution and weakness, the mere imperfection, in short, of human nature, go a long way to account for a great deal which is often [...]
[...] would grudge to have at least a taste. But in ordinary households fidelity cannot flourish for want of its natural nourishment, and necessarily changes into mere honesty and good service while it lasts. The servant has a world of which master and mistress know nothing; the interests of master [...]
[...] retort, to compel him to silence under reproof, and yet to expect him to make our interests his main concern; it is idle not to see that he merely reconciles himself to silence and respect as Part of his contract, a condition to be submitted to till some [...]
[...] To those who do not object to an exceptionally unpleasant sea passage, and who do not want mere town amusements, the group of islands known as the Channel Islands will be found charming for a summer's holiday. They are full of interest for [...]
[...] attribute to the corona is among those already chronicled by Mr. Lockyer in the chromosphere spectrum. Confining ourselves merely to these considerations, this at all events is clear—that the eclipse of 1870 must be well observed. The new method, so far from rendering observations of eclipses un [...]
[...] the idea of a universal substance, always active and always an immanent cause of the universe, with whom creation is merely thought and self-development; that its world, instead of being purely material and distinct from God, is a manifestation of the divine substance following the invariable laws of thought [...]
[...] which broke the glass and furniture, but injured no one. The children were beside their mother at the time, but they did not move, and scarcely changed colour. The Countess merely gave them a look of approbation, and the meal was continued in the midst of the confusion. [...]
[...] would render the Imperial control little more than nominal. Meanwhile Englishmen, when they condescended to think at all of the colonies, thought of them as mere plantations for the benefit of English commerce. Their final cause was to grow tobacco, or to supply a market for English manufactures; and Lord Chatham [...]
Saturday review11.03.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 11. März 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] sufficed to impose on the PRESIDENT. He now confesses his guilt; and it perhaps matters little whether he is sentenced by the Senate or merely relegated to infamous obscurity. [...]
[...] plies a mistake as to the nature of things. To call a man incon sistent who changes for good reasons comes of fancying that there is some virtue in mere immobility, in mere keeping to the same ground, whether with reason or without reason. Still the point is only verbal; those who would call a man consistent for so doing [...]
[...] Of the nature of accuracy we have spoken before now. We need now only repeat a warning against the mistake which confounds accuracy with mere minuteness. Accuracy implies minuteness whenever minuteness is needed; but it is perfectly possible to be accurate without being minute. Accuracy implies that eve [...]
[...] good many mere slips; it will most likely contain a good many cases of that not uncommon process when it is good to write down something at once, to make some statement, to form some theory, [...]
[...] repay the very slight cost which in peace-time our Treasury might be called on to pay. A really broad view of the organization of the Imperial army should comprehend not merely the forces of England and of India, but those of the great colonies, which, instead of [...]
[...] from what they would take in a narrative history. Mr. Stubbs of mere reading of such a book one of course learns much; but it is onl in a process beyond mere reading that we find out the full strengt [...]
[...] former one, he writes everywhere as a lover of freedom, as an admirer of the men who strove for freedom; but he is never a mere political partisan. At each stage we wait with a kind of anxiety to see what will be his judgment on the next stage; we do not, as we do in the case of a merely partisan writer, feel sure [...]
[...] when we think of his living portraits of the Angevin Kings and so many of their contemporaries, his summaries of their reigns in all respects, not merely constitutional, but personal and oecumenical, we feel sure that the constitutional historian of England could also be, if he chose, its narrative historian. [...]
[...] Shadow and sun; faint forms that glint and fly; Sands shifting under foot; no staff or stay! My wisdom was mere folly! [...]
[...] chance. This is evidently written in imitation of Tennyson, and is a striking example of the distinction between real poetry and a mere stringing of words. Here is a sample:— In a haze of glimmering lawn And titter of girl-Tattons Mabel swam [...]
Saturday review23.05.1874
  • Datum
    Samstag, 23. Mai 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Paris at the last Exhibition is a memorable instance of this. But when feeling and interest go together, the interchange of civilities is something more than a mere matter of ceremony. [...]
[...] the account merely because the EMPEROR chooses to look in upon us for a day or two. These are things which cannot and ought not to be forgotten, but it would have been [...]
[...] PARs just now, having nothing else to think about except a mere change of Government and perhaps Constitution, is deeply interested in a question of personal tº: which has arisen, between a couple of noblemén. Have you a right to [...]
[...] candles, oil, powder, &c., and some of the pitmen came down to the magazine smoking, merely putting their pipes into their waist coat pockets when they got close to the magazine. Twice this officer was taken into magazines by persons carrying a naked [...]
[...] light it, and fired the powder. By this explosion one person was killed and many were injured, and 3,000l. worth of damage was done. At present the mere fact of selling powder constitutes a dealer, and the mere fact of dealing enables him to keep 200 lbs. of powder anywhere and anyhow, and without any supervision [...]
[...] mere show; and where we have a right to look for care, we encounter carelessness. The picture, we fear, can scarcely be naturalized either in England or Japan; the hands are too badly drawn for London [...]
[...] From that moment he knew that he loved her irrevocably. No merely human words could describe all the tumultuous longings and thoughts which thronged his brain; for there are some phases of human passion which, [...]
[...] he reader should be induced to have some kind of sympathy even with the wicked actors, or he does not take any interest in their ravings. Deborah is a mere demon in petticoats; we listen to her as to a mere embodiment of rant, and cannot pity her even for her º in love. Nobody would be much affected by [...]
[...] author of a certain paper in the Edinburgh Review,” inasmuch as it was the case of one “anonymous writer animadverting on another, merely with a view to what he has written, and without the slightest reference, directly or by innuendo, to any particular person. [...]
[...] or President while the people were inspired with a spirit of freedom and a love of liberty. Grote, even at the mature age of fifty-five, had so far re tained his youthful ardour as to feel elated by the mere fact of “living under a republic,” when he visited France in 1849—a sensation which to Fon blanque, whose mind was singularly unimpressionable to mere outward [...]
Saturday review12.09.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 12. September 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] insurrection, and continued at its head. The question of the mutineers' motives is not what it once was. So long as the mutiny amounted merely to military disobedience, equity and policy, though certainly not strict justice, required that we, who knew the marvellous [...]
[...] the army must, as a matter of the commonest precaution, be maintained, even in the most peaceful times, at a considerably higher strength than mere financial considerations would render desirable. But we want to see the question put on its true footing—so much annual taxation on the one side [...]
[...] system. It is as old as Christianity, and older—it is in favour with Roman Catholics, and with Dissenters, and with Churchmen of all sorts. In short, merely as a mode of communicating truth, or announcing opinions, open-air preaching is not a specialty of religion at [...]
[...] preachings consisted. Protestantism in Ireland is simple enough. It consists of good, solid, monotonous railing at the Church of Rome. We do not complain of this—we merely state the fact. Very possibly it is quite right. We know that out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh. The [...]
[...] To do Mr. HANNA justice, he has not the hypocrisy to attempt much concealment of his motives. He preaches “a temperate Evangelical address,” but, as he says, merely to “vindicate the right of the ministers to preach.” That is to say, he was very anxious to convert poor wretches who [...]
[...] chimera. Notwithstanding the advantages which he derived from family connexion, Fox entered political life in his boyhood as a mere ad venturer. His early squabbles with Lord North involved no pre tence of a question of principle. The young orator succeeded in [...]
[...] extravagant airs of the Great Mogul, will be readily allowed. We merely affirm that, on the average, as a body, by its integrity, its talent, and expe rience, it is equal to its task; that never have magistrates of greater integ [...]
[...] dark soul, and created beneath the ribs of religious bigotry, political intrigue, and Royal formalism, a living heart of affec tion. In these volumes Philip is not merely a State machine or a Grand Inquisitor misplaced on a throne, but a man whom We i. sometimes like, and with whom we occasionally sym [...]
[...] copyists have met with the usual fate of their breed—their imita tion has become caricature. Their conceits are not quaint, but uncouth—their similes are not merely far-fetched, but simply unintelligible. Still more unfortunate has been their abhorrence of i. for nearly all Pope's defects are negative. Though [...]
[...] that blank verse does not mean prose printed in short lines—that eccentric language does not alter the nature of commonplace ideas—and that even the mere art of poetry consists of something more recondite than the simple plan of leaving out all the nomi native cases and jº: substituting participles for verbs. [...]
Saturday review06.02.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 06. Februar 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] If the employers who so acted were never in any sense agents of any candidate, but merely distributed wages as they pleased in order to promote the success of the political party to which they belonged, no election could be affected. Em [...]
[...] ferred on the Bavarian dynasty, abolished the salaried Senate, established a single Representative Chamber, and endeavoured to cxclude Government nominees and mere place-hunters by declaring that mayors and officials, with the exception of Ministers and [...]
[...] of which is restricted to a definite time, place, person, or object— namely, annual Acts; Acts which, though passed for State purposes, relate merely to local or personal rights; and Acts which are merely legislative authority for doing a certain work. The “Public General” Acts would not only be passed for State purposes, but [...]
[...] series. There is no reason why an English lawyer should be com pelled to load his shelves with the Statute law of Scotland, any more than with the “Code Civil " of Lower Canada, merely be cause Scotland, like Canada, is subject to the Crown of England. It is a mere accident in the question that the Scotch Statutes are made [...]
[...] be in a position to address himself cheerfully to the next stage of progress–to attempt to arrange the Statutes in a rational, instead of a merely chronological, order. If law reformers could only by persuaded to define their terms [...]
[...] to make confusion worse confounded. Till they adopt a better method, the Statute-book must remain, like every other depart ment of English law, a mere chaos through which wayfarers are misguided by a cumbrous and itself chaotic index. [...]
[...] alternative of two remedies—he may either bring an action in the colony, , or bring an action here. The question was whether a colonial Act could take away, not merely the right of action in the colony, but the right of action here. “It appears to me,” said Lord Chief Justice Cockburn, “that the mere state [...]
[...] in that country.” Applying these words to the case before the Court, and treating Jamaica, as for this purpose it may be treated, as a foreign country, they merely amount to this, that Mr. Phillips would not be disabled from suing Mr. Eyre for damages for trespass committed in Jamaica merely because no damages [...]
[...] reasonings are not sufficiently cogent or searching; the assumed connexion between effects and causes, between scattered details and governing principles, is often merely conjectural. The causes which have induced art creations may for convenience be dis tributed under the distinctive divisions of race, climate, and chro [...]
[...] and not without views of landed property consistent rather with the French than the English theory; accustomed, moreover, to subordinate mere theoretical conclusions to practical expe diency; he was not likely to be betrayed into the hasty or pre judiced judgments of ordinary European critics. The time at [...]
Saturday review31.08.1861
  • Datum
    Samstag, 31. August 1861
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Acts of Congress during the brief session of little more than a month which commenced on the fourth of July. Nay, the mere titles of the measures would suffice to give a substan tially accurate general idea of the history of the period. [...]
[...] all, while the same canals which supplied the land with water would, in any case, have prevented 50 per cent of the relief fund being spent on the mere conveyance of food. [...]
[...] 1860. However, by eliminating these disturbing causes, Colonel SMITH satisfied himself that the depression was not a mere reaction from a period of inflation, and that its cause must be sought in more special circumstances. The famine was naturally suspected of having had a [...]
[...] WHF we say that London is empty, we merely mean that at the West End there are not quite so many people as there were a month or two ago; and so, when we say that there [...]
[...] pas in composition, any more than in morals, that it is “a very little one.” The distinction is one important to be made, because people often confound accuracy with mere minuteness. , Com plaints of inaccuracy are often thought to be pedantic or hyper critical because they are supposed to be merely complaints of the [...]
[...] minuteness to call a man vaguely an Eastern Christian, but it is inaccuracy to call him a Greek if he happens to be a Bulgarian. It is mere lack of minuteness to call a man generally a nobleman; it is inaccuracy to call him an Earl if he happens to be only, a Viscount. In all such cases, the mere lack of minuteness may be [...]
[...] as of any natural defect which cannot. Inaccuracy, therefore, is morally blameworthy. Muddle-headedness is something quite different from mere ignorance. Of course the best-informed and most clear-headed man will constantly come across things, even in his own range of [...]
[...] enunciation of moral truths. The plaudits of a theatrical public, when they denote not merely the admiration of talent, but the approval of sentiments, may be taken as a very fair index of the moral theory entertained by a people. “Man,” says Schiller, “is never so much in [...]
[...] may be possible for anything we know to the contrary, and mental power need not always be in operation; but to speak of any form of mental activity apart from consciousness is a mere contradiction in terms. It would seem rather a curious, though apparently an inevitable [...]
[...] matters which puzzle modern astronomers as much as they may have puzzled the earliest Chinese observers. Some would make them mere optical effects, without more substance of their own than a sunbeam shining in a darkened room. Newton made the tail a mere vapour thrown off by the heat of the sun; but neither [...]
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