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The nation01.01.1874
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. Januar 1874
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] tive letterpress by D. G. Elliot, F.L.S. Super-royal 4to, cloth, elegant, $1o 50. “Pictures like these—not mere passive delineations of the outward shapes, but illustrations of the habits of wild animals—have an instructive and suggestive value. [...]
[...] in that ragged picturesqueness-the picturesqueness of poverty—on which we feast our idle eyes at Rome and Naples. Except in the unfinished fronts of the churches, which however, unfortunately, are mere prosaic ugliness, one finds here less romantic stateliness than in most Italian cities. But at two or three points it exists in perfection—in just such perfection as proves [...]
[...] Some two years since Satank (Sitting Bear), Satanta (White Bear), Kiowa chiefs, with a band of their warriors, in which Big-Tree (no chief, but a mere young “buck”) boasted he was included, made a raid into Texas and captured and rifled Captain Warren's train of wagons, killing some ot the teamsters outright and torturing by fire and killing others that had been [...]
[...] ones realize the import of “the terror by night.” It was a grave error in the first instance to make treaties with people in such a state of savagery that they have no government—are mere mobs. There are, all told, only 1,500 Kiowas and 3,000 Comanches. It is a graver error to put non-combatants in charge of such a people—of utter savages. [...]
[...] In the December number of the Penn Monthly, at the close of his seven teenth article upon the Moorish conquest of Spain, Professor Henry Cop pée announces that the series, as it stands, is merely a cartoon. He in tends, he says, to expend additional labor upon his fascinating subject; and should time serve him, and materials be procurable, he hopes that at some [...]
[...] of its editor, Dr. Pertz, has not merely proceeded very slowly of late, but has been less satisfactorily conducted; the last volume (XXIV.), the ‘Diplomata Imperii, by the younger Pertz, has been severely criticised. Prof. Waitz had [...]
[...] work before us is of interest alike to the general reader and to the student of history and politics. It has a double character, being an attempt not merely to delineate the more striking features of the political and social con ditions of England, but also to discriminate the chief forces and ascertain the main causes that have made the English people and English institutions [...]
[...] House of Commons and parliamentary government, the fifth to the forma tion of political habits. It is in this fifth chapter that M. Laugel is at his best. It is an excellent essay, whether considered merely as an account of the operation and sphere of action of some of what the author well calls the organic, as distinguished from the constituted, powers of the state, or whether [...]
[...] preparing such a book as this, to try to decide whether the Dutch school is to be more honored for its faithfulness or more despised for its coarseness and low level, but merely to quote that school, or individual masters of that school, when he may need examples of the merits or of the demerits which, by general consent, he will find there. We have been told lately that Leon [...]
[...] not wait to learn by heart and to compare the canons of the different schools. In this respect we think our author is to be praised, and to be trusted. Whether he treats of the peculiarities of painters and of schools in mere prac tice, as in mixing and applying colors, or whether he examines the transcen dental merits of religious designs or of grand portraiture; in nearly all cases [...]
The nation01.02.1872
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. Februar 1872
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] what was said as to the necessity of some restraint upon the cost of our public documents we quite agree with; and we admit that some slight economy might have been effected in the mere letterpress of this magnificent work. But both Mr. Garfield and Mr. Dawes [...]
[...] came to light the first week. The Administration organs, which were at first confident there was nothing to be found out, and that the whole affair was a mere “Schurz-Fenton trick,” now admit that a good deal has been found out, but they throw the blame on “the system.” “The system" plays much the same part in political that [...]
[...] them, by virtue of their former position, are Sir J. Pakington and Lord Derby. Of Sir John I shall say nothing. He is a solid country gentleman, of the heavy respectable type, and merely puts the ordinary language of Con servatives into specially pompous phraseology. Lord Derby deserves more notice. His great social position and his reputation for real ability give [...]
[...] considers his article exceptional until a wasting sojourn in London makes him content to dispose of it for what he can get. I saw a head the other day— a mere head without even a neck—in a soft, chalky stone (one of the trou. rai"es of Cyprus), for which a dealer had paid £110, and, selling it for £250 a week later, he made an offer a few days later still of £500 to repurchase it, [...]
[...] would suggest an illustration, but to oblige Mr. Dickens I did my best to produce another etching, working hard day and night; but when done, what was it? Why, merely a lady and a boy standing inside of a church looking at a stone wall.” Readers of “Oliver Twist,” if they are late readers of it, will recollect the more feebly sentimental and more feebly melodramatic [...]
The nation01.02.1877
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. Februar 1877
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] which must place it among the artist's few supreme masterpieces. The nu merous other Gainsboroughs are far from having this value. They are evi. dently, for the most part, mere “pot-boilers,” upon which the minimum of care has been bestowed. They are, in general, full-lengths—which means that a pair of very wooden legs has been added to a pair of extremely me [...]
[...] And since we are speaking of archaeology, let me mention that the exqui site series of volumes by Paul Lacroix on the Middle Ages—so satisfying to scholars and so charming even to those who merely “look at the pic tures”—is now completed by a work on the science and literature of the period. Quite of the same sort is the history of household furniture (“His [...]
[...] they have enjoyed of old by precisely the same title as that of the Church of England in England, and that of Rome in Spain. Nevertheless this concession must be made, in recognition not merely of the principle of justice but of the spirit of the Constitution. The State constitutions could not be meddled with at the time when our national life began, [...]
[...] pendent ; “they now appear just what and as they were at their original publication, with the exception of a few changes made in their titles.” We cannot see that the book suffers materially for being a mere verbatim re print. IIere and there we find repetitions, especially in the introductory papers ; the philosophy is not everywhere so searching (e.g., in the ninth [...]
The nation01.04.1875
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. April 1875
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] that I made it quite a wade-mecum. 7%ey had the disingenuousness to extract mere/y the part of my opi mion which / have under/ined, and to insert it among their puffs and [...]
[...] T is an encouraging sign of the growth of the general intelligence and conscience as to public questions, that Mr. Tilden's attack on the canal peculators is not treated anywhere as a matter of merely local interest. Down to the time of the onslaught upon the Ring in this city in 1871, it was the custom all over the country for politi [...]
[...] Le Dieu, his intimate, represents him as going for years from parish to parish, Gospel in hand, and finding in the Holy Book an inexhaustible fountain of eloquence. The printed sermons are mere skeletons ; and still, here and there, it seems as if you felt the living ardor of the inspired preacher, and saw his eagle eye, and heard the vibration of his proud voice. [...]
[...] lessness of quantity,” it must be left to him to meet so grave a charge against himself and the wholesale rebuke administered to American scholars. If, however, he has merely been guilty of a play upon two Latin words which, though they sound alike, differ in quantity, I beg to interpose and respectfully express my dissent from the assertion that such play is [...]
[...] carrying of slungshots should not apply wºº, * º: person found in possession of a slungshot, with inient to so the Sarno against another, is declared to be guilty of a felony ; and the mere posses Sion of the instrument, concealed on the person, is declared to be presump [...]
[...] and one or two examples must suffice as mere specimens of Sir Henry Maine's singular and admirable capacity for tracing analogies and forming generalizations. The theory, for example, which connects the [...]
[...] is merely an application of one of the general theories which he has done as [...]
[...] wide separation between the Aryan race and races of other stocks; but it suggests that many—perhaps most—of the differences in kind alleged to exist between Aryan sub-races are really differences merely in degree of development. It is to be hoped the contemporary thought will before long make an effort to emancipate itself from those habits of levity in [...]
[...] and the Druids to be considered merely accidental, or are we to search for an historical connection ? Is there any real connection between any tenure known to Roman law and the feudal system : Is it at all [...]
[...] The work needs no recommendation other than the mere mention of a few of the contributors: The Dean of Canterbury º Smith); The Dean of Chester (Dr. Howson); Rev. [...]
The nation01.05.1873
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. Mai 1873
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] rectly planned and ordered by this man [McEnery] and his associ ates " ? This charge, levelled against a respectable gentleman, is merely atrocious; and is seen to be more so when accounts more trust worthy than it is reasonable to expect from Kellogg make it high ly probable that the trouble had for a principal cause Kellogg's own [...]
[...] time—is simply worthless. But its design is plain upon the most careless reading. It was not intended to be a contribution to history: it was in tended as a mere vehicle to contain and carry the personal attack upon the English Chief-Justice which forms its centre and substance, and is its only raison d'être. We will give but one illustration of our statement but this [...]
[...] both nations had centred in some passage of the negotiations, wherever there was something which had hitherto been concealed under a flow of mere words and a display of mere forms, this book leaves us exactly where it found us, and goes no further below the surface of things than did the cor respondents whose narrations preceded it. [...]
[...] debate on this motion was interesting and instructive. Every one admitted that the reasoning of the Arbitration was wrong, however correct the deci sion might be. Some thought that this reasoning was merely obiter, and of no binding character; others that it was the ratio decidendi, and constituted the essence of the precedent. All agreed that in the proper time the subject [...]
The nation01.06.1871
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. Juni 1871
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] The above-mentioned needs are not the promptings of mere love of progress. Far from this; the College cannot retain its high position before the public with no professorship of the English languge for its [...]
[...] ought not, to excuse criminal acts, is not, it seems to me, made sufficiently plain. To the cultivated reader or to the medical student, the difference between insanity which merely confuses the moral notions, and that which perverts the reason and overpowers the will, may be well marked ; but the ordinary reader and the average juryman will require something [...]
[...] from doing the act? If it would, he is sufficiently sane to be held legally responsible for his conduct; if it would not, his punishment would be useless cruelty, and he should merely be placed beyond the power of fur ther injury. S. DAYToN, O., May 17. [...]
[...] bestow a well deserved reward on the French sympathies of the Swis nation.” - This advice, considered merely in the light of expediency, can hardly” judged sound, for several reasons. One is, that a polytechnic school " Strasburg would seriously impair the German polytechnic schoºl a! [...]
[...] - philosophical and discursive; and even where it is merely narrative, it is [...]
[...] and pathetic. We shall not give an analysis of the novel which it is so easy to get, but shall content ourselves with praising its great merits. Regarded merely as a bit of workmanship, it has all the elegance which, perhaps, will immortalize the best of the present race of French "tº [...]
The nation01.06.1876
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. Juni 1876
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] knowledge when he has a general conception of and interest in the history of language-changes in Asia and Europe than when he merely has a little stock of Greek and Latin inflexions, paradigms, and quotations. For this comparative study of language Mr. Papillon has [...]
[...] “A most useful little volume. . . . No space is wasted in mere words, but everything in the book, including many handsome illustrations, is explicit and to the purpose.”- .V. P. Errenting Pºst. [...]
[...] on the first ballot, and we trust that the Republican reformers who are going to Cincinnati will recollect that in putting up a candidate for their own party, they must put up one who will not merely be better than Conkling or Morton, but fit to run against Mr. Tilden, who is himself a formidable candidate for any one to run against, [...]
[...] tion bills he has cut down the estimates of the Departments right and left to a great extent, by a wholesale reduction of salaries. The Senate, not merely in the interest of good government, but also as being the body which fills the offices, objects to this kind of eco nomy, and there is at present small hope of agreement between the [...]
[...] 5,000,000 piastres. The change of administration is regarded in Europe as favorable to a peaceful settlement of pending questions; but the mere change itself seems, under the circumstances, more likely to encourage the insurrectionists than to dispose them to ac cept any terms the execution of which is left to the Mussulmans. [...]
[...] England as well as here” is therefore false. The public, as we have pointed out, were the real vendees, and there were many facts which were not merely unknown to them but were carefully concealed from them. The first fact concealed from them was that there were 25,000 shares locked up with the vendors—the prospectus was issued on the 13th of November, and [...]
[...] which has only to be carefully read to have its inspiration and purpose at once understood. Without attempting any general review of the article, I will merely give a few extracts, italicizing those parts which are the most flagrant in deception and the fullest of untruth. Of the Northern Pacific grant the writer says: “This was an empire [...]
[...] crude ; but such consummate judgment is shown in their disposition and use that an effect of power and harmony is often produced that outweighs, in an artistic sense, any mere effect of delicacy or brilliancy in porcelain specimens. The collection is, or was, very rich in Gubbio or lustred ware— examples of that lost art of which no modern imitations give any idea. In [...]
[...] commendation even if the result be not altogether in accordance with his desire. Here and there in his pages are lines and even passages of some length that exhibit something more than mere conscientious workmanship —lines, for instance, like the following : [...]
[...] member, a justice of peace,” etc. Again, he says that King James, “with his own hand, wrote a letter to Shakspere in return for the compliment paid him in his tragedy of “Macbeth.’” Now, both of these are mere un authenticated and unsupported traditions, and as such have been discredited long since by all biographers of the poet. But Mr. Rees puts them down [...]
The nation01.07.1875
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. Juli 1875
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] millions, which are the modest sums generally mentioned in con nection with the enterprise, a whole people might almost be made musical; and if these sums are dedicated not merely to instruction, but to amusement as well, we might have concerts in the Central Park which should do for the public at large what Thomas now does [...]
[...] cupied by farmers, farming from fifty to five hundred acres each, and, as a rule, holding their occupancies on no written lease or formal agreement, but merely at will, from year to year, and liable to be turned out on a six months' notice. A sort of feudal relation has thus been fostered between landlord and tenant. The landlord draws the same rent from the tenant [...]
[...] that in which the critics of the school have done it. For these have drawn for the most part their understanding of the principle from the mere wording of it, without consulting the writings of which this motto is more properly to be regarded as the title or summary name. Yet it is far from clear, when we consult these writings, how the [...]
[...] brought his Princess to London and surrounded her innocence and beauty with the pettiness of town-life. The ‘Three Feathers' is, on the whole, more evenly written. As a mere story—a natural succession of events re lating to people in whom we are interested, and which are themselves just exciting enough to make us feel that we are in the midst of action-any [...]
[...] complete a work of such magnitude is self-evident; for he prepared it and carried it through the press without seeming to interrupt his other pursuits. Yet we have it on good authority that not merely is the general plan and arrangement his own, but even the material execution is mainly his. The examples were selected by him, the passages quoted were marked by him, [...]
[...] work. Littré disclaims every idea of aiming at erudition. He says, in so many words, “L’érudition est ici non l'objet, mais l'instrument.” He merely seeks to complete what he calls l'idée de l'usage. He wishes to show l'usage complet of the language from the earliest days to the present, and thereby to prevent those arbitrary decisions which have been too frequent [...]
[...] man of the world, with a nice ear and good taste, having a broad and con stant experience of the best society, even were he a little futile and inclined to stop at the mere form, might be and probably would be a better guide for pronunciation than the profoundest scholar, who necessarily leads a life of relative retirement—unless indeed the latter has made the science of [...]
[...] tion heard in Paris. But all Littré's influence and all the logic of ancient custom will not prevent the Parisians from pronouncing as they do. The dying away of the true liquid l sound, its gradual passage into a mere y sound, is un fait accompli. It would be about as easy to bring back into English the old sound of gh in such words as through, thorough, as to go up [...]
[...] form. Its unity, so far as it can be said to have any, consists solely in the author's style, his way of looking at men and books. We state this, not to condemn but merely to characterize the work. The first section, entitled “Renaissance,” comprises three essays on Pe trarch, Lorenzo de' Medici, and the Borgias. Then follow the essays upon [...]
[...] them, and unable to calculate the resultant of forces good and bad now at work. In other words, they are not qualified for their mission by a careful training in historical subjects. Each man looks upon his office as a mere clerkship, and not as an organ in a complicated and ever-changing organism This evil has a twofold origin. It results from the want of connection be [...]
The nation01.08.1872
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. August 1872
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] wring all he could out of his capture. The idea of improving the civil service and of keeping a disabled soldier in a public office merely because it was right and all decent people wished it, was to him an idea Utopian, ridiculous, and aristocratical. Mr. Dawes listened with profound indifference to all that was said, and answered [...]
[...] fuses, and renders useless every new member, and on the other en ables the smallest pattern of a country lawyer to climb into its most important places through mere familiarity with its juggling hindran ces. The work which this system produces is of the most wretched description, for the most part founded on ignorance of the subject [...]
[...] usurpers. How are we to account for this contradictory attitude on the part of the Curia Romana Ž Is it mere inconsistency, or is it a sign that the system of warfare till now pursued by the clerical party has undergone a radical change? From all we know of the admirable skill, discipline, consistency, [...]
[...] speaking of the adversaries of New Italy, which he might have left to their own organs, what an impression must be produced by such a cri de détresse at the mere sight of the enemy' Self-confidence, and consequently dignity, was unfortunately the one thing in which all Italian governments have failed since the death of Cavour. If the Liberals were to look the liew emergency calmly in [...]
[...] I am surprised that Mr. Wells should have found it possible to make a mistake of such magnitude. The number of Indians of whom Mr. Wells says' the Government had to take care in 1870 is merely the number of those of whom the Government did not take care, or assume to take care. The number—25,731—which he cites, is the number attributed by the census to [...]
[...] Eastward. The Waison copy, if it is a copy, is said to be noble in design, but not of corresponding execution. We regret extremely that the very meagre notice we have seen of it—merely a line or two—gives us no hint whether the statue has the marked characteristics of Polyclitus's style. From the nature of the subject, we are perhaps justified in guessing that the [...]
[...] French. No mention of contemporary authorities, no mention of Ranke, Droysen, Häusser, Von Sybel, even in German matters. It is a book for general readers, not for scholars; and aims merely to give a graphic account of the best authenticated facts in the history of modern Europe. This it succeeds in doing, and we can recommend it unequivocally as the best [...]
[...] best use of a book like this would be in supplementing the author's own rather jejune history, and that it would have been better to let the book be merely a collection of extracts. The author has, however, preferred—and he may be right in this—to insert between the several extracts not merely a sufficient explanation of the circumstances of each event, but a brief history [...]
The nation01.09.1870
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. September 1870
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] observance of the September convention. The reply of the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Visconti-Venosta, was sufficiently dry, and announced merely that the French reminder had been, in mercantile parlance, “re ceived and contents noted.” Nevertheless, it cannot be denied that there is, on the part of the more respectable and intelligent classes, an [...]
[...] trol of a few great capitalists, who, whenever they please, can make the competition of capital for labor, on which economists rely so much for keeping up wages, a mere farce. Nevertheless, we have yet to see a word of decided or intelligent protest against the tariff and its iniqui. ties from the labor reform party. - [...]
[...] time France has not ceased dreaming and talking of her natural boundaries —the Pyrenees, the Alps, and the Rhine. And this has not been the idle dream and idle talk of popular vanity and demagogism merely ; states men, historians, publicists, and poets have vied with each other in making France believe that she had a natural right to all the lands west of the [...]
[...] and debates. He was of high rank in the party when Webster and Clay were its leaders, and had for many years a national reputation, such as the newspapers confer on politicians, though a mere politician he never was, still less a low one. Personally, his character was without blemish; and politically, he was never a truckler to the South as were too many of his [...]
[...] and thus, cruel and degrading as it could be, it on the whole gives oné the sense of moral earnestness, and so redeems its master's name from the charge of mere Mephistophelianism, which, if it does seem to lie against some of his works, does not lie against the man himself. He may, as they say, have bitterly hated and despised men, especially at the last of his in. [...]
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