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Saturday review25.07.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 25. Juli 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] uncle, would have been as little spared as CHARLEs X. and his priests. The populace of Paris is not so foolish as to be cajoled into looking on BERANGER as the mere panegyrist of tyranny. Public honours to the dead poet would have sug gested to it something else than the blessings of Absolutism; [...]
[...] was one of those rhetorical truths that serve admirably the purpose of falsehood. What would be necessary to effect the much desired end would be merely to place settlements of land on the same footing as settlements of stock—that is, to make them to the same extent dependent on the in [...]
[...] to India, if report speaks true, expecting to find there a state of society, which a very little reflection, even unaided by knowledge, might have shown him to be a mere dream. No one, however, will deny him the praise of being a truthful and honourable man. Are, then, the general representations of that book—are [...]
[...] nothing short of madness. †. speculations and suggestions, however, with respect to our possessions in the East must be for a time matters of mere secondary importance. Plans and hopes, as well as sorrows, must give place to the urgent and primary necessity of trampling out and chastising rebellion. [...]
[...] baldachin of Italian mosaic, with a creditable sense of colour and of the value of gilding. No. 14 has a certain simplicity, being merely a simple flat tomb with recumbent figure, covered by a barbaresque-classical temple. No 17 exhibits some clever groups of representative men, not very appropriate, nor indeed intelligible [...]
[...] was putting the matter in a rational light. He did not speak highly of i. Jerrold's writings, nor did he criticise them the least unfavourably. He merely said that they had at least one of the characteristics of humoristic preaching, for they warmly supported the poor against the rich. He could not exactly say [...]
[...] discussing the remaining epic literature of Greece. He divides into three classes the vast series of epic compositions, of which the whole, or part, or merely the name has been preserved to us. First come the remains of the Homeric school—that is, the hymns, the cyclic poems, and sundry humorous productions. [...]
[...] worthy of his genius, in general merit; while there is little in the details, either of language or historical allusion, seriously repugnant to its claims to such an honour. The author has treated a licentious subject not merely with grace and elegance, but with an entire freedom from meretricious ornament. [...]
[...] decayed, Paris revolutionized three times over, the large cities of Europe trembling with fear, and the Slave States of America mad with rage and fury at the mere thought of freedom.” Thirdly, we must always remember that England is the central sun of justice and truth. Her claim to this distinction is founded [...]
[...] representation, and wicked ignorance have been shown than against any other institutions.” . The exact plan of working these dispensaries is not explained, but if we look merely to the results which Mr. Smith assures us would flow from them, nothing could be more brilliant. Among other advantages we [...]
Saturday review01.08.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. August 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] E have very little doubt that the pretended conspiracy to assassinate the Emperor of the FRENch is a mere invention of the Imperial Government, intended to form a pretext for proceedings against the French exiles in London, [...]
[...] distich is a neat epitaph on a child :— L'enfant a deux tombeaux: le moindre est sous la terre; Le plus grand est creusé dans le coeur de sa mere. [...]
[...] written in Latin P Now, with a close verbal exegesis, Mr. Con ington has aimed at interweaving a metaphysical analysis of his subject, such as would never have been attempted by a mere Latinist, or would certainly have assumed in his hands a very repulsive form. Yet this is what we want. Our young readers [...]
[...] hoped for : but we may at least expect that editors should reform according to their own solid convictions, not rewrite in obedience to baseless and arbitrary fancies, or to the mere authority of a great name. [...]
[...] petes directly with them for employment, and absorbs the remu neration which would otherwise be theirs. Nor, again, are they mere tools in the hands of the rich planters. They are, on the contrary, the masters of the South, and the patrons of that Fili busterism which, wherever it is successful, takes away from the [...]
[...] sedulously avoiding, however, the very appearance of a trade or any regular employment. Sometimes he squats on a patch of rich land, where the earth, if merely scratched, will bring forth abundantly. The nearest approach to industry seen by Mr. Stirling occurred in Florida, where the poor white will sometimes [...]
[...] difference, he says, between English and American civilization is the greater thoroughness of the former. Workmanship, even in the Free States, struck Mr. Stirling as mere surface-work. In the lacquered and gilded mansion of the wealthy American, not a lock will catch, not a hinge will turn—knives wont cut, [...]
[...] much ability many of the earlier works. He insinuates that the admiration expressed for them in musical circles in his own country is but hollow and feigned—a mere fashion. As far as our own impressions are concerned, we can assert that we have found these quartets, when played, as it has been our good [...]
[...] “woman-creation,” as the Germans would say, that we have to deal with. The pitch and tar give a colour to the character as well as to the cuticle. Mere animal courage would have enabled her to face shot, shell, and sea-sickness; but nothing except a high moral nature could have carried her through pitch [...]
[...] title, is exactly the sort of book which people in the country would think they should like to see. Now, its pages contain not merely a formal accusation against the late King of Holland, that he was repeatedly guilty of the most revolting of crimes, but a loathsome description is given of one particular scene. It is a [...]
Saturday review08.08.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 08. August 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] But are we to look upon the circumstances here indicated— the rallying at Delhi and the gyrating round Lucknow—as parts of a great scheme of revolt, or as mere accidental results We strongly incline towards the latter hypothesis. It was well observed by Sir John MALcol M, that Indian [...]
[...] within which to choose whether he would take a resident and perpetual, or a non-resident and terminable fellowship, so that no one would be elected merely to a terminable fel lowship. On the holders of perpetual fellowships the duty of residence should be strictly imposed, for the educational [...]
[...] and more felt as the sphere of University education becomes enlarged; and it is one which we are equally con vinced the mere extension of the Professoriate—which is more adapted for the purposes of learning than educa tion—will not adequately meet. The introduction of a [...]
[...] seductive influence. The antecedent probability surely is, that the publicity of a large gathering aids virtue rather than vice. We consider, therefore, the mere calculation of expediency a very doubtful one, and should hesitate to pronounce a definite opinion that such occasions as the school-matches are real [...]
[...] was born in the province of Malwa about fifty years ago, of a distinguished Mahomedan family. He was of a studious and persevering disposition, and when a mere boy made himself ac quainted with Persian and Arabic. In later life he applied himself assiduously to learning English, and his mastery of [...]
[...] the driest lover of finance need desire. So far, however, as the Sinking Fund theory is concerned, the reader may venture to skip the greater part of Sir Nathaniel's pages—merely taking note of a rather hazy and diffuse assertion of the idea that, by the magical effect of accumulation at compound interest, almost [...]
[...] as to form a fund which would grow side by side with the national debt until it had become sufficient to cancel it altogether. To rove this is a mere matter of very simple arithmetic. Dr. }. however, held a different theory, maintaining that there was an infinite difference between the two methods; and he most [...]
[...] fatigue patiently and well, and made nothing, upon occasion, of creeping on hands and knees into a black i. filled with bats. Nor is the book merely a lady's gossiping narrative of what she has herself seen; for it contains a considerable amount of solid information, which may be new to many of its [...]
[...] receiving 40,000 rubles, and his ... son, Djemala-Din, who had been surrendered to the Russians as a hostage in 1839, while still a mere child. The 22nd of March, 1855, was appointed as the day for the completion of the exchange. A strong detach ment of Russians advanced through the debateable land to the [...]
[...] When the ladies came to tell the tale of their imprisonment, it appeared that all the fine phrases which had been used about the ji. treatment which they had received were mere false hoods. A gaoler had dictated their letters standing over them with a dagger, and they had been exposed to every sort of hard [...]
Saturday review15.08.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 15. August 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] intelligence of the loyalty of these Presidencies, diminishes the proportions of the disaster which has befallen us. But the news which we have now received is not merely of a negative character. In the Nagpore territory the Madras Army has exhibited, under trying circumstances, [...]
[...] was so apparent in the Paris negotiations, supported the same view. Prussia, of course, followed like a valet on the footboard of the Russian State-coach; and Sardinia merely espoused the course which happened to be obnoxious to Austria. England, in concert with the Court of Vienna, [...]
[...] asking for assistance from the public purse. The real difference between the proctors and other sufferers from legislative changes is merely this—that by their own internal regulations they had kept their numbers within a manageable compass, and that they were possessed of suffi [...]
[...] Ford HoPE for launching it—its execution is but a question of time. The conviction of its expediency and necessity is one which must inevitably grow by the mere fact of delay. [...]
[...] might have been mere accident, but the scene at the forge chimney and the attempted alibi could not be so readily got over ; and the coincidence of all these indications [...]
[...] W HETHER it be that the extraordinary heat of the summer has dried the fountains of inspiration, or merely that all the littérateurs of Germany are amusing themselves at a hundred [...]
[...] foreign war was merely a contriyance for embarrassing the Government at home, or for supplanting an existing Ministry. The Republicans of 1848, as soon as they succeeded to power, [...]
[...] possessed the qualities which, coupled with fair opportunity, would have ensured him success at home, he has prospered in Victoria much more signally than the mere scribe or counter [...]
[...] of antiquarians in Etruria, has undertaken to blend together, in a clear historical summary, three themes of great extent and of corresponding interest. She professes to be merely an abbre viator. Her aim is to epitomize plainly and succinctly—her object is simply utility—and she proposes to make herself useful, not [...]
[...] all this peril and privation ? What blood but the Celtic mingled with the Saxon, and dashed with the Northland, would run into danger merely for danger's sake, and face difficulty for the mere delight of overcoming it? We are content to admit that, were Mr. Cobden to put to us such questions, we should not [...]
Saturday review22.08.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 22. August 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] little confirmations of them are pouring in almost daily. Let it be remarked that Colonel WHELER's propagandism was only brought on the carpet by a mere accident. The inquiry was the consequence of his remissness in the per formance of a military duty. We have no reason to believe [...]
[...] of confidence which is placed in that imposing but inef fective body. The production of these measures was, in fact, a mere attempt to restore the credit of the Commission by exhibiting a first proof of vitality; and the obvious in ference from its failure is, that the reconstruction of [...]
[...] Besides all this, there are certain spaces in which Mr. Marshall has faintly and timidly indicated some scratchy bas-reliefs of mere historical incidents—a battle or the like—together with the Duke's armorial bearings. Now we must be pardoned for observing that this is stark, staring [...]
[...] Now we must be pardoned for observing that this is stark, staring monsense. We admit that a monument may be altogether sugges tive and ideal. Or it may be a mere portrait. Either is consistent, and either may be defended. The suggestive and ideal monu ment may be consistent—not by clothing Wellington in a palu [...]
[...] for every variety of composition, historical or poetical. As it is, their panels, which ought to have been full of storied imagery, merely bear round placards, with such stirring epigraphs in print ing type as “Member for Trim,” and “Catholic Emancipation.” No. 1 o, Arno, the first foreign prize design—that of the Cavalier [...]
[...] D. G. Rossetti and W. B. Scott—in Ireland, Mr. Ferguson and Mr. Allingham—would, we believe, willingly join in expressing their gratitude to Percy. It is not merely as models of simplicity, strength, pathos, and music that the Reliques are valuable to the modern artist in verse. In the more technical department of [...]
[...] makes the matter worse is that most of the writers of these waifs and strays of the printing press might produce something positively useful if they were merely to consider beforehand what they had to say that was worth telling, and would take reasonable pains to tell it in a complete and intelligible way. [...]
[...] sources of information, access to the completest collections these are advantages rarely possessed by the provincial student; yet without them he will merely waste his labour in the pro duction of an ambitious failure. But there is work ready to the hand of the humblest student of nature who, in an earnest [...]
[...] Americanisms as “realizing” past geological periods—against such loose and slip-shod English as, “I imagine that our limestone shales are merely the commencement of that adaptation which terminated in the oceanic history of the mountain limestone,” and talking of “areas in the Pacific and Indian Oceans” “con [...]
[...] giving a sort of rude unity to what would otherwise be simply rhapsodical. This construction is therefore a most decisive proof that the Song of Songs is not merely a cento of unconnected com sitions. But it suggests the idea also that much for which Mr. insburg has accounted by the introduction of different person [...]
Saturday review29.08.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 29. August 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] a temperature which more than suggests the tropics, elevates the Long Vacation into a duty. Originally, we believe, it had merely a practical purpose. University students and public-school boys were required to assist in harvest labour; and town fled into the country to do the work of the fields [...]
[...] good.” She cannot be enjoining observances which are all very well for her, but do not concern her neighbours. She has had practically, and as a matter of mere business, to consider how she could look well ; and if she says that a woman who wants to preserve good looks should bathe, no one can fancy she only says [...]
[...] That the case was not one for severe punishment is obvious enough, but we hardly think it merely deserved a nominal one. We should not feel disposed to extend the rule which is usually supposed to grant impunity only to cases where the husband [...]
[...] stances there is no information whatever given respecting the date—for the best possible reason, that there is none to be had; and in most other cases, we have merely the entry at Stationers' Hall, or the date of the printing, with the addition, “no other external evidence,” or “no exact evidence,” or “nothing very [...]
[...] Again, Titus Andronicus is not only rejected from the list, but the writer somewhat unnecessarily adds that he “wishes he had never read it.” Yet Titus Andronicus is mentioned by Meres in 1598 in his enumeration of Shakspeare's §§ and is included in the folio of 1623. Mr. Collier, we are told, infers that because it [...]
[...] matics. On the one hand, may be produced in evidence the flippant and pretentious remarks which }. current in society, and establish the reputation of a mere talker as a profound philo sopher. No one could have felt more strongly upon this subject than M. Arago himself:— [...]
[...] amusing and humorous imitation of Oriental story telling, that it was natural to look forward with considerable interest to the appearance of another tale by the same author. Mr. Mere dith has now given us Farina, a Legend of Cologne. We must confess that we are disappointed. The subject does not seem [...]
[...] quantity; but do they really look well, and produce the fine effect for which they are intended? We confess they seem to us a mere trick of the trade, and do not produce any other impression than that of something rich, which would be arrived at by an enumeration of any i. articles of a high [...]
Saturday review05.09.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 05. September 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] last telegraphic message from India, which placed all that was evil in the foreground, and announced what was good merely as a set-off—a small abatement from the huge sum total of disaster. The impression which it conveyed was, that the really important part of the news was contained [...]
[...] But it was not merely from the general impression conveyed by the “full particulars that this relief was derived. A more encouraging aspect was given to soºne of the details. For [...]
[...] objectionable as a piece of mere vengeance; but it is certain [...]
[...] It is remarkable that, though the old joke against the Association used to be that it was a mere dining club for promoting conversation between professors and rural alder men, it has not had the effect of stimulating superficiality. [...]
[...] tance with a thousand matters which are common knowledge to those who mix in society, but which would greatly trouble a mere judgment-making machine if they chanced to come before him in the course of an action. To adopt the language of Mr. Justice ColeRIDGE, “if you make it [...]
[...] senting diaconate. Or, again, have the Directors loaned the Gardens to Mr. SPURGEON, or to Mr. SPURGEON's friends, merely upon the religious ground ! If Mr. Coppock is a disinterested patron of Nonconformist homiletics, it only adds to our estimate of the versatility and unexpected [...]
[...] adds to our estimate of the versatility and unexpected characteristics of a man of genius. We own that we feel some little curiosity on all these points—a mere blameable, low, prying, meddling curiosity. But there it is. We should like, in the interests of statistical science, to [...]
[...] the “Raising of Lazarus” (1132), by J. G. V. Vliet, of Delft; but Our Lord's figure in particular is spoiled by over-action. Du Jardin and Ruysdael are to be credited with some merely average specimens of animals and landscapes; while Both's etchings are decidedly above mediocrity, especially his plate of [...]
[...] basis of teaching, not only is an immense field of thought opened, and a higher character given to musical training than that of a mere vocal exercise, but the process of learning to read music is also immensely facilitated. The objections to the Tonic Sol-Fa system in the form in which [...]
[...] zealous for nothing, and incapable of any heart-stirring, generous aims. Sursum corda 1 he finely says, should be the watchword, not merely of our spiritual being, but of all true science, lite rature, and art. The speech further contained some eloquent and touching tributes to the memory of some Academicians whom [...]
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 review19.09.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 19. September 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] we had to apprehend in India was a hostile combination between the rulers of Nepaul and GHoLAB SINGH, of Cash mere, or his successor, and that the event of a transfer of the sovereignty in the latter country would almost certainly plunge But GHoLAB SINGH is dead—we hear nothing [...]
[...] had given the death-blow; nor are we now considering to what extent India must be controlled in future by European troops. We merely take it as an illustration of the crass ignorance which pervades most of the theorizing of the moment. The statement that “India was won by the [...]
[...] As to Mr. HANNA, we perhaps dignify him too much in elevating him to the melancholy rank of the fierce ancestors of his co-religionists. He merely caricatures the solid fana ticism of the successors of John KNox. His religious com munity has the traditional discredit of sanctifying deeds of [...]
[...] prejudicial to the country at large, and that the time has come when it will be impossible to continue it. The vice of the Crédit Mobilier was not merely that it offered a stimulus to speculation, but that it gave it a false direction. Until recently, there was far more of the gambling spirit in [...]
[...] prospects of a reasonable return for a venture were as good in the one case as in the other, we do not suppose that mere patriotic considerations would induce the bulk of mankind to invest their money in useful enterprises, in stead of risking it in the hazards of the Stock Exchange; [...]
[...] own game with the greatest intelligence are sure to benefit the community at the same time that they build up their own prosperity; while the mere gamblers of the Bourse are almost certain, to derive as little ultimate advantage to themselves as they confer upon their contemporaries. [...]
[...] silent influences of time and property begin to render permanent what at first were merely casual divisions of classes; and the freeman whose rights are associated with his landholding finds himself practically bound down to the soil. The mere fact, [...]
[...] officer undertaking to describe scenes the most stirring, and mili tary operations the most important in modern times, he himself having been not merely an eyewitness but an actor. ... And when, from one high enough in rank to have known all that went on at head-quarters, and not too high to be familiar with [...]
[...] instance of misnomer than that exhibited in the author's choice of a title. These are not “passages "... that he gives us— they lead nowhere and to nothing. They are mere blind alleys, culs-de-sac, by no means either lightsome or airy; and the reader in search of something fresh and original is con [...]
[...] etter than that of a war chronicler. The reforms he suggests, are chiefly the encouragement of gymnastics, swimming, and other manly exercises among our soldiers, not merely as recrea tions, but as healthful training for active service; and he further. recommends instruction in the arts of campaining, such as pitching. [...]
Saturday review26.09.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 26. September 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] yet wholly unlooked for; and it has been suggested that we have another instance in the Indian Mutiny of 1857. But, although it is the mere cant of party which objects to par ticular statesmen or Governments that they might have provided against it if they had been wiser, it is certainly [...]
[...] This is no mere theory. Already we have some glimpses of the state of affairs within Delhi. A letter from a native, residing there, has been translated and published in all our [...]
[...] different; but residence at the seat of learning seems a fair test whereby to discriminate such fellowships from those which are held, or ought to be held, merely as assistances, useful alike to the individual and the public, in the com mencement of a profession. [...]
[...] lated, was a mere confirmation of the prescriptive powers that had belonged to the Exchequer for centuries. Lor *:::::: holds stoutly by this last opinion; and there is no doubt that he [...]
[...] described by Lord Monteagle as based, the one on the principle of confidence, the other on the principle of mistrust. By relying merely on the obligation to produce a subsequent account, you give up all check except that which is afforded by the dread of Parliamentary disgrace, and the remote risk of a Parliamentary [...]
[...] officers; and, unless one were make strictly subordinate to the other, it would be necessary that each should be accountable only to Parliament, and that neither of them should be a mere delegate of the Executive itself. [...]
[...] Case I contains a multitude of treasures gathered from the stores of numerous private contributors; and here will be seen, not merely the ornaments of religious "...; but a hundred appli cations of sculptured ivory to the embellishment of social iife. The Tenure-Horns afford a gºod starting-point in a closer exami [...]
[...] value of consumptive daughters. The money was duly paid, the saint told the lie, and the marriage was concluded. At first, apparently as a mere matter of decency, she was taken to Corfu for her health. But to Madame Chermidy's infinite disgust, no sooner was the arrange [...]
[...] the common oppressor. . A native nobility would probably have silently separated itself from the mass of the nation, and become in the end a mere exclusive oligarchy, instead of the first rank of the people. , Certainly a comparison of the later history of England with that of more homogeneous Teutonic nations does [...]
[...] from Port Royal. Something ventured, and something lost, sacrifice and suffering, are the necessary conditions of religious impulse and thought. And the mere reaction against the changes and violence which had shaken society in the fluctuations of faith throughout the whole century, brought with it a longing for quiet, [...]
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