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Saturday review25.02.1855
  • Datum
    Sonntag, 25. Februar 1855
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Domingo; but a protest or expression of alarm on the part of England would insure popular support to any scheme of aggression. The Joint-Stock Company is evidently a mere fiction, or a temporary instrument of the PRESIDENT. The American Government would never recognize the sovereignty [...]
[...] has been seeking to apply the regular maxims of Parlia mentary government to an arrangement which, from his point of view, is merely a temporary expedient for tiding over a difficulty. The minority in the Committee have been opposing him on the ground that such maxims are altogether inappro [...]
[...] may be called the modern history of the British navy dates from the foundation of the Hospital, while the necessity of scientific as distinguished from merely practical training for naval officers is fully recognized by the establishment of the College. T ounger of the two Dutch admirals who bore the famous name o [...]
[...] Antioch, Cadiz and Trebizond, still obeyed a single ruler, that the art of the Mediterranean coast which was not directly under the mperial sway was a mere ..". here and there, is the best of all antidotes to the conventional chatter about the Roman Empire coming to an end in 476. The only thing that we can suggest [...]
[...] qualification for entry into a well-known London club—that the candidate should have been five hundred miles from England—has long been merely nominal. The consequence of i. made easy is that we have an abundant, crop of vacation wanderings and summer trips. A well-known barrister gives us his experiences of [...]
[...] six A.M., and in ten hours and a-half the Englishman had finished thirty-four, while the natives had only finished thirty-one. We confess to be haunted by an apprehension lest this result merely conceals a tribute to that national vanity by which, in Nelson's time, our grandfathers were taught to believe firmly that one [...]
[...] preserved it. The whole story, indeed, is so wildly improbable that it may be dismissed without further argument. . We will merely add that, as Mr. Mac Carthy is constantly boasting of his accuracy, he should not have used the phrase, the poem “is said to have produced the sum of Iool.” It is only said to have [...]
[...] pect that few aspiring writers and dramatists are so happily thick skinned as to be impervious to the most savage criticisms, and merely “take it out in tobacco smoke” when other men would be stung. Yet perhaps there is nothing intrinsically improbable in that fortunate blending of sensibility, stoicism, and epicurism; and [...]
[...] wehrwolf superstition; for while he repeats the well-known explanation how the Greek “light-born " A. and his mythic relatives came, by a mere etymological blunder, to be [...]
[...] and an introductory encyclopædia of industry. Getting On in the World f is a treatise of more moderate scope and more attainable purpose; its object being merely to indicate the general principles of practical prudence, the considerations that should govern a man's choice of a career, and the qualities and circumstances on [...]
Saturday review03.01.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 03. Januar 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] We count it a fortunate thing for the memory of Sir Robert Peel that his portrait” has been drawn by such a man as M. Guizot. Not merely is the artist removed, by virtue of his osition as a foreigner, from all contact with influences unjustly }. or unduly partial, to the name and fame of the English [...]
[...] treat Lucian as a critic P Why judge him at all from that point of view P But we must hasten on, to the French thesis, which is no mere pamphlet like the Latin, but a goodly octavo volume.: he feud between the Ancients and Miº serves as the foreground, as it were, to a [...]
[...] and which is not in the least amusing. There is no scandal in it, no good stories, no º descriptions of life and man ners. . It merely illustrates the history of Germany during a rather uneventful period of thirty years. If a reader has no anxiety, to know what was happening in the petty [...]
[...] observes, are derived the numerous learned allusions which have so often tried the gravity of scholars; but a nobler ambition soon succeeded to mere 㺠dissipation. “I felt within me a revival of the aspiration after literary fame which, in my most busy days, I was never able entirely to extinguish.” The Lives of the [...]
[...] reason to regret a state of circumstances which, for the time, is eminently favourable to the pretensions of mediocrity. In some instances, the habit of study will grow out of the mere desire of killing time; and even Lord Campbell's works will incidentally serve as an introduction to literature. [...]
[...] useful admonitions he replied, “Ye'll see if I were awa’ amang strangers, I'll just do weel aneugh.” When brought up to the India House, he was so mere a child that the Directors hesitated to pass him; and one of them said, “Why, my little man, what would you do if you were to meet Hyder Ali P” “Do, Sir,” [...]
[...] He had to provide for the security of life and property through out the whole of a district as ſº as England, which had been wasted by war and rapine till it was in many parts a mere jungle for wild beasts. The peculiar fitness which he displayed or this kind of employment throws a singular light on the whole [...]
[...] negroes, and enslave them. I have seen your eye flashing, and your fist clenched with indignation, at the wrong which they commit; and here are you, by the exercise of mere brute i. compelling a fellow-being to submit to your will, when it is torture and misery to him to do so, to say nothing of your barbarous violation of all those courtesies and amenities of [...]
[...] Mrs. Ellis stops shört with the governess; but it is pleasant to think that young ladies of good fortune and position would scarcely be satisfied with mere domestic and female instruction. They would be brought up to town during the season to have finishing lessons in this as in other branches, and a [...]
[...] want of moral courage with contempt, while we should oftener accord it pity. Aline is tyrannized over by the cruel, revengeful St. George, merely because she had been too weak in the first instance to confess her marriage to her father. This fault involves her in a web she never escapes; and a momentary and not [...]
Saturday review10.01.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 10. Januar 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] to a great nation, so we will only show what is Mr. Con greve's view of the particulars in which French superiority consists. England, he says, is, for political purposes, a mere aristocracy—an aristocracy, indeed, “which has not been wanting in ability” for the securing of its own vile and selfish objects. [...]
[...] to which we cannot subscribe, though it is conclusive and all embracing ; for its premises are never true, and its conclusions are always false. But our qualifications are not merely negative. We, too, have a positive philosophy; and its fundamental maxim is, that it is wise for men and nations to mind their own [...]
[...] and writing exists at all, or in which government is not carried on by mere brute force. The oldest man living there has never heard a cannon fired in anger within its bounds. It has discussed, prepared, and actually carried into operation within the last [...]
[...] system, we see in the Roman law how far the natural man can carry morals into the conduct of the most complicated human affairs. As a mere part of the history of philosophy, the con ceptions of such terms as nature, obligation, duty, or equity— formed by the Roman jurists—deserve much more attention than [...]
[...] Ethiopia and Abyssinia, who speak a language decidedly Semitic. M. Reinaud, without controverting these opinions, suggests that as yet they ought to be considered merely as a scientific hypo thesis, and that they require for their confirmation more ample material than has hitherto been at the disposal of the ethnologist. [...]
[...] The Berbers, therefore, are a race of considerable historical interest, after their conquest by the Mahommedans, as well as before that time. They are not to be treated as mere Niggers. They have had an ancient civilization; and they possess even at the present day, their own alphabet—the Tifinag—the same as [...]
[...] candour and §. good sense not to be led away by the views of that writer, “The figures of goats, &c., are not merely ludicrous, but in one or two places quite obscene.". We hope Mr. Forster will read the passage (p. 168 and 169) of this work in ertenso, before he publishes another edition of his libel [...]
[...] facts are told in a style alike confused, meagre, and disjointed. As we have said, the title is an entire misnomer. The book is merely a hash of everything the author can call to mind having the slightest connexion with royalty, whether bons mots, fables, wise saws, or modern instances. Dr. Doran's plan is com [...]
[...] year 1838—for up to that time no Poor-law existed in that country –and they may now be studied to advantage in Naples. It is not merely the economical loss of power, and therefore of wealth, which results from the employment of hundreds of thousands in the very unproductive labour of worrying their richer neighbours. [...]
[...] dares not think a thought that the nominative case governs not the verb"—and his “Mere Scholar,” “who speaks sentences more familiar than sense, whose creed is the antiquity of his university, and the excellency of his college an article of his faith.” If [...]
Saturday review17.01.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 17. Januar 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Sicily, and some brave men have been sacrificed, while the KING has doubtless been strengthened in his position. The mere threat of coercion rallied round him something like loyalty—the success with which he has resisted the dic. tation of three powerful nations has made him almost respec [...]
[...] Although, however, the threatened war would have been a crime on the one side, it would have been a sad necessity on the other. It was not a mere point of honour for which the Swiss contended. They may have felt convinced, even with out the assurance of the Emperor NAPOLEON, that the sur [...]
[...] Until within the last fifty years, there was no punish ment at all awarded to the crime of embezzlement, be cause, said the law, the offender was a mere debtor, and had at most been guilty of a breach of trust. But this was too mischievous an anomaly to be endured even in the palmy [...]
[...] sense which the world generally views as Statecraft. It reads very like what we are often called upon to accept as a political memoir; and—which betrays its merely literary origin—it travesties with some little humour many of those profound speculations generally called the Philosophy of History, which [...]
[...] ad been transported for life. His case illustrates two defects ºf the criminal law. . His worst offence, the robbing of Fanny Kay, was in all probability a mere breach of trust, involving no [...]
[...] mands to obey—but by a process of self-purification, which con sists in austerity, study, and self-control, and which will, by the operation of mere natural law, lead them to the desired goal. But, unless they are perfect saints, this purification involves many a preliminary transmigration; and according to their merits will be [...]
[...] a mere part of nature's great machinery, whose evolutions it can [...]
[...] Incarnation, Yººn, and the Fall, in the sense usually attached to those terms. At others—and they are more frequent—the Incarnation becomes merely the possession of divinely good ualities, Inspiration a record of devout experiences, and the }. melts into the fact that we are all as bad as Eve was. Of [...]
[...] thrown himself, by a hearty sympathy, into the manner of life he is describing. Sir Francis Head's Descriptive Essays are not the chilly narrations of the mere minutelooker-on—circumstantial, accurate, and cold. It is not head without heart that we mark in his sketches of varied life. His men are not mere figures in a [...]
[...] charm. And so it is that, in reading Sir Francis Head's book, we not merely admire the writer—we grow fond of the man. He appears, to us the very ideal of what is commonly called “a fine fellow.” . . His frankness, outspokenness, geniality, high [...]
Saturday review24.01.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 24. Januar 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Albemarle-street, into a myth. Is there any such person as this John MURRAY Are “WILLIAM CLowes and SoNs, Printers,” nothing more than mere symbols? Is Stamford [...]
[...] politician—and in many relations of life, social and do mestic, he is a man of mark—we will not say what mark. But he is eminently a mere littérateur—quick, versatile, lively, brilliant. SHAKSPEARE, taste, and the musical glasses —the Wealth of Nations and BURNs songs—finance and [...]
[...] Terminable Annuities. The portion of the annuity which they would have relieved from taxation is, in fact, not income, but merely a return of invested capital, just like the repayment of a loan, which, whatever the practice may be, is not theoretically liable on the principle of taxing income. [...]
[...] which artists are guided—are equally binding on photographers; and mere mechanical skill, with ever so good implements, will, without artistic knowledge and taste, never make a first-rate photographer. [...]
[...] tisfactory and unreliable as that of making them the text of fictitious “narratives of fact stranger than fiction.” Mormon Wives is a mere novel, and will teach nobody anything except that the authoress has a very natural and just horror of §. greatest social crime of the age. It is, however, worth reading as [...]
[...] chiefly occupied by social plants, grasses, heaths, and ferns, reaching to the top of Pico Ruivo, the highest mountain. Many persons have supposed that these islands are merely, as it were, the “mast-heads of a continent above water,” like so many of the islands in the Pacific. As might be expected, the fauna and [...]
[...] hourly speech. We anticipate the remark that to say that natives º Scotland, Ireland, and America go wrong in their use of these words is merely to say that they use them differentl from most natives of England. We shall be told that . have in themselves no meaning except that which is arbitrarily [...]
[...] well as in the others, intending to convey the idea of mere futurity; and the Edinburgh reviewer maintains that he is quite right in doing so. Is there, then, anything deeper than usage [...]
[...] futurity; and the Edinburgh reviewer maintains that he is quite right in doing so. Is there, then, anything deeper than usage in the matter? Is it a mere matter of choosing between two indifferent words, and sticking to the one made choice of P Or is there some recondite principle involved in the English use of [...]
[...] This day, price 3s.6d. 8vo, cloth, HE TRUE THEORY OF REPRESENTATION IN A STATE; or, The Leading Interests of the Nation, not the mere Predominance of Numbers, proved to be its proper Basis. By GEORGE HARRIs, Barrister-at-Law. [...]
Saturday review31.01.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 31. Januar 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] voice with silver note, “I dreamt I dwelt in marble halls.” The beauty and spirituality of some eyes exceeds the status of mere reason, and yields a path for the majestic step of imagination. . Through the eye, joy oft beams and hovers, imparting a luxuriant animation which causes ado [...]
[...] fact which it proves is the enormous demand which exists amongst us, for books of mere amusement... No doubt, the great majority of publications sold on a railway must be at once cheap and light; for such travellers as want graver books [...]
[...] property, and not merely, as had been once supposed, the effect of evaporation upon the wet surface, was shown by the fact that the process takes place with equal certainty under water, and even [...]
[...] ment; but who can conjecture what his emotions would have been could he have extended his vision to the present º The worthies we have enumerated may be regarded merely as the early settlers in the new world discovered by Shakspeare. The real work of colonization—ploughing, clearing, embellishing, [...]
[...] M. Rio's former volume, though it appeared under the imposing title, De la Poésie Chrétienne, dans son principe, dams sa matière, et dans ses formes, was merely a sketch of the early history of one particular form of art—viz., painting. This title is wholly dropped in the volume before [...]
[...] specimen of the cheap decoration which maturer reflection ought to have led him to retrench. He is in the interior of a Boman Catholic Cathedral in St. Louis—merely, however, as a spectator. “In the centre of the mystic throne hangs the lonely lamp, which seemed to be endowed with a think [...]
[...] he soon must enter. Other life-sick mortals have also entered the sanctuary, &c. But here we pause, merely asking, why must a man be “life sick,” in order to go to church and pray P Is it not enough that he is “mortal?” Of course there is a large class of readers who [...]
[...] turned the columns of the National Intelligencer. The author has gratified them, and may rest content. Even then, the thing was merely the string of farthing candles which illumi nates a raree-show. Now it is more like the odour of the reeking wicks when the light has been blown out. The descrip [...]
[...] dinners in a great mansion ; his Grace chats in an easy, good tempered manner, and the young ladies are kept in constant employment, merely bowing negatives to the dishes handed round.” We trust our readers will pause over this last clause of the sentence, that they may fully take in all that it suggests. [...]
[...] female relative. Mr. Owen deserves some credit, therefore, for having taken the pains to condense and classify his remarks on each subject under a separate heading, instead of merely string ing them together in the order of time. He does not even indi cate his line of route ; and though this omission leaves a sort of [...]
Saturday review07.02.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 07. Februar 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] tact and masculine sense. She described to them the persons and opinions of foreign statesmen who, but for her, would have been to them mere names and shadows. She flattered them, argued with them, and sometimes ventured to advise them. She talked with them, and made them talk. But the [...]
[...] l tants and Roman Catholics, has a peculiar mode of fight ing which recurs periodically. Each side appeals to passion and prejudice for the mere sake of making controversial capital. The accredited line is, for the Roman Catholic authorities to court and invite martyrdom, and for the Pro [...]
[...] way Company has no bowels of compassion, no personal duties, no feelings, no moral character, then society will begin to treat it as the mere machine which it professes to be. A Company is not to subscribe to charities, not to pension its clerks, not to discharge any relative duties of [...]
[...] Education des Filles may present a higher ideal, but the lessons inculcated in the Lettres may be practised out of Utopia. As a mere study of style—as a specimen of the unaffected naturalness and grace, rather than elegance, of which the French language is capable—these volumes deserve to be conned by every votary [...]
[...] continents, are placed before us with as much fulness as is com atible with the limits of a mere outline. The chapters from the ourth to the ninth inclusive contain the kernel of the work, and treat of the distribution of minerals, vegetables, animals, human [...]
[...] ture—they show an absence both of thought and knowledge. They do not spring from a critical poetic conception, but are, for the most part, a mere exaggeration of sounding phraseology, Rarely, if ever, do they bear the impress of a first-class poetic imagination, however stunted by ignorance and distorted by un [...]
[...] to the Maremma indeed, but to St. Petersburg. The shock of parting did no good to our hero... He was stunned, not roused, and ere long fell back into mere dissipation. A dream which he had about this time had more effect upon him; and leaving Florence, which he found more favourable to gaiety than to [...]
[...] iºnsH.". of sectarian difference which will bristle along his path. . But there are certain habits of mind peculiar to the mere divine which may go far to neutralize the value even of these high and rare qualities. Public affairs will seldom appear in the same proportions to the spiritual man as to the layman. [...]
[...] tions. The question, whether St. Paul ever visited Spain or Britain, Gaul or Africa, has been treated too much, perhaps, as a matter of mere curious speculation. It seems to us that the subsequent career of the Church might have turned to a great degree upon the foundation by him of a church or churches in [...]
[...] improvement into the practice of Life Assurance, by making Life Policies certain and absolute documents of complete security. Instead of issuing merely doubtful instruments like ordinary Policies, depending for their validity upon numerous questions which are kept open until the claims arise, then to be discussed, this Company take "ſº themselves the duty of making all [...]
Saturday review14.02.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 14. Februar 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] ture in respect of late transactions at Naples, which Mr. DISRAELI brings against the English Government, on the ground of its being merely an accessory to the supposed arrangement. If Lord PALMERSTON's conduct with respect to Naples is to be considered delusive because he approved [...]
[...] they had had a temporary disagreement, or if they had had some improper purpose long entertained, actually obtain a divorce for all practical purposes” — merely on their own private arrangement. We say first, that the case in which a wife, separated, “may acquire property and settle it” [...]
[...] “all systems are supposed to agree in this—that no dis solution of the nuptial union should be allowed upon the mere agreement of the parties to terminate their connexion.” When the experiment of allowing divorce on mutual agree ment was tried in France during the last century, divorces [...]
[...] the foundation of his own subsequent and independent investiga tions P Dr. Cumming's book contains no independent investiga tions whatever. It is a mere abridgment, reproducing language, illustrations, and references—even references to the Bible— without any specific acknowledgment of the real character of [...]
[...] legal expression, but it has also faults peculiar to the statute-book. Among these may be mentioned short titles to acts, interpre tation clauses, and consolidation clauses. These are merely [...]
[...] Siebold, a German naturalist, go to prove that the Cystoid and Taenioid worms are not really different species. The former are merely an undeveloped stage of the latter:— These larval creatures assume quite different forms and possess different habits, according to the kind of animal within whose body they live. That, for [...]
[...] Company (of which Mr. W. was the informing spirit), for land which the Company had purchased of the natives for a mere trifle. The remaining 27. Ios. was to be applied in fixed proportions to immigration, road-making, the building of churches and schools, and the provision of endowments. The [...]
[...] We must submit to Mr. Paul that this is no proof that the Canterbury scheme was not a delusion, but merely that the delu sion was successful. That this society of refined gentlemen, of whom he so justly boasts, ever left our shores, is due to the fact [...]
[...] upon its own nature, remarks all things that are examples of its truth, con firming it in that truth, and, above all, enabling it to convey the truths of philosºphy, as, mere effects derived from what we may . the outward watchings of life. And in another place he tells us that Shakspeare “never followed [...]
[...] themselves. ... * # * * * # * Anything finer than this conception, and working out of a great character, is merely impossible. Shakespeare wished to impress upon us the truth, that action is the chief end of existence—that no faculties of intellect, however brilliant, can be considered valuable, or indeed otherwise than as misfortunes, [...]
Saturday review21.02.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 21. Februar 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] uttering slander, whether he were the first utterer or not, to show that he uttered it upon some lawful occasion. Upon the whole, I am of opinion that a man cannot by law justify the repetition of slander by merely naming the [...]
[...] and commercial subjects. To meet all these demands, in addition to the performance of other duties, undoubtedly needs, not merely a clear-headed judge, which the CHANCEL LoR is said to be, but a man with philosophical as well as practical ideas; and it is clear that SoLoN himself could not [...]
[...] rance into a tribunal of the first resort, by giving it time to speak and form its preferences before the adjudicators are named, is to invert the most obvious considerations, not merely of art, but of COmm On sense. After all, the time—unduly wasted as we have held, and do still [...]
[...] architects, as must—to professional architects, at least—render the anonymousness of the English side of the Exhibition a mere delusive form. There is, above all things, the awkward ness of being placed, by external authority, in a position of tem porary superiority over that body of equals to whom, the [...]
[...] and were on their own confession, confirmed by the evidence of numerous witnesses, committed for trial. On their trial they retracted their confession, saying that they had merely signed papers without knowing their contents; but the witnesses persisted in their story, and the prisoners were condemned to [...]
[...] nervous compositions spread all over the country like wildfire. The best German hymns belong to the century which followed 1517. When the Lutheran theology crystallized into a mere collection of dogmas, it ceased to bring forth such fruits as “Ein' [...]
[...] for its interest, not on well-drawn ... but on thrill ing incidents. . It does not hold the mirror up to nature— it, merely furnishes an artificial stimulant to jaded feelings. The pleasure it gives is mere excitement. It has no claim to rank as art. A §. novel bears about the same relation to [...]
[...] plead with irresistible force for their author. But it is a great mistake to analyze the circumstances of such a life in their little details. The mere fact that apology and explanation are so often needed will be sufficient, with common readers, to raise suspicion. A delicate picture is soiled and discoloured if [...]
[...] honest woman insufferable. Miss Strickland lays on Mary's commissioners the whole responsibility of this offer, and pos sibly they deserve it; but it is a mere subterfuge to say that the Queen courted publicity by suddenly demanding, an inter view which it was very certain, at that time, would not be [...]
[...] had better die than be the subject of such mistakes; and they followed Mary everywhere. Nor is the charge of assassination incredible merely on account of its gravity. §. for the times, assassination was an expedient currently sanctioned. Calvin prayed that the Lord would take the Duke of Guise if he did [...]
Saturday review28.02.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 28. Februar 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] one measure so vehemently desired as the final extinction of the Income-tax ; and it has taught us, too, that the object can never be attained by merely voting its imposition for a limited period, unless at the same time a prospective pro vision is made to enable Parliament to remit the burden [...]
[...] mockery to talk of a limited term, unless such arrangements were made as would render it possible to dispense with the tax at a definite time. The country did not want mere pledges, but it did demand such financial measures as would afford a reasonable prospect of ultimate relief. The demand [...]
[...] accumulated injuries, Sir J. BowRING did not fix upon one better fitted to support his bombardment than that of the miserable business of the lorcha. The mere fact that the case of the Arrow was thought the best stalking horse for the English Plenipotentiary's warlike propensities, [...]
[...] ment of the squabble. The allegation that what was sought by the English authorities was only an apology for an insult offered to the British flag, is a mere pretence. The moment such an apology is offered, it is practically rejected by clog ging the demand with conditions having no reference to [...]
[...] a British ship to a Chinese vessel, but merely laid down a principle which is perfectly consistent with Lord LYND HURST's declaration—viz., that a vessel in possession of a [...]
[...] held; “for,” he reasons, “I cannot think that any transcen dent genius, in its essence, so spiritual, can be satisfied with any mere material results.” He then proceeds to discharge his duty of grave reprobation, and stigmatizes those who forget “that an ancient Greek and a modern Englishman searching [...]
[...] first persons to point out the political value of the rifle as an arm for citizen levies, and that the learned author of Fearne's Contingent Remainders took the lead, not merely in con futing Lord Mansfield, but in the invention of ionº, small arms. [...]
[...] pilgrims. It would be impossible to give an idea of the historical value of these works by mere extracts... They open quite a new world, and they show it to us in its full reality. . We knew, indeed, the teaching of Buddha—we knew the principles of his moral code, [...]
[...] superior now seemed to be something contrary to the very nature of an organized society. Louis d’Outremer, King of France, ersuaded Duke Richard of Normandy, when a mere boy, to do ſº. to him. Afterwards, Richard was set free from the tie by a contest in which Louis was so much worsted that he consented [...]
[...] in manners, in civilization, as the time of the austere Gregory and the proſligate epoch of the Renaissance is a mere human invention of the author’s. “It is not man but God,” he tells us, “who has thrown these clear lines of demar cation over the entire mass of humanity.” The Age of Pericles [...]
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