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The nation27.12.1877
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 27. Dezember 1877
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] reluctance to be used for any such purpose, and a greater and greater readiness to act as mere viziers of a despot, rather than as the ministers of a free state, and to treat even the wildest and hastiest popular cry as a final decision, and to occupy themselves [...]
[...] for and by which “sentiments” have not been “embittered.” And we would warn those who are disposed to treat the silver movement as a mere question of finance the settlement of which may be left to experts, that it is supported in a spirit and by arguments which, if once fairly embedded in our politics, would make that por [...]
[...] the President as by the House, because the rules forbid a motion to be entertained while an interpellation is being discussed. The question of order was, however, merely the appropriate form to attain the real end of the majority, viz., to avoid an open conflict before the meeting of the Reichstag. For this reason the motions which the Fortschrittspartei [...]
[...] founded to some extent, and promises to redress the grievances whenever specific charges are brought to the Government's knowledge. The prin cipal difficulty lies in the fact that, as a rule, the parents indulge in mere general talking, while they very often fail to give the teachers the neces sary support in forcing the pupils to make the proper use of their time. [...]
[...] more aesthetic, modest, fonder of the sacredness of “reposeful mental states,” more averse not only to dogmatism but even to system-making, more anxious to make philosophy merely the “general expression of indi vidual culture” than one who, “without assuming to arrive at fully de monstrated results, nevertheless finds in reflection and in conversation upon [...]
[...] occurred to me that in monarchigal governments this beplastering of the mighty man is conventional and formal, like ‘your humble servant' at the close of a letter, or the greetings of acquaintances and mere strangers, [...]
[...] the Public Faith. Professor Newcomb has not attempted, or only slightly attempted, to advance new points in economic science, or to argue contro verted ones, but merely to bring well-established principles to the appre hension of common people, and to show their application to the society, industry, and legislation of the United States as now existing or as [...]
[...] by what they only half display. It is true that the objects are only half numbered, so that it is often impossible to identify any one by means of the catalogue ; and that the “catalogue” itself is a mere list, not quite so full of blunders as might have been expected by those who know how it was made—by copying, in haste, the descriptions and the ascriptions [...]
The London and China telegraph24.12.1877
  • Datum
    Montag, 24. Dezember 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] . The sittings of the Prussian Diet during the past week have not presented anything of special interest, the debates having been upon topics of mere internal importance. The members will leave Berlin on the 21st for their Christmas vacation, and are holding night sittings in order to work up the outstanding business. The Reichstag will re [...]
[...] from the point at which he was joined by Mr. Mesny as very arduous, graphically comparing it to “continually going up a staircase.” Roads there are none, the way consisting of mere tracks through a rocky, mountainous country. In the neighbourhood of Ba-thang ranges were crossed some 15,600 feet high. The scenery in this direction, and in [...]
The nation20.12.1877
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 20. Dezember 1877
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] It is not superficial. On the contrary, I know of no system that calls up more mental activity in both teacher and pupil. There is nothing mechanical or merely formal in it; It lends itself to the highest teaching. Even the grammatical knowledge imparted by this method is broader than is given by any other. [...]
[...] because a year ago we supposed Mr. Gordon to be a man of sense and capacity, and a real politician interested in public questions, and not a mere leader of tide-waiters. Recently he appears to have been fascinated by the business of distributing patronage, and to have been devoting his time and energies to it, and last week had a small [...]
[...] the provisions of that act, placed the United States on the single gold standard. The silver dollar had already become obsolete in fact; the law of 1873 merely conformed to that fact. This legisla tion was a continuation and consummation of that which took place in 1834 and 1853, which had for their object the use of gold as the [...]
[...] —If a book like Tissot's ‘Voyage aux Pays des Milliards, a mere cari cature of German manners, goes into forty editions, and his translation of some discontented German's satire reaches nearly as many, the Ger [...]
[...] commission, to serve as examples. Everything which can be properly regarded as a work of art, interpreted in the broadest sense, is to be in cluded, provided it is national property. The design is not merely to make a catalogue but to give the history in brief of each work, so far as it can be ascertained—the artist, school, age, etc. The publications are [...]
[...] respects, if not his principles, yet his dignity. Dupin betrayed the Assembly, and afterwards was rewarded by its destroyers. Nor was the baseness of Louis Napoleon's arts a mere accidental necessity of his position. No one who reads Victor Hugo's reminiscences can doubt that the President meant to degrade his opponents. It was part of his [...]
[...] “translated ”; and if we have now to mention and describe three Ameri can books on the same subject, they are the first. In the list given below the English and French books are merely little manuals of the commoner marks found on pieces of pottery and porcelain ; dictionaries, so to speak, of those various indications by which the student is sometimes helped to [...]
The London and China telegraph17.12.1877
  • Datum
    Montag, 17. Dezember 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] however, considers wholly illusory, and holds that it cannot be too strongly impressed on the minds of those who will have to consider the subject, that the mere multiplication of treaty ports is useless, unless the country itself be thrown open to foreign capital and enterprise. [...]
[...] sengers she was known to have prisoners on board, and rumours were circulated of deaths to the number of thirty and even fifty. On inquiry, the story, however, dwindled to a mere nothing. One man of the first lot landed sick, and it seems that only three altogether of those landed were reported as being attacked. The [...]
[...] opinion to the restrictions that had been placed by Colonial Govern ments upon the introduction of Chinese labour. The conclusions he drew were that Chinese emigration was now merely in its infancy, and that in time it would so increase as to exercise a prodigious influence upon the fortunes of nations and the industrial forces of the world. [...]
[...] Thesauri.” The Ming dynasty supplement to Ma's T'ung is also there; but we should like to see the compound trio completed by not merely the supplements to all the three, but also the addi tional supplements published during the present dynasty. The nine thus complete are rarely to be met with, but it would be [...]
[...] Hack Tuke on “Modern Life and Insanity.” He traces the various causes which conduce to mental disease, and strongly condemns the system of mere cramming for examinations, so much in force. - Mazie's Joy, by LizzIE Joyce ToMLINSON; and The Bella an [...]
The nation13.12.1877
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 13. Dezember 1877
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] It is not superficial. On the contrary, I know of no system that calls up more mental activity in both teacher and pupil. There is nothing mechanical or merely formal in it; It lends itself to the highest teaching. Even the grammatical knowledge imparted by this method is broader than is given by any other. [...]
[...] pended. Unless there be some practical question at issue between the opposing parties, the party out of power has a great advantage merely because its members have nothing to quarrel about. Conse quently, the present state of things, in which the two parties have pretty much the same platform, and each is afraid to take any de [...]
[...] Turkey to submit to the programme of the Conference. That the mere threat of such application would have been sufficient to bring the Turks to terms no one doubts. All of the Powers except Russia refused to resort to it, simply on grounds of expediency. Russia [...]
[...] The repulses at Plevna and in Asia were, however glorious for a Power of which people had such a mean opinion as they had of Turkey, mere flea-bites to a Power whose resources were undeniably so great as those of Russia. They acted merely as an irritant, and lured the Turks into a false confidence which [...]
[...] rience will appreciate. The principal difficulty with us in Massachusetts lies in the fact that the Constitution withholds the right of suffrage from “paupers” merely, without limitation or qualification. No judicial in terpretation can be necessary to teach a person of ordinary intelligence that a “pauper” is a person who is receiving public aid, or subsisting, [...]
[...] ld ) . . . Chaos is an infinite ocean or quagmire of universal darkness. It is not to be considered as mere empty space, but an abyss wherein are jumbled together in confusion [...]
[...] pies three columns and a half. At this rate a dictionary which might be compressed into one small volume threatens to exceed all reasonable limits. The ordinary reader, who consults his dictionary for mere lexical purposes, does not need such etymologies, and the professed philologist can either work them out for himself or find them in other more standard [...]
[...] every time by the boast of excessive delicacy and concentration of work manship. The Gazette des Beaux-Arts continually suffers from this want of elbow-room, and its artists are sometimes compelled to study the mere corner of a great original, with a result like those pocket editions of cle gant extracts which “sample" celebrated authors by their episodes and [...]
[...] The painfulness of this disagreement between doctors can hardly be allayed by the physical slightness of the bodies in dispute, unkindly alluded to by the last-quoted critic as “mere visiting-cards.” Of our | own artist Whistler L’Art acknowledges the “remarkable talent,” but considers that at the Grosvenor Gallery it was not favorably represented. [...]
[...] This “Dictionary of Americanisms' will rank ºf hº most im portant of the contributions which the scholarship of the age has made to this department of literature. It is no mere curious collec tion of odd and outlandish words, but an invaluable aid in the study of the English language. Many of its definitions are little social [...]
The London and China telegraph10.12.1877
  • Datum
    Montag, 10. Dezember 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] to provide themselves with funds was to put more º into circulation. So we do not say that the Government have done wrong merely in having issued paper money, but we hold that they should make their reasons for the course known, and notify to the public the amount they have thrown into currency. [...]
[...] his patrimony of Moar State and his rights thereto, and that Mr. Douglas made something like the following statement:- That Colonel Anson in all he did was merely acting, and could not give any decision in the matter; that the instruction from the Colonial-office was not to interfere in the matter, and there [...]
[...] sure. . No ship-owning company is so capable of inaugurating this new era of speed and comfort in ocean travelling as the P. and O. Company, for they would merely have to work on their own lines, and assert that pre-eminence in the future which the mail subsidy enabled them to maintain in the ante-Canal period.” [...]
[...] 28. This suggestion was opposed by the China merchants when Sir Rutherford Alcock's Convention was under consideration, because it was clearly discerned that its effect would have been merely to add 50 per cent. to the import duty, with no better guarantee than before against surcharges in the interior. [...]
[...] ment in the cuisine, and otherwise meeting the taste of the public. It was impossible to deny that many preferred the French steamers merely on the latter account ; and it would be well that the matter should be looked into. Mr. Sutherland, a managing director, then replied to the ques [...]
The London and China telegraph03.12.1877
  • Datum
    Montag, 03. Dezember 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] cient number of errors and to a sufficient amount would necessitate the opening of the accounts. Upon the first question of fact, were the plaintiffs merely charged the prices paid by the defendants, there was no contest, for the defendants themselves admitted making overcharges, which they sought to justify on various grounds, on almost every item [...]
[...] the entire cost of the officers belonging to the Royal Horse Brigades of Artillery, who have also to bear their part in supporting the other regimental bands, which are merely assisted by a Government allow allce. [...]
[...] Catholic Missionary in Thibet, who says that he considers the proposed passage of the English explorers from India into Thibet fraught with danger, and that the mere rumour of it has created the greatest excitement in Lhassa. Orders have been issued to stop all foreigners at the frontier, [...]
[...] as invoices. But in Manchester hands such prosaic papers call forth powers of imagination which would grace a DEFOE, a DICKENs or a THACKERAY. Mere facts are too common place for mercantile genius of this order, and except for purposes of symmetry, multiplications and additions have [...]
[...] sense, has been thrust upon China. To hold relations with the for reigner is in defiance of the moral convictions of its educated men, not merely of its mandarins, but of a large proportion of the millions who are trained in the history and philosophy of their country. Nothing has been so far obtained in China by what we term pacific negotiation. [...]
[...] lessly severe officials who ever trampled out a rebellion. At Tali, by his orders, 50,000 of the Panthays, men, women, and children, were massacred. Mere cruelty in suppressing a revolt is no reproach in China. When Yeh in 1855 beheaded 70,000 persons in Canton, many of whom had been surrendered by their own relatives, the decapita [...]
The nation29.11.1877
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 29. November 1877
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] Now, the matter being in this state—i.e., the complainant being in corre spondence with the court with regard to the appearance of the defendant, and professing his entire readiness not merely to submit charges but to ap pear in person—the court convenes, tries the case, and renders a verdict of not guilty. The chairman of the Committee, we may add, has been the [...]
[...] to our knowledge of matters of fact. Mr. Bowen himself finally arrives at this conclusion. And in the next place there is a great deal more in Hume than the mere occasion for Kant's Critique. Indeed, as it seems to us, a chief cause (rather, perhaps, a chief sign) of the stagnation in English philosophy since Hume is to be found in the notion that he has [...]
[...] to us, a chief cause (rather, perhaps, a chief sign) of the stagnation in English philosophy since Hume is to be found in the notion that he has been disposed of, by Kant or by somebody else, or by the mere operation of common sense, and that we can go on cheerfully with the postulates which he demolished. - [...]
[...] this ; it was the earplanation of the fact of Existence, and, of course, had to be stated generally, or as a principle. “Causa sui,” says Mr. Bowen, “is merely First Cause—i.e., First Cause of everything else, but not of itself, for that is absurd.” But is it less absurd, in a philosophi cal point of view, to assume two kinds of existence º Or shall we say [...]
[...] from the necessity of existing 2 The absurdity by which Mr. Bowen feels himself repelled lies in the attempt to reduce such relations to terms of cause and effect. But it is not to be escaped by merely fencing off one portion of the problem. At any rate the absurdity, if it is one, belongs to Descartes—makes, indeed, the essence of his philosophy,+and [...]
[...] but he preserves them only in the interests of scepticism, and makes them the foundation, in fact, of a system which resolves all our beliefs into mere illusions and dreams. Then comes Fichte, whose endeavor is to sweep away even this poor ghost of actual being, and to refashion Kant's survey of the limitations of human knowledge into a system of absolute [...]
The London and China telegraph26.11.1877
  • Datum
    Montag, 26. November 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] These vessels had engines of one nominal horse power to 10 tons of gross register tonnage, and realised an average speed of 8% knots per hour. The compound engine was merely an applica tion of long-enunciated ideas to appropriate purposes. The three properties of steam—direct pressure, expansion, and con [...]
[...] Judging by advertisements which we have seen, the trade in these spurious silks seems to be at present a very flourishing one, and is not confined to mere second-class warehouses. The profit on this class of goods is, indeed, too much for the honesty of many mer chants, especially when the public will insist on running after a cheap [...]
The nation22.11.1877
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 22. November 1877
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] are more or less disagreeably surprised by his suddenly tendering his resig nation. He alleges the state of his health as the reason; and although this is not regarded as a mere pretext, nobody finds it a satisfactory ex planation. The Emperor, instead of accepting the resignation, has, “with the consent of Bismarck,” granted the count a leave of absence [...]
[...] plant to the moral nature, honor and respect it, just the same as it has to that of the spirit. It is time we got rid of the old slur about “preach ing mere morality”; time that we were done with sacrificing the grandest interests of society and humanity on the altar of an artificial dogma; time that we were done with hearing men like Froude testify that all their [...]
[...] —The Portfolio (J. W. Bouton) never disappoints the applicant who approaches it for close art-study; there is always at least one article of a solid value that takes the periodical out of the category of merely deco rative and popular picture magazines. Thus, Professor Colvin's patient study of the engravers who taught or followed Dürer, after exhausting [...]
[...] graphers have been reduced to the necessity of making guesses which do more honor to their ingenuity than to their judgment. But to pursue the enquiry further would be a mere waste of time. It is enough to know that we have the word, and are not ignorant of its meaning.” We were not aware that any of the great lexicographers, including [...]
[...] ing, to hold that the points of contrast are of more permanent importance than the points of resemblance. The saying about scratching Russians and finding Tartars is something more than merely “smart,” for it ex presses in a terse form the fact which every writer on Russia, from Mr. Mackenzie Wallace downwards, brings out, that the Russians, with all [...]
[...] facts, or from the habit of attributing to countries, as they at present exist, characteristics which once perhaps really distinguished them, but which now, at any rate, are merely matters of history or tradition. We may suspect that more than half our young ladies who visit Scotland ex perience a slight feeling of disappointment when they find that claymores [...]
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