It is clear from Spohr's remarks that he was satisfied with the choruses and fugues, but not with the solo parts of Jesus and Mary, which were in the florid cantata style of that day.
The following recipes and remarks will be found valuable assistants to those so situated, and will offer many practical suggestions intended to develop ingenuity and skilfulness in this much-neglected branch of cookery.
But if the single effect sought to be produced by a story is of horror, for instance, its people cannot be permitted to make remarks that will hinder the attainment of the effect, which is a matter of preserving the general tone of the story.
Stevenson states Villon's salient physical characteristics, then remarks that the wolf and pig struggled together in his face, and a reader has the man, soul and body.
Hearne also remarks that the northern Indians had a superstitious reverence and liking for the wolf.
This was a great disappointment to Matonabi's people; but Hearne remarks the fortitude with which they bore this, nor did one of them ever speak of revenge.
No serpents whatever were seen by the party, but Henry remarks that the hawks nearly made up for them in abundance and ferocity.
Footnote 16: These are the remarks of an English chaplain in the island, quoted by the Rev.
The foregoing remarks appear to apply to the case of the Mollusca, which, at a very early period, had reached a high organization and a great development of forms and species in the testaceous Cephalopoda.
The stranger's remarks had given him much food for thought.
Percy's remarks of the afternoon still rankled in the minds of the junior portion of the residents, and, as he sauntered to and fro, he became the butt of many pointed jests.
By the time he had finished his remarks he was close to Spurling.
But remarks of this character are misplaced; they disregard--or are ignorant of--the political facts of the time.
Remarks of this kind I do not make from choice; they are forced upon me.
Just one or two remarks on peculiarities of the Church in Britain.
My object in these last cursory remarks has not been, I really need not say, to convey information in detail on the difficult and intricate points to which I have referred[54].
In his letter to Ethelbert, Gregory remarks at the end that he is sending him some small presents, which will not be small to him, as they come from the benediction of the blessed Peter the Apostle.
I must defer, to an opportunity in my third lecture, remarks which I wish to make on what may seem an ungenerous questioning of these assertions of benefits conferred by Rome.
Caesar remarks on this fact that the immigrant Gauls retained the names of their continental districts and cities.
The remarks suggested by your own eminent career give to the general conduct of the theme additional interest, like the personal passages in Montaigne.
A white-skinned girl among black people, she had often winced at the coarse jokes or pitying remarks that had been made upon her appearance.
To these remarks his replies were very short, evidently having made up his mind to let them raise an excitement in London if they wished, and (as I afterwards learned) if he could possibly bring it about.
They had many remarks to make also upon the little girl whom her Majesty took by the hand; they told her she turned pale, and they were afraid she would grow up a white woman.
A] [Footnote A: This part of the subject is fully explained in the remarks on the Government of Man, chap.
To this biography the remarks of Sir Fortunatus Dwarris are strictly applicable, except that it never appeared in the form of a pamphlet.
What Robert Chambers remarks of him is well within the facts of the case.
As Grant remarks in his Old and New Edinburgh: 'The slender house accommodation in the turnpike stairs compelled the use of taverns more than now.
Most interesting are his remarks concerning the validity of dogmas.
But from the foregoing remarks it would seem that the Rabbis could not conceive such a monstrosity as atheistic orthodoxy.
Rabbi Eleazar remarksthat the meaning is that the man desires only to do His commandments, but he does not want the rewards connected with them.
Zunz somewhere remarks that Krochmal was inspired in his work by the study of Hegel, just as Maimonides had been by the study of Aristotle.
I have tried in the foregoing remarks to give a short sketch of our Rabbi's life according to the accounts of Zunz, Rapoport, and Letteris.
But as far as his writings go, this belief finds expression only in incidental remarks and occasional citations from the Bahir,(100) which he never thrusts upon the reader.
After the foregoing remarks on the quantity of this collection, I shall now attempt to give some idea of its quality.
So Nachmanides' remarks with reference to Sarah's treatment of Hagar (Gen.
Reggio proceeds to give a few specimens confirming his assertion, and concludes his remarks with a eulogy on Delmedigo, who in this respect also had the courage to differ from his contemporaries.
From all these remarks it will easily be seen that in olden times the boy enjoyed almost all the rights of majority long before the day of his being "The Son of the Law.
The following remarks must, therefore, not be taken as the result of a systematic study of this collection, which would be quite impossible without the aid of a catalogue.
But the foregoing remarks may suffice to show that Judaism did not remain quite inactive at the approach of the great religious crisis which our generation has witnessed.
As Matthew Arnold said of the remarks of the Young Man from the Country about the perambulator, they are felt not to be at the heart of the situation.
And it is not easy to say exactly why we feel that the few metaphysical remarks of Mr. Horatio Sparkins are in some way really much funnier than any of those old stock jokes.
Then the bailiff, approaching my carriage window, addressed a few complimentary remarks to myself.
Baron Bramwell, by the remarks he uttered and the order he made, aided and abetted the bribery, and protected those who committed it.
In consequence of remarks I published upon this unfeeling and egotistic outrage, the Duchess sent me a letter of thanks, and requested me to call at her residence.
It is a pity," remarks Shelley, "that any one so pretty and amiable should be so selfish.
Henry St. Clair tried to make it evident by a sign that remarks about Raymond were to be stopped.
I was going to offer you, geehrte Anwesende, a few remarks about husbands.
Oh she made a few conventional remarks that showed me her limitations, and then she began about Bernhard.
This Patty learned from remarks made by the visitors, and also from Miss Aurora's own delicately veiled intimations that each of her fourteen kinds was a totally different and distinct recipe.
And so pleasantly friendly were her relations with Mrs. Farrington and Elise that it did not seem necessary to make remarks for the sake of keeping up the conversation.
The weapons I would use in reply to such remarks I cannot address to you, Herr Professor.
Welsh captain remarks how: "The pale-faced moon looks bloody on the earth.
The belief in slow poisoning was general in bygone times, although no better founded on fact, remarks Dr.
Danish prince swear by St. Patrick, on which Warburton remarks that the whole northern world had their learning from Ireland.
His remarks on the United States are in a more discriminating tone than is often attained by English tourists, but the whole tone of the volume is, for the most part, so prosy and commonplace as to make its perusal an intolerable bore.
It remarks that the class of books which has received the largest additions, is that of biography.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "remarks" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.