NPG 1475; Sydney Smith Sydney Smith replica by Henry Perronet Briggs Date 1840 (1833) Medium oil oncanvas Sitter Sydney Smith (17711845), Wit; Canon of St Paul s. http://www.npg.org.uk/live/search/portrait.asp?mkey=mw05860
Smith, Sydney Famous Quotes Famous quotes by Smith, Sydney Madam, I have been looking for a person whodisliked let us swear eternal friends 1771-1845 British Writer Clergyman. http://www.borntomotivate.com/FamousQuote_SydneySmith.html
Silence Famous Quote Silence Smith, Sydney 17711845 British Writer Clergyman He had occasional flashesof silence that made his conversation perfectly delightful. Silence http://www.borntomotivate.com/FamousQuote_Silence.html
Extractions: Famous Quotes About Silence Soon silence will have passed into legend. Man has turned his back on silence. Day after day he invents machines and devices that increase noise and distract humanity from the essence of life, contemplation, meditation. Tooting, howling, screeching, booming, crashing, whistling, grinding, and trilling bolster his ego. His anxiety subsides. His inhuman void spreads on like a gray vegetation.
The National Archives National Register Of Archives Browse The Smith, Sydney (17711845) Canon of St Paul s Wit (16). Smith, Sydney (1911-1988)Zoologist (1). Smith, Sydney Goodsir (1915-1975) Author Poet (4) http://www.nra.nationalarchives.gov.uk/nra/browser/person/page/person_SM.htm
Extractions: Contact us Help A to Z index Site search Sorry, your browser can't show the date here. dqmcodebase = "/script/"; //script folder location You are here: Home Search the archives National Register of Archives Jump to: A B C D ... Z Select an alphabetical group from the list below to continue browsing. Then to: SA SC SE SF ... SZ result(s) were found.
Famous Quotes By Smith - ThinkExist Quotations It ranks immediately after health and a good conscience. Sydney Smith quotes (EnglishClergyman, Essayist and Wit, 17711845). Add to my book http://en.thinkexist.com/quotes/top/last-name/smith/3.html
Extractions: Advanced Search My Account Help Add the "Dynamic Daily Quotation" to Your Site or Blog - it's Easy! ... More... Showing top results. For more precise results use top quotes filters below. " Marriage resembles a pair of shears, so joined that they cannot be separated, often moving in opposite directions, yet always punishing anyone who comes in between them. " Sydney Smith quotes (English Clergyman, Essayist and Wit, 1771-1845) Similar Quotes . About: Marriage quotes Add to my book show_bar(7345,null,'marriage_resembles_a_pair_of_shears-so_joined') " Education is a private matter between the person and the world of knowledge and experience, and has little to do with school or college. " Lillian Smith quotes (American Writer, 1897-1966) Similar Quotes . About: Education quotes Add to my book show_bar(262497,null,'education_is_a_private_matter_between_the_person') " It sometimes happens, even in the best of families, that a baby is born. This is not necessarily cause for alarm. The important thing is to keep your wits about you and borrow some money. " Elinor Smith quotes (American professional pilot b.1911)
Famous Quotes By Smith - ThinkExist Quotations Sydney Smith quotes (English Clergyman, Essayist and Wit, 17711845) Will Smithquotes (American Author, Actor, Singer and Producer. b.1968 Philadelphia http://en.thinkexist.com/quotes/top/last-name/smith/
Extractions: Advanced Search My Account Help Add the "Dynamic Daily Quotation" to Your Site or Blog - it's Easy! ... More... Showing top results. For more precise results use top quotes filters below. " Love wasn't put in your heart to stay. Love isn't love until you give it away. " Michael W. Smith quotes (American Singer, b.1957) Similar Quotes . About: Love quotes Add to my book show_bar(215053,null,'love_wasn-t_put_in_your_heart_to_stay-love_isn-t') " Fear of failure must never be a reason not to try something. " Frederick Smith quotes Similar Quotes Add to my book show_bar(343010,null,'fear_of_failure_must_never_be_a_reason_not_to_try') " Life is to be fortified by many friendships. To love and to be loved is the greatest happiness of existence. " Sydney Smith quotes (English Clergyman, Essayist and Wit, 1771-1845) Similar Quotes . About: Life quotes Friendship quotes Add to my book show_bar(149744,null,'life_is_to_be_fortified_by_many_friendships-to') " The man who cannot believe in himself cannot believe in anything else. The basis of all integrity and character is whatever faith we have in our own integrity. " Roy L. Smith quotes
IPac2.0 Smith, Sydney, 17711845. by title. A memoir of the Reve by call number.824 S66WS6m. Search the Web by Smith, Sydney, 1771-1845. http://ipac2.vpl.ca/ipac20/ipac.jsp?index=BIB&term=837145
Entrez PubMed Sydney Smith (17711845), British clergyman. Cohen SG. Publication Types BiographyHistorical Article MeSH Terms Asthma/history* Christianity/history http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=8
MSN Encarta - Sydney Smith Smith, Sydney (17711845), English writer and Anglican clergyman, born in Essex.In 1798 Smith went to Edinburgh, where he helped to found the http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761560463/Sydney_Smith.html
Smith, Sydney (Norwegian Writers' Web) Playwrights Association Norwegian Writers Center Norwegian Association ofLiterary Translators. Smith, Sydney 17711845. E-text Project Gutenberg http://www.litteraturnettet.no/s/smith.sydney.asp?lang=gb&type=
Smith, Sydney (Litteraturnettet) Norsk Oversetterforening OM VIRUS OG SPAM. Smith, Sydney 17711845. E-tekstProject Gutenberg Tekst. SØK ETTER Smith, Sydney. SØK I. E-tekst http://www.litteraturnettet.no/s/smith.sydney.asp?lang=&type=
The Classical Essayists. Smith, Sydney (17711845) Smith, with Francis Jeffrey (1773-1850), FrancisHorner (1778-1817) Brougham, founded the Edinburgh Review. http://www.blupete.com/Literature/Biographies/Literary/BiosEssayists.htm
Extractions: Addison, Joseph The eldest son of a cleric, Addison eventually found himself at Oxford (Queen's and Magdalen). He wrote favourable (whether commissioned, or not) articles concerning certain powerful people and their works; he was duly rewarded with a pension of £300 which allowed Addison to travel extensively throughout the continent for four years. With the victory at Blenheim , in 1704, Addison was commissioned to write The Campaign and this led to further political patronage; he was appointed as a Commissioner of Excise Taxes (the only significant taxes they had in those days). The job as a commissioner, presumably, took little of Addison's time and he was left to pursue his writing. While he had contributed to the Tatler (started by Steele in 1709), Addison started his own paper in 1711, the Spectator ("In the Spectator may be traced the foundations of all that is sound and healthy in modern English thought." [
Extractions: "Hazlitt In Paris 1802-03." In March of 1802, the Treaty of Amiens was signed, and by it, the war between France and England was ended. France, at this point in history, was all powerful on land accessible from the European continent and which did not necessitate any large movement upon the seas where Great Britain ruled supreme. Though it caused a great strain on the British taxpayer to keep her fleets at sea, such an investment allowed the English, except for the European land mass, to assert themselves throughout the world; and, they made the most of it. John Richard Green "Amid all the triumphs of the revolutionary war, the growth of the British empire had been steady and ceaseless. She was more than ever mistress of the sea. ... She was turning her command of the seas to a practical account. Not only was she monopolizing the carrying trade of the European nations, but the sudden uprush of her industries was making her the workshop as well as the market of the world." This peace that came about in March of 1802, one that was not to last much beyond a year, released a pent up demand in England for travel to France. With travel restrictions lifted, Hazlitt was among those who determined to go to France. On October 16th, 1802, Hazlitt arrived at Paris. His objective was to sit in the Louvre and to make copies of the classic paintings hanging there, in particular the Titians. "I arrived here yesterday. ... Paris is very dirty and disagreeable, except along the river side. Here it is much more splendid than any part of London. The Louvre is one of the buildings which overlook it. I went there this morning ...
Literary Encyclopedia: List People (S) Smith, Sydney (Smith, Sydney ). 17711845. We hope to complete this entry soon.Smith, Vivian (Smith, Vivian ). 1933-Present http://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?no=275&golist=true&init=S
Sydney Smith: Critic Of Indian Missions Smith (17711845), a clergyman of the Church of England, was suited to Sydney Smith. Three Volumes Complete in One (Philadelphia Carey and Hart, 1845) http://www.wmcarey.edu/carey/smyth/sydney_smith.htm
Extractions: SYDNEY SMITH: CRITIC OF INDIAN MISSIONS In the February 1808 issue of the Edinburgh Review , the Reverend Sydney Smith contributed to the emergent debate over the Christianization of India. That debate had been prompted by the decision of evangelicals, including prominent members of the Church of England, to encourage relaxation of East India Company regulations limiting missionary activity on the Indian sub-continent. Smith (1771-1845), a clergyman of the Church of England, was suited to the formation of polite opinion. Known as a wit and as co-founder of the Edinburgh Review , he later became an eloquent proponent of Catholic Emancipation (affording civil liberties to Catholics). Ironies in Smith's essay on "Indian Missions" derive from an implied comparison between the published words of the missionaries and the principles of Smith's "rational" Christianity. Smith drew extensively from the Periodical Accounts of the Baptist Missionary Society , offering quotations designed to exemplify the departure from reason that he took to be typical of Indian missionary sojourns. Smith, who wrote during the Napoleonic Wars in the aftermath of the Vellore Mutiny of 1806, appealed to Britons' concerns regarding the menace of French power and the precarious loyalty of Indians. Smith's references to Baptist missionaries as "Anabaptists," however, reveal that something more than a playful irony was at work here: Smith had invoked the rhetoric of the Protestant Reformation, delivered a stinging social slur, and underscored his own anxiety to distance himself from radicalism.
Arts: Literature: Authors: S: Smith, Sydney - Open Site Smith, Sydney (17711845). Miscellaneous writer, b. at Woodford, Essex, the s.of a gentleman of independent means, and ed. at Winchester and Oxf., http://open-site.org/Arts/Literature/Authors/S/Smith,_Sydney/
Anecdote - Sydney Smith - Berry Nice Smith, Sydney (17711845) British clergyman and author, cofounder of the EdinburghReview noted for his letters and for such works as Twelve Miles from a http://www.anecdotage.com/index.php?aid=1095
Extractions: Quotation Author Author description Whatsoever one would understand what he hears must hasten to put into practice what he has heard. St. Gregory The Great c. 540-604, Italian Pope Beware of the person of one book. St. Thomas Aquinas 1225-1274, Italian Scholastic Philosopher and Theologian The world may be full of fourth-rate writers but it's also full of fourth-rate readers. Stan Barstow 1928-, British Novelist, Playwright Intelligence, in diapers, is invisible. And when it matures, out the window it flies. We have to pounce on it earlier. Stanislaw J. Lec 1909-, Polish Writer Everything in the world exists to end up in a book. Stephane Mallarme 1842-1898, French Symbolist Poet The pure work implies the disappearance of the poet as speaker, who hands over to the words. Stephane Mallarme 1842-1898, French Symbolist Poet The classics are only primitive literature.