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All the year round13.03.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 13. März 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] The Manual publishes among its contents a list of twenty-three soups, twenty-seven “made dishes,” twenty-one “modes of cooking eggs,” twenty vegetable preparations, thirty-four sauces, and no fewer than forty-three sweet dishes and [...]
[...] flesh of two fine lobsters,” and gratifying addi tions of “grated lemon-peel, and anchovy, and cayenne, and the yolk of an egg,” or a soup of oysters, which, besides the precious shell-fish themselves, is to contain, among other comfort [...]
[...] themselves, is to contain, among other comfort able ingredients, the yolks of ten hard-boiled eggs, and of five raw ones, and which, as it approaches completion, is to be “stirred well one way,” and served to the anchorites, who are [...]
[...] are to “beard your oysters and chop them very fine, to have ready a mixture of bread-crumbs, yolks of eggs, parsley, sweet marjoram, and seasoning to your taste; to mix the whole well together into a thick paste, cut it into pieces [...]
[...] the eye's gratification; and then he adds, as a finishing touch, “garnish with claws and feelers.” The different modes of cooking eggs which are given in these ascetic pages, are in no respect behind the other recipes in the matter [...]
[...] think, to take a specimen dish (compatible, let it be remembered, with strict fasting), of the following? “Eggs with forcemeat balls. Take half a pound of bread-crumbs, and rub two ounces of butter into it, adding one ounce of [...]
[...] some other of the “made dishes” of which there is, as we have seen, a choice of twenty seven. Then there are the twenty-one egg preparations to fall back upon ; the “curried eggs,” the “eggs with forcemeat balls,” the [...]
[...] thin, with chopped onions between each layer, with two ounces of fresh butter cut into little bits, with the yolks of four eggs boiled hard, covered close with puff-paste, a table-spoonful of mushroom ketchup being “poured in [...]
[...] This is a “nice” dish for breakfast, is his candid —and, let us add, perfectly truthful—estimate of buttered eggs: while of another composition he opines that it “is a tasty dish for collation on fasting days,” which sentence, with its close [...]
[...] the principal meal in the evening.” In other words, you may have an eight-ounce luncheon (a good-sized egg weighs only two ounces and a half) in the middle of the day, and a dinner of unlimited quantity, and consisting of any of [...]
Nature06.01.1870
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 06. Januar 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Cuckows' Eggs [...]
[...] making myself plainly understood. In endeavouring to reply so far as lies in me to his questions, I will take them in order. -- 1. “Are they [Cuckows Eggs] so variable as some assert?" Mr. Sterland supports the doubt here indicated by the statement of “one of the most eminent and experienced of living oolºgists; [...]
[...] one of them, so far as I can gather from their works, was acquainted with Dr. Baldamus's essay. 2 and 3. “Were these [sixteen varieties of eggs] seen to be deposited by the bird, or how were they identified as those of the cuckow 2 . . . . Is there not room for error here?” [...]
[...] deposited by the bird, or how were they identified as those of the cuckow 2 . . . . Is there not room for error here?” The evidence on which the eggs in question were referred to the Cuckow has been printed in full by Dr. Baldamus and the translator of his essay. To repeat it here would occupy much [...]
[...] to do so), perhaps he will permit me to bring forward these birds. I have some reason for believing that the same hen Blackcap constantly lays eggs of similar colour. Do the birds of this species hatched from eggs with reddish shells lay eggs of the same character, or brownish ones, and vice versä & If of the [...]
[...] Papilio inhabiting the same district remain distinct is perhaps more unaccountable than that the different forms of Cuckows' eggs should be preserved, for it does not seem to me unlikely that the colour of the egg and the maternal instincts should depend upon the hen bird; in which case, granting the hereditariness (if [...]
[...] Mr. Dresser and Mr. Cecil Smith which have since appeared. Mr. Dresser says (p. 218) that he “cannot quite agree with Professor Newton that Cuckows' eggs as a rule are subject to great variety.” I am not aware that I had made such an assertion. The nearest approach to it that I can find is my [...]
[...] statement. ... For the knowledge of these I am much obliged to him, as well as for stating the result of his own experience in support of my supposition that the eggs of the same hen Cuckow resemble each other. Mr. Cecil Smith.(p.242) seems to me to be as unfortunate in [...]
[...] single assertion of his as to matters of fact. Mr. Smith, appa. rently, thinks because I have referred to the number of Cuckows' eggs yearly found in nests of the Hedge-Sparrow in this country, without ever bearing any resemblance to the eggs of that bird—a fact, of course, fully admitted by him—that I must [...]
[...] Jeffreys, F.R.S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 265 LETTERS To The Editor: Cuckows' Eggs.-Prof. A. Newton . . . . . . . . . . . 265 The Weined Structure of Glaciers.-E. WHYMPER . . . . . .266 Irish Lepidoptera.-Edwin Birch All . . . . . . . . . . 267 [...]
Saturday review06.07.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 06. Juli 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] LAYING EGGS. [...]
[...] and work of art. It is not only, therefore, one of the railties and vanities of commonplace people to make a fuss over the laying of their eggs. The eggs that genius lays may be better worth laying, but it is undeniable that the cackle of genius over its egg is far the loudest cackle of all. [...]
[...] most stable, are thus often the very facts which are most grossly material, most evanescent, and most common to the kind. That we should pride ourselves on such a sort of egg at all is remark able; still more is it remarkable that upon the laying of such eggs we should base our favourite arguments in favour of our individual [...]
[...] we should base our favourite arguments in favour of our individual dignity and worth. The anxiety to prove that our own egg is the one genuine article, and that it ranks very high on the list of contemporary eggs, is a passion so prevalent that we usually, in dealing with one another, [...]
[...] boat. This would be so but for the principle of association, which tells very heavily against those who are not accustomed to it. One man's egg might have an equal chance with another's, if it were not for the establishment everywhere of Egg Companies Limited, which are founded on the principle of every member admiring [...]
[...] not for the establishment everywhere of Egg Companies Limited, which are founded on the principle of every member admiring every other member's egg as well as his own. To those who are outside the partnership this system is ruinous and distressing in the highest degree. No solitary and isolated egg can stand up against it [...]
[...] Limited that likes red hair and apple blossoms. Everybody knows how faithfully they adhere to the principle of admiring one another's eggs. Then there is the Egg Company Limited which dislikes red hair and never paints apples. They are equally select. There is the Egg Company Limited at South Kensington, all of whom are [...]
[...] and literature, all have their similar fraternities of guilds; and it is completely shown by all experience that it is no use at all attempting to travel about the country with a single egg. Union in eggs, as in everything else, must carry the day. So certain is this, that some acute persons have come to the sober and saddening [...]
[...] ying any. Those who ever have tried the recipe #. how easy and delightful it is of execution. . As far as convenience and comfort gé, far above all human birds who lay eggs is the myste rious and inscrutable old bird who never did lay an egg, and never means to do so. [...]
[...] -Laying Eggs. The Curate's Progress. Ambitious Wives. The First of July in Paris. Lord Lyons and Lord Delmore. [...]
The tatler02.11.1710
  • Datum
    Sonntag, 02. November 1710
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 1
[...] ladle for plumb-porridge; a silver cheese-toaster with three tongues, an ebony handle, and silvering at the end; a silver posnet to butter eggs'; one caudle and two cordial-water cups, two cocoa-cups, and an ostrich's egg, with rims and feet of silver, a [...]
PunchRegister Bd. 021 1851
  • Datum
    Mittwoch, 01. Januar 1851
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] Grand Protectionist Goose-Club, 210 Great Dowager Question (The), 46 Great Egg Myth (The), 54 Great Needle Case (The), 23 Great Peacemaker (The), 267 [...]
[...] Education in the Army, 187 Effects of Bloomerism, 180 Eggs-emplary Hussars and Lancers, 23 Electric Compliments, 169 Electric Lying, 219 [...]
[...] Punster's Fate (The), 6 Queny by Cromwell's Ghost, 251 Question of Stale Eggs (A) 111 Rack Ponche à la Romaine, 68 Railway Dialogues, 74 [...]
Nature21.11.1872
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 21. November 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] popping of the dry furze pods in the stillness, the quivering air above the heather, the startled spiders with their appended egg-bags, the grasshoppers, the green hair streaks, the gem-like tigerbeetles on the wing, in the distance the Mendips and the yellow sea, or the long rich [...]
[...] quires the patience of a Landois to trace these future glories of a butterfly within the chest of the caterpillar but lately escaped from the egg. But in considering the relation of growth to metamorpho sis, it must be remembered that some insects have no wings, [...]
[...] larva. They continue to grow and to be perfected during the whole of the life of the insect, until their function is called into action. They originate after the escape from the egg; but the structures, upon the consideration of which so much time has been spent this evening, originated during the embryonic or egg [...]
[...] sively developed, and that they grow from simple protoplasms into all their beauty and complexity of form during the stages after the escape from the egg. They are acquired organs; they are given to the insect during its progress of change. . Like the metamorphoses, they are [...]
[...] its progress of change. . Like the metamorphoses, they are superadded to the original condition of the embryo or the young within the egg. They are characteristic, to a great extent, of metamorphosis, and thus the notion that the organs and these states of change were both acquired and superadded is worthy [...]
[...] Another species belonging to the genus Psyche has very pretty male moths, but the female has no wings, legs, or feelers, and looks like a helpless egg-bag. She never quits a curious case made up of parts of flowers, in which the caterpillar and the pupa lived. [...]
[...] do this over and over again, senselessly it is true, but in obedience to an inherited and almost automatic impulse. There is no doubt that a great number of futile egg layings and [...]
[...] scene of its labour and hides the offspring from harm. The only satisfactory hint which can be gleaned respecting the origin of the provisioning of chambers in which an egg is left, is obtained by "abre's study of the habits of Bembir vidua. This mining wasp lays an egg which hatches very shortly, and the little mother [...]
[...] vegetarian, but she is known to sip the honey which may be on some of her victims. The instinct of a Bembix may have been altered by its eggs not hatching, and a series of victims may have been placed in the chamber automatically, instinctively, and without what is called [...]
[...] during the quiescent stage. Does the butterfly remember its existence as a gormandising caterpillar, and therefore retain some notion of the propriety of laying eggs over cabbages? Does the Odynerus fly remember its underground life, and obey some impulse to provide the unseen offspring with food different to [...]
Punch or The London charivari (Punch)Titelblatt 04.1843
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. April 1843
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] ments March 25.-Last day for purchasing ten-guinea legs of mutton and five-pound cakes of soap, of doubtful free holders, March 27.-Last day for collecting antique eggs, cabbage stumps, and dead cats near the hustings, March 31. —Lists to be copied into Poll books, and such to be [...]
[...] at this time. MoRAI. MAxiMs.—It never rains but it pours—Macintosh. Don't teach your grandmother to suck eggs—Editor of the Morning Herald. To MULL WINE.-Take a bottle of good claret, draw the [...]
Nature02.12.1869
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 02. Dezember 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Cuckows' Eggs [...]
[...] eminent and experienced of living oologists has stated: “As far as my own experience goes, it teaches me that there are not many birds the eggs of which differ less than those of the cuckoo.” On the other hand, Mr. Newton says: “It has long been noto rious to oologists, that the eggs of the cuckow are subject to very [...]
[...] of the cuckoo? Dr. Baldamus does not appear to have taken them all himself. Is there not room for error here? Mr. Newton saw these eggs, appears satisfied that they were those of the cuckoo, and agrees with Dr. Baldamus in his con clusions, that the object of the practice was that the cuckoo's egg [...]
[...] should be “less easily recognised by the foster-parents as a sub stituted one.” How then is this process effected? Mr. Newton's explanation is that each hen cuckoo deposits her eggs only in the nests of one species, that her eggs resemble those of the species whose nest she uses, and that this process is hereditary. [...]
[...] habit of laying a particular style of egg maintained? It is quite ossible that habits may become hereditary; but is there any instance of a wild species of animal inhabiting one locality and [...]
[...] sixteen varieties to be kept from crossing? And iſ, as I believe, interbreeding does take place, how can the alleged distinctive style of eggs be preserved? Here I am at fault, and I shall be very glad if Mr. Newton will help me out of my difficulty. In the face of the alleged object, that the egg shalí be less [...]
[...] easily recognised as a substituted one, how are we to account for the fact that, in this country at least, a larger number of cuckoos' eggs are deposited in the nests of the hedge sparrow than in those of any other species, the speckled brown egg contrasting strongly with the greenish blue ones? [...]
[...] period.”—M. Balbiani communicated an investigation of the development and propagation of Strongylus gigas, in which he described the production and structure of the egg, and the development of the embryo of that parasite, the embryo of which he said, remains in the egg for five or six months in winter, and [...]
[...] experiments, from which it appears that this parasite does not pass directly from the egg into the animal in which it acquires its perfect development.—M. P. Fischer described the copulation and spawning of the Aplysie and Doſa' riſerae, as observed by [...]
[...] Lectures to Working Men.— Prof. Roscoe, F.R.S. . . . . . . . 138 Changes in Jupiter.-J. Browning. (With 14tustration.) . . . 138 Cuckows' Eggs.-W. J. STERLAND . . . . • . . . . . 139 The Corona.-J. M. Wilson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139 Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 [...]
Punch04.03.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 04. März 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] HARD-BOILED EGGS. [...]
[...] “The answer to the Andrassy Note was ready on Wednesday, but was kept some days awaiting the approval of the SULTAN, who was ill with cholera from having eaten eighteen hard eggs at one meal, and could not be communicated with.”—Constantinople Correspondent. [...]
[...] Diplomacy attention begs, , While you digestion over-tax, By this excess in hard-boiled eggs. Look, where your Rayahs evil-starred Oppression's cup drain to the dregs, [...]
[...] Oppression's cup drain to the dregs, A*think your yoke on them lies hard, As on you yolks of hard-boiled eggs. [...]
[...] And you may spare your powder-kegs— And find it easier to digest - Hard-worded notes than hard-boiled eggs; [...]
[...] You cross with rather shaky legs, Rayahs will speed you o'er the ri With blessings on those hard-boiled eggs! [...]
All the year round19.09.1874
  • Datum
    Samstag, 19. September 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] man. Nothing comes amiss to him. Corn, the offal of slaughter houses, cheese, soap, candles, bacon, eggs, jams, pastry, butter, oil, boots and shoes, leverets and other small game, all serve him when hungry. [...]
[...] Mr. Rat displays a good deal of ingenuity in working out some of his plans. He can carry away eggs without breaking them; he stretches out one foreleg under the egg, steadies it with his cheek, and hops away [...]
[...] cautiously on the other three legs. Two of them, working together, have been known to carry eggs up-stairs; one stand ing upon his head, lifted an egg high up on his hind feet; his confederate, standing [...]
[...] ing upon his head, lifted an egg high up on his hind feet; his confederate, standing on the next step above, took the egg, and held it until the acrobat had come up; after which the same process was repeated [...]
[...] after which the same process was repeated again and again. A pastrycook once found that his eggs disappeared in a mysterious way; an investigation showed that rats made off with them, down-stairs [...]
[...] legs, with his fore paws and head resting on the step above; a smaller rat rolled an egg gently to the proper spot; the big fellow seized it firmly but carefully in his fore-paws, and brought it down ; and so [...]
[...] fellow seized it firmly but carefully in his fore-paws, and brought it down ; and so on, step after step. One particular egg adventure is as amusing as a comedy, [...]
[...] with the additional merit of being true. A rat lay down beside an egg, folded his body round it lengthwise, and took his tail between his teeth to get a firmer hold; [...]
[...] tail between his teeth to get a firmer hold; other rats approached, seized him by the neck, and dragged him and the egg off together in triumph-on what principle the booty was divided, does not appear. [...]
[...] curious maidens who wish to penetrate the veil of the future. , Lead, or else the yolk of an egg, is poured into water on the night of St. Thomas, and from the shape it assumes may be pre [...]
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