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Punch27.12.1856
  • Datum
    Samstag, 27. Dezember 1856
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] BRABANT gave the “humble labourer” a far higher than a sixpenny recompence. ... He returned the pipe a very different thing from what he received it. He received it mere clay, he returned it as good as aluminium—if not gold. “Pipe”-perhaps exclaimed the peasant, paraphrasin; unconsciously a line of SHAKSPEARE, and apostrophising [...]
[...] point to Paris. Dr. Punch has ample grounds for his belief that the persons first affected were the ladies attached to the Imperial Court; and it is a more than mere surmise with him, that symptoms of the mania were primarily betrayed, by the young and lovely EMPREss. Qf its introduction to this kingdom, Dr. Punch can scarcely speak with [...]
[...] colour it is quite chameleon-like in changing, displaying in the daytime the most variegated hues, while at night it more frequently assumes the appearance of a mere white swelling. Like other insane people, the Crinolineomaniac is difficult to approach —indeed it may be said that even her nearest relatives have to stand [...]
[...] A Mere Surmise. [...]
Punch27.08.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 27. August 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] destroyed, that the drought has been particularly severe in France, that “the amount of hedgerow timber” in England “is rapidly disappearing under our new systems of cultivation” pursued with an odious 9. eye to mere material pro duce, regardless of any defacement of the country's beauty. And just when the French Government, to remedy the deficiency of moisture, “is planting” trees [...]
[...] pation in planting cannon, consider, and weigh even in your own pecuniary scale a most pertinent remark (made by a correspondent of the Times) that, for the mere national gain of a few thousand pounds, which will very soon be poured into the insatiable maw of our great national expenditure— “It is at this moment we propose to destroy the New Forest, one of the best storehouses [...]
[...] What with telegram telegram hotly succeeding, And letter on letter piled thick. --- In fact, we’re all growing mere sieves for loose writing For news craving still, . news-cloyed; .. And 'mong other pernicious effects of this fighting, [...]
[...] their mutual interdependence—these are all inscrutable problems to baffle the wisest philosopher, and dismay the most arrogant thinker. Are they innate eidola, or merely intellectual secretions?. Are they conceived in a flash of instantaneous rapidity, or developed by a slow [...]
[...] If this were inserted merely with a view of terrifying that evil boy— why—let it pass. The suggestion that he is to be made to sing out elsewhere than in the choir is amiable. That he can sing there, and [...]
[...] THIs about completes the picture of the Modern Woman. She only wanted to be an Amazon to make her perfect. Merely to be a Wivan dière no longer satisfies her desires; merely to tend the sick and the wounded seems but a poor outlet for her masculine energies. She feels [...]
Punch07.01.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 07. Januar 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] them consolation in the circumstances, is what I dare not attempt. I think I told you that there was a philosopher over here some years ago who held, or, at least preached, that the soul, was merely glue... I suppose that Pigwiggin's, if he have [one, is more than usually sticky. [...]
[...] How happy, if only healthy, must be that man whose means are so ample that they require his conscience to remit so much as £20 for mere underpayment of Income-tax Of course, that sum is merely a single arrear. So conscientious a person as he must be (she is out of the question) could never have º: on long under [...]
[...] he does not know the “division” of a battle % further aileges, concerning Cassio, that “Mere prattle, without practice, Is all his soldiership.” [...]
[...] Army is so inconsiderable as not to admit the possibility of Generals of Division. The fact appears to be that Governments, whose cal culating powers were exerted in the direction of mere economy, have subjected it to a too extensive process of Reduction. [...]
[...] advertisements of sham sovereigns were only baits to catch birds of º: they probably discharged the advertisers, whose proposed sale of bad money was in reality merely a “sell” which imposed onl upon fools who were knaves as well, and very #. knaves indeed, although less knaves than fools. But it is’c eering to note that [...]
[...] of the Chamberlain's Office. PALGRAVE SIMPson. —If this gentleman could be cured of his love of mere boisterous fun, and a habit of introducing any wild scenes that may occur to him, regardless of the advance of the story, and, if he would aim at grâceful polish in dialogue, and eschew [...]
Punch08.02.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 08. Februar 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] lated, or edited any thing for the Stage. I am merely an occa sional playgoer, easy to please, mostly a [...]
[...] If I were writing beautiful poetry, and not plain prose, I should make "cleverly" chime with Beverley (I shall not be surprised to hear that it has been done already), not merely as a rhymical conve nience, but as a just and sincere compliment to the scenic artist of Drury Lane. If any wayfarers will adopt me as their theatrical [...]
[...] In the Regent's Park Garden?, where you have all been: Armadillo, Armadillo, he's armed like good fellows, In mere self-defence front the wild beast that bellows. His back is protected with armour of scale. And he runs about safe clad in that coat of mail, [...]
[...] HOW TO CHECK POACHING. Being a good sportsman, and not a mere game-butcher, Mr. Punch is pleased to see that the Farmers' Club at Hexham have passed a resolution that big battues are a nuisance which ought to be abated. [...]
[...] If every farmers' club in England had the sense to do the same, no doubt a good effect might be produced upon the game butchers. What is sport to them is death, not merely to the birds and animals they slaughter, but to the crops which these same birds and animals consume, and for which no compensation really compensates the farmer. Great game [...]
[...] covert, needs neither nerve nor skill, nor any quality of sportsmanship, and only lazy, idle fools can fancy that there is any pleasure in it. Then think at what a cost this pleasure is enjoyed. Not merely waste of crops, but waste of life is caused by it. Where hares and rabbits swarm, there poachers, too, abound; and labourers are tempted to [...]
[...] mensely so, likewise, is the serious assertion on the part of a woman that her waist was reduced from twenty-three to fourteen inches by mere compression without ever giving any cause for regret to the subject of that process. It is a parallel to the allegation in Swift's mock advertisement about the juggler, who allowed any gentleman to [...]
[...] further, and ask what the Spiritual Police, who are paid to direct wandering theologians, have been about in the district of the Peculiar People. These poor folks had to be told by mere lawyers that though they had read the Book right, they had read but a bit of it. It seems hard that simple people should have to be tried for their lives in order [...]
Punch11.01.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 11. Januar 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] ladies shall wear muffs with a sable or a marten on them, and of course the ladies bow to the imperative behest, and never dream of thinking of the deaths which it occasions. Merely to gratify " a fancy of the moment." sables, ermines, and martens are slaughtered by wholesale, and if the fashion did not change, would speedily be numbered with [...]
[...] Let us call her Biddy. Biddy will have it that we are all a set of hypocrites for saying that the Fenians who murdered Brett were hanged for mere murder. She insists that their punishment was a political execution. Biddy seems never to have asked herself whether, if the accomplices in rescuing [...]
[...] insists that their punishment was a political execution. Biddy seems never to have asked herself whether, if the accomplices in rescuing whom they shot a policeman, had been mere thieves, her Fenian friends would not have been certainly hanged all the same. Because the murder of Brett was committed on behalf of fellow- [...]
[...] would not have been certainly hanged all the same. Because the murder of Brett was committed on behalf of fellow- traitors instead of fellow-thieves, Biddy argues that it was the mere incident of a political act, and not murder at all at all. Killing is no murder when it is treason besides, according to Biddy. Treason makes [...]
[...] Government were to hang the confederates of Wilkes Booth! Then Biddy calls the hanging of the Manchester Fenians a political execution. If it was not a political execution, a merely political exe cution, why, asks Biddy, were soldiers stationed to guard the scaffold P Och, sure, not because it was a political execution, but only because it [...]
[...] And now, when good men, of all parties and creeds, Unite against doers of villanous deeds, How nobly, above the mere demagogue's view, He soars in denouncing that infamous crew! John Bright has a heart, and he is not ashamed [...]
[...] They deny us spirits—otherwise than as the United Kingdom Alliance would deny gin and whiskey to people sufficiently like ourselves to be content with mere water. Yet who knows that it is not our ghosts who rap the tables through which some persons think, with some reason, that they correspond with their deceased relativesP [...]
[...] prove to have been supra grammatical*—only a rather too exalted beneficence. But the enthusiastic recognition, in bad English, of a mere saving of rates, argues a stinginess not above bad grammar—a not too exalted stinginess. However, the gentlemen in question may indignantly deny that they [...]
[...] is it. He is fired with the professional enthusiasm of a British Naval Officer, who wants something to do. Perhaps that would suffice to keep him warm at zero. He can be actuated by nothing else but mere geographical curiosity. Sir, however, 1 respect that. I am no Philis tine, although I confess myself ^ Sybarite [...]
Punch06.02.1858
  • Datum
    Samstag, 06. Februar 1858
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] RothschMLD, upon hearing of the marriage of the PRINCEsse DE * * *, whb merely carries to her husband a dowry of 150,000 fr. a:year, was vºisibly affected, and after several sighs, exclaimed: “Poor children! twºo more victims to the folly of “Frugal Marriages!” [...]
[...] of the India Stock Proprietors; #. by a philanthropic concern for the welfare of the natives; but if their entreaties have been prompted y the mere desire of emolument, the success of those supplications may have contributed to the result which we witness in the revolt of the Sepoys. However, that catastrophe can be chargeable only in part [...]
[...] is open, and he proposes to give a whole group of people a certainty of literary immortality. The Editor, who, by the bye, should be ..more dignified, and, not let mere correspondents address him as “deal Editor,” and begin without homage to his valuable and widely-read º: been reading a lecture to all the shining lights of his [...]
[...] sphere. - - have his little jokes. And so, after quoting words far too solemn for more reference to them here than the mere mention that, they form one of HANDEL's choruses, (at which even the worldly stand up), the Editor dashes into peroration:— [...]
[...] THIRD was king, the harlequinade was some thing more than a mere series of tricks and tumbles. There was a [...]
[...] to run smooth. ...To frustrate their designs, and give protection to her favourites, the good fairy then gave Harlequin his magic wand and cap: the latter of which bestowed complete invisibility, while with the former he performed his tricks—not merely to surprise and please the audience, but to astonish and amuse the weak minds of his pursuers, and so gain time for a dance of delight upon escaping from them. [...]
[...] with them. He cuts a caper to remind us of some Cutlery establishment, and takes his leaps to show off the superior elasticity of some gutta percha leggings or new patent spring heeled boots. In short, his tricks degenerate to merely tricks of trade, and all the “comic business” of the good old harlequinade becomes a paid-for and a serious commercial matter. Moreovernow the “Unities” [...]
[...] have not anything to do. How to undersell? That’s the only question in the mind of any cheap and not, ºvernice, competitor. Of course, then, wages are regarded merely “from a business point of view,’ and the more they are cut down the better for the cutters. [...]
Punch30.08.1856
  • Datum
    Samstag, 30. August 1856
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] of the educated and governing classes. It is true that CELESTINA SoMNER escaped the gallows, but did not the Home Secretary hang MARTHA BRowN ? and if the former's crime was one of the most cruel murders on record, was not the offence of the latter mere man slaughter committed under the extenuating circumstances of extreme provocation? From one extreme the Government will of course run into the other, and the executioner, in that his [...]
[...] merely dealing with the pocket, and renouncing as hopeless, of, as in fact, unworthy of her attention, the heart and head of heretical Albion. [...]
[...] a curate. will have to do all your duty, whilst you will be secured from all censure for neglecting it, which would not be the case if you merely kept a curate at once without getting yourself suspended. [...]
[...] to whose inventions so much of their opulence is owing. If the chiefs of the Trade fail to do something for those poor people, they will not merely prove themselves to be thoroughly iron-hearted, but we shall [...]
[...] mere hog; and then the question will be whether the sainted BENNET [...]
[...] We are delighted to hear this, and have additional pleasure in offering a few suggestions calculated to have the desirable effect of precluding |any fence from getting defended, through mere accident, by the Society for Mutual Improvement of Marine Store Dealers. The Society does defend its members, charged with offences in their trade, on certain [...]
[...] mere clerical errors. [...]
Punch26.04.1862
  • Datum
    Samstag, 26. April 1862
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] upon the rich, we will suggest another basis on which Glasgow may rest its claim... It seems to have an appreciation for something better than mere trade, though that is a good thing too. We perceive by the Glasgow. Herald that there has been a large gathering, headed by one of the Members for the city, to do honour to an § and to pre [...]
[...] sense talked by the speakers, but had their orations been far worse than they were, the fact, that in a commercial metropolis, the chief men of the Synagogue are moved to assemble to do honour to a Mere Artist, would have been eloquent enough. But that it may be seen that Glasgow is quite in earnest in its art enthusiasm, and that this is [...]
[...] Artist, would have been eloquent enough. But that it may be seen that Glasgow is quite in earnest in its art enthusiasm, and that this is no mere sentimental spurt in favour of a friend, here is a bit from the speech of the excellent and accomplished SHERIFF BELL:— [...]
[...] My plans of progress all are undone y mere demands for self-defence. How I should like to rebuild London! And might, except for that expense. [...]
[...] one else, but improved upon a little bit by yourself, so as to enable you to swear it was your own. The PRIsoNER said he had merely whispered to a friend of his in the it that the water-scene in Colleen, Bawn had been repeatedly done §º. and was nothing new, when he was at once seized by the collar, [...]
[...] unfairness to brewers for sale. The private brewing-licence is a nomi nal tax, and will prove a source of nominal revenue. MR. GIADSTONE proposed it, and insists upon it, merely out of abstract regard to fiscal symmetry. This is a cheering indication. If he cannot bear the idea of a theoretical partiality in the pressure of the brewing-licence, how [...]
[...] We will not impute to MR. GLApstone the atrocious design of putting a stop to private brewing, and checking instead of encouraging the production of home-brewed beer. But he has, in mere pedantry, [...]
Punch05.01.1856
  • Datum
    Samstag, 05. Januar 1856
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] worth a controversy, costing as much as five thousand pounds. I may conceive hopes that what his forces may be unable to accomplish with their mere bayonets, they may succeed in effecting by poking ST, SERGIUs, ST. ALEXANDER NEwski, and other idols at our men: and it would be a fine thing if, under such an expectation, he were to [...]
[...] alarmed at seeing Englishmen still capable of expending money upon critics, in expounding his views upon the subject, really gives such very cogent reasons for his disapprobation of the performance, that we cannot leave them to mere local circulation. [...]
[...] The belt, sparkling with the pro mise of the effulgent horizon, was a mere prosaic way of announcing the dawn of Mr. Punch's Thirtieth Volume. [...]
[...] require horse-radish; may be matters of speculation; but in . at least, will be matters of speculation only whilst the living horse fetches a price so much higher than would be given for his mere carcase. Eating horse would be eating money indeed; and the slaughter of an animal worth perhaps three thousand pounds would [...]
[...] That to use a rope's end is not to flog is, certainly, to draw the line very fine somewhere. "º. say the Boston authorities, “is a technical naval act:” just as hanging is merely a legal formality. Flogging must be “inflicted with an instrument known as a ‘cat.” Now, a rope's-end is not a cat; it is not—and any Philadelphian lawyer [...]
[...] | lesque of King Jacky, And this idea Potts, with all the generosity of original genius, declared himself ready to share with KETTLEs, if KETTLEs, on his part, would merely supply the humour, wit, and fancy —the irony, the satire, and the sardonic qualities—necessary to insure the admiration and patronage of an enlightened British audience for [...]
[...] A PolicEMAN may be a very fair witness when he limits himself to a mere matter of fact, but he is seldom to be relied upon when he attempts to go through a process of reasoning, and offers the result as evidence. How can we reason but from what we know? is a very [...]
Punch05.09.1863
  • Datum
    Samstag, 05. September 1863
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] Qh, how lovely must she, To expect so much, bel But who prizes mere beauty's a goose. Like the plum's bloomy rime, 'Tis brushed off in no time, [...]
[...] “The Thames is a pretty enough river to pull down, and about Cliefden especially its scenery is lovely. But there is no view on the Thames that the Wye does not eclipse, and its beauties are not merely varied but continuous. You may travel down the Rhine and not see bolder cliffs than on the Wye at Symon's Yat, where you will be told to [...]
[...] . Here is a malefactor who, merely to get a few mushrooms for his dinner, does not hesitate to trespass on another man's land, and do damage to the amount of one penny' His only excuse for this act of [...]
[...] which you can turn to account by letting out to brother or sister Tourists who have forgotten to bring them. You will find the beds small and comfortable; and if otherwise, they will do for a mere night shift very well. A couch three feet wide, may, sometimes serve your turn, but when you do turn, you should, like the late DUKE of WEL [...]
[...] in this land, are experienced in any other. It is my firm opinion that Vesuvius and Etna are all humbug. The alleged Earthquake of Lisboa Iſregard as a mere fable, and have no more faith in that which is repre sented to have taken place at Manilla the other day. I have the same idea of tremendous hail-storms and thunder-storms, such as are con [...]
[...] JUDGEs and Barristers are now reduced to mere shadows, and the columns...º. the Reports are almost empty. There have been lately several “Running down” cases. This name is only applied by laics [...]
[...] The study of years To Lions devoted. A mere waste of time Too precious to squander! This type's the sublime - [...]
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