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Punch16.01.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 16. Januar 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] A problem in molecular mechanics' ... If Conscience be but chemic combination, And Love a mere molecular affinity; - What boots all Life's superfluous botheration Qf mad and painful dreams, that limn Divinity [...]
[...] in the Second Act. It is the success of the piece, and it is a genuine artistic triumph. Could the management even now suppress the opera, and merely play this great Ballet Scene, it, alone, would be sufficient to attract all sight-seers and admirers of gorgeous spec tacle from now till Whitsuntide. The costumes are unprecedentedly [...]
[...] affords another example of the difficulty ºf finding the actress and the vocalist combined. Charming as a finished singer, she is, at present, a mere amateur in acting. But this deficiency can be, to a certain extent, remedied by careful study, under judicious guidance. Both for acting and singing it would be difficult to find a better [...]
[...] But to turn frºm their dash to their relative's stealth, Set her beggar's parade in the teeth of their wealth, Might be called a mere mockery of woe. [...]
[...] 44 horsey,” so I say in an off-hand manner. ... “Well, he’s not very young.” MURGLE, who, I thought, would have told me exactly, merely coughs, looks more stupid than usual, and says, “No, he ain't not azackly young.” - I am annoyed and disappointed with MURGLE. His business is, [...]
[...] Quite so. That's all satisfactory. I really don't care about .* as to his soundness... I know what I should say if I were selling.him. I look upon all questions as to soundness as mere formalities. The price is the point. CHALVEY wants twenty-five guineas. [...]
[...] “Speaking to them rarely, but confidently of his accession to the throne.” Not improbably his companions may have treated these expectations of the Prince's as so many castles in the air—mere #. en Espagne, which, however, at the present time, seem .# to turn out more substantial structures than such edifices [...]
Punch02.03.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 02. März 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] subject unless there is an object to be gained by his doing so. [Many of his well-meaning correspondents do not quite understand this, but his Millions do, and appreciate his occasional º He merely records, as a Parliamentary incident that Lond JoHN MANNERs pro. oses to fill up the Ornamental Lake, so as to leave it a depth of four [...]
[...] fanatic as he must be, can never have meant to accuse them of employ ing material weapons in religious discussion. By broken-up chairs this perverse Protestant merely intends, in a clumsy figure of speech, to signify the usual arguments which Roman Catholics are wont to rest F. refuted long ago, as he thinks in his prejudiced stupidity. Instead [...]
[...] of using violence to convert their adversaries, the devout Irishmen, of course, betook themselves to intercession; and his assertion that they shouted for half-an-hour is founded on a mere misapprehension of the fact, that, during all that space of time, they were reciting prayers. In the conclusion of his story, however, there is no doubt too much that [...]
[...] present at the controversy between #. heretics and the true believers at Wºº. countenanced, the police in apprehending the champions of the faith on the merely specious pretence that they were actually fighting for it. [...]
[...] Merely copying, or cribbing, an original design is an offence not much worth mentioning—at least in English Law Courts. If a paper monger copied the cartoons in Punch, and printed them in colours to [...]
[...] Drawing-room. Ladies all in full grand toilet. I feel inclined to apologise, but getting near FRIDOLINE SYMPERson ſº is superior to mere outward show, and looks lovely with her silky golden hair— it used to be darker—and thin dark eyebrows) I tell her how I abominate evening dress, and what a comfort it is to be in an easy [...]
[...] She has gone before I can reply. Is it possible that * * Is she * * * I wonder * * because * * * if I only thought that she * * * I should like to know if she meant * * * or was it merely * * * * and yet " * * Happy Thought.—I will. [...]
Punch09.03.1861
  • Datum
    Samstag, 09. März 1861
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] make a fraudulent defence will generally make a false affidavit, and besides, if he happens to have any conscience, his attorney will remove his scruples by assuring him that the affidavit is mere matter of form, and indeed, more reasonably, by asking him how he knows whether a defence is or is not good in law. hy, judges defend the plea of [...]
[...] the performance of the waltz being accompanied by the liberation of the fumes of the stew. It has long been objected to the lighter kinds of music, that they merely captivate the public ear. Now, being per fumed whilst they are played, they will also lead people by the nose. [...]
[...] in this world, and must be taken to mean an advantage to be conferred in the other; remission, for so long, of purgatorial pains. In short, the indulgence, if it were not a mere humbug, would entitle the holder to a discharge from the prison of purgatory, so many years before, in the regular way, his term of imprisonment would expire. [...]
[...] When old Brown Bess her purpose suited, The Queen of Weapons then reputed, The Rifles were a mere Brigade them, Because we thought of little but trade them; But now each man has his Enfield Rifle, [...]
[...] once: whereas Ifancy one would go a dozen times or more to see the ever varying fun of a Grimaldi. But while a Pantomime is treated merely as a peg whereon to hang some splendid scenery, both the author and the actor are slighted and discouraged. The blaze of gas eclipses the sparkle of their wit, and their invention is destroyed by [...]
[...] unlocked garden-gates invitingly lie open to them. Whatever it may be, the comic waiting-maid is always mistress of the situation, and is not merely the confidante but mistress of her mistress. It is by her permission only that her ‘young lady” makes love, and either encou rages to hope, or drives her lover to distraction. Nor ought any one [...]
[...] cared very much whether he concurred with them or not, but he was entirely of their opinion, and thought that it would be a bad precedent to confer a peerage upon a gentleman merely because he possessed an old house in which one of ift: British sovereigns had been killed. SIR MAURICE BERKELEY said, that if that lubber meant to insinuate [...]
Punch04.05.1861
  • Datum
    Samstag, 04. Mai 1861
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] attempt too much. They risk their necks as extraordinary acrobats, and turn out to be mere tumblers. [...]
[...] position over the altar of the Jesuits’ oratory, where it stands to be worshipped. Yes; to be actually and absolutely worshipped, not merely venerated as a memorial, but specially adored as an image dis tinct from other images. So official authority itself declares in the following courageous assertion:— [...]
[...] had the misfortune to be bitten by a viper, would have been obliged considerably to augment the strength of his customary potion; would have had to heighten it much above proof. Mere Cognac would never have sufficed him as it did that countryman of his who, being recommended a bottle of brandy for a bad leg, [...]
[...] We’re ready when we’re called on, To take the field—I know: And though mere babes in arms, we’ll try A brush with any foe. But betwixt us and the foemen, [...]
[...] much to be wondered that it threw her in a flutter, and, had there been anything to gain by it, she would no doubt have tried to faint. But I had previously explained that hysterics were prohibited by the Census Act of Parliament; and, as I was merely acting as the proxy for the Government, she must look to them, not me, to give her a new bonnet for telling them the truth. Her occupation. I described as that of “Wife of my Buzzum, and Keeper of [...]
[...] it calls forth. Still I can’t believe the Strand would have ever been blocked up with Colleen cabs as it has been, or that by wish of the Police the doors need have been opened sooner than their wont, merely on account of this one aquatic feat. I am more inclined to think that play-goers have been pleased by the care, and the completeness where [...]
[...] one chosen by Her Majesty should have been pronounced the most elegant and most characteristic of the exquisite taste exhibited by Parisian artists, amongst them all. . We have been informed that the mere adjusting of the dress on the night of the ball occupied the space of three quarters of an hour, as the placing of the bouquets and diamonds on the skirt cannot be accomplished until the dress is on [...]
Punch05.05.1877
  • Datum
    Samstag, 05. Mai 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] delightful odour. Fancy that of the Works! - . A background to the site of the proposed Sewage-Manure Works is formed of mere rows of trees coming out in leaf. Would not DR; Johnson have been right in saying that a grove of chimneys in a place like that was better than any grove of trees? Particularly [...]
[...] § \\,, The EARL of CARNARVoN, most laborious, well-meaning, and clear-headed of - - Colonial Ministers, introduced his skeleton South African Confederation Bill. It is the mere framework of a permissive measure, under whose dead ribs the Colonial Legislatures may, if they will, breathe a soul, by turning the Bill's “mays” into “shalls.”. The problem before the Colonial Office is not an º one-how to combine into a harmonious, well-guarded, and well-governed whole, the motley mixture of Dutch Settlements º olonies, and Native States now dividing [...]
[...] a Palace Green Parliament-House, to the delight of cynics and the shame of intelligent and civilised men. If Home-Rule means merely Local Self-Government, it can be given under that name. If it means Repeal of the Union—as it does mean in the minds of its sincerest supporters—it cannot be [...]
[...] The Newspaper Proprietor. Hor rible! It's merely butchery by thou sands and thousands. [...]
[...] a horse driven without bearing-reins. Their use is a mere matter of senseless fashion. No good coachman uses bearing-reins for a horse from which he desires to get the full amount of work, or which he desires to leave at ease. [...]
[...] fashion. No good coachman uses bearing-reins for a horse from which he desires to get the full amount of work, or which he desires to leave at ease. Their employment is, indeed, merely a senseless fashion, which has abso lutely nothing to recommend it; and in favour of abolition, there are reasons so many and decided that we hope that not many years will pass before they [...]
[...] IL était un Hébreu de Hambourg, CINQ fois veuf, il a cinq belle-mères, [...]
Punch10.01.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 10. Januar 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] an acquaintance being “jolly drunk,” the first of these two adjectives | becomes a prefix of intensity, and denotes a something more than merely positive state of tipsiness. In some cases, too, the entire word is merged, and another substituted; as, for example, when we wish to describe a man as being something more than a positive nuisance, we [...]
[...] OF ALL Foolish THINGS, THR MERE PUN IS PERHAPs The Most Foolish.-Now, HERE's A FELLow (PROBABLY A MEMBER of THE ST-ce. Exch—NGE) who, IN SPITE of BIS REALLY PERILous CoNDITION, says: “THAT HE CAME ouT FOR A [...]
[...] it supplies HER MAJESTY's subjects respecting the personal and private acts of HER MAJESTY and her illustrious Consort. For instance, one day last week, the whole of the intelligence, not merely public, relative | to the QUEEN and PRINCE ALBERT, was comprised in the two following | scraps—highly interesting and important, to be sure, but still two [...]
[...] º ºğll Here is positively an alleged PAOLOWERONESE º º ſº , as we may say, a-begging—at least, offered º §§§ | or the mere song of a thousand eas—and ſ º the authorities of the National Gallery do not [...]
[...] to undergo an alteration. Some propose to call it Duke's Place, for a twofold reason; namely, because it has been engrossed and appro priated by a person, who, although a mere, baronet, has, in that pro ceeding, assimilated himself to certain Scotch Dukes; and also because the baronet in question º be regarded as one of the Duke's Place [...]
[...] Plymouth, Devonport, and Stonehouse will subscribe abundant funds for the prosecution of Sir Mºses for a nuisance, if that injury can be called a mere nuisance which consists in, depriving the inhabitants of three towns of a large portion of their “lungs.” [...]
[...] - S º in their sanitary, operations, having, spent upwards of ŞSS N N £40,000, incurred debts, become insolvent, and had their - SNN § - works seized by their creditors, on whose mere will and SSN §N pleasure now depends the water supply, and nearly all S$ § N the drainage of the town. The venturous energy of the [...]
Punch06.09.1873
  • Datum
    Samstag, 06. September 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] Raze those proud walls to the ground, Churls in authority; dol What are, but names of mere sound, HowARD and PERCY to you ? [...]
[...] Now there are many passenger duties which are not merely not obnoxious, but, are eminently proper; and yet how many persons travel ‘.... railway without giving them a thought. By [...]
[...] THE STALWART BROTHERs DICK AND Bob TURN THEIR PUBLIC ScHool, AND College EDUCATION To Good Account BY TAKING THEIR NEwly-MARRIED WIVEs (THE GENTLE SISTERs, BLANCHE AND WIoIET) on A WALKING Tour THROUGH THE MIDLAND Counties. LADEN IN THE MANNER we HAVE TRIED To DEPICT, THESE BRAWNY SONs of ANAK Look Upon THIRTY MILEs A DAY As A MERE [...]
[...] Godfathers and godmothers have now nothing to do for their spiritual children, that they possibly can, spiritually. Their office would be a mere sinecure if it were lucrative as well as nominal, and did not, on the contrary, involve doing, something attended with expense. Those who give other people's children names, are [...]
[...] the quantity of coals which would be large enough to supply half-a- dozen people or so with heat. All the clothing necessary for that purpose, merely, is reducible to things which cost much less than £15; and the considerable difference between their price and that sum goes for mere ostentation. Dear are the dictates of Society. [...]
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 [...]
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