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Punch07.11.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 07. November 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] the trouble,” quite prohibits our §. that he has any thought of º: his instructress. Then, mark how finely he distinguishes etween mere º and really private people. Only in the latter case will he sit at table with the inmates. Nay, even here again his diffidence deserts him, and he imposes the condition that the table [...]
[...] MR. BALFE has just produced a new opera, with brilliant success. It is called The Rose of Castille, l\ut everybody knows this, and Punch alludes to the fact merely to mentiºn that some of the carrion-mongers who “burlesque” anything that is too good, unadulterated, for their vulgar patrons, are already preparing a theatrical nuisance to be called [...]
[...] cannot get the people into church, and therefore are obliged to ask them to come to the theatre, where will the attraction system stop? After a time, the mere novelty of seeing a minister of religion declaim § the spot where a few hours earlier a danseuse exhibited her skill, will fail to “draw.” It is not so very exciting to call your pew a [...]
[...] “It is, perhaps, important that it should be known that this is not a mere pri: vilege granted, but it is an absolute right. Formerly the Citizens of London had the right of hunting in the Royal forests, and it was then agreed that in lieu of [...]
[...] their hunting in the Royal forests, a certain amount of venison should be selt to the officers of the Corporation. Therefore, this was compounding a legal right which the officers of the Corporation possess. It is not a mere gift of the Crown; but it is a composition in lieu of an ancient right. (Ilear, Hear.)” [...]
[...] city keys had locks to them, there might have been some sense in handing them to royalty; but we regard the ceremony now as an effete superfluity, a piece of mere theatricalism which must annoy the QUEEN and, indeed, is only fit for the Princess's. Of course we shall be tol that the custom is an “ancient” one, and that loyalty and homage [...]
Punch23.01.1858
  • Datum
    Samstag, 23. Januar 1858
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] a milliner's girl, and go and live in a Welsh cottage, he can do it. But he wishes, to marry one of my daughters, who I, suppose are fair Fº of the society to which he belongs, I will merely mention that when he has set apart £90 a-year for house rent (he can live in no decent place for less), £50 a-year for her milliner and little expenses [...]
[...] to be in waiting on the young Black Prince of Delhi. The disarming of our soldiers we can readily believe, and we should fancy that the clubs which were exchanged to them for bayonets were mere panto Inlinic 'º. ” of cottonwool and canvas, constructed so as not |to hurt the poor dear darling Sepoys on whose precious heads and [...]
[...] tº: * º: º *. inal, Lord H f admitted to the Commons, what was to prevent their mounting to the ** As the duties o e Lord tºruvy are merely nominal, RD HARRowdy o - - - - - f course performed them satisfactorily, and Lond CLAS Rºcarpe will be equally, suc- §: l. º º: º º: ū tº sº...?: ‘.| cessful. The office exists indeed only as a pretext for placing in the Cabinet O rds might cry on, on 3, but ne (ºne ljuk QUI [...]
[...] Lord Privy Seal there is nothing to do, and that, therefore, LoRD i.º. º: º i. É. tº; g should CLANRICARDE is just the man to do it. When told that the place * j I * º: . lf .#. 1. . ñº QUARE exists merely as a pretext for getting an unburdened man of weight |. . th †. i. º * e º º ‘. º now into the Cabinet, they ought oft. also to accept the sequitur that };}} the Prime Alms #. i. k e Saw dis . id:". |. §§ of all men in the political as well as social world, whose “position, #. 20, !...º. *: . * à. º *. ...”. ips [...]
[...] almost justify the magistrate to impose five-shilling fines, without any further proofs of the condition of the writers. With patience and an eye-glass we have succeeded in deciphering some portion of the scrawls, and print it, merely as a sample of the ways in which our editorial good ºº:: is imposed upon, and as a proof of our great wisdom in putting no belief in anybody but ourselves as being capable of doing anything we want done : [...]
[...] hands. Now, instead of concealing the => - foot and ankle, they therefore display, not the ankle and foot merely, but half the leg to boot—with military, heels or otherwise. Perhaps this was a dodge of the Frenchwoman's, intended to obviate an objection [...]
Punch19.09.1863
  • Datum
    Samstag, 19. September 1863
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] gun by running up a con siderable bill at his Hotel. Now if you are a mere machine in the hands of MURRAY, your attention [...]
[...] our advice, you will not turn hout of your way to go there. There is merely a monastery to be seen, where dwell the Monks of La [...]
[...] * GERMANY-This country is bounded on every side by a lot of places, but that it has any connection with the German ocean is a mere German notion that must be at once dispelled. The male population are called Germans, the female, of course, Gerwomans; the rest of the family [...]
[...] from London to Constantinople, or any other distant spot. The Prussian dollar was, some time ago, of so little value as to be merely nia in the market. Hence the proverb, musically expressed by that ri-tooral Tourist, MR. PAUL BEDForp, in the words, “Mir my dollar /* [...]
[...] Could the foregoing story be believed by anybody but an ill-informed Protestant who thinks that the Pope and his flock worship images as such, instead of regarding them with a merely relative yeneration, for which, of images ºperating the same original, any one image would be as good as another? . . - [...]
[...] the pulpit ; and the Reverend MR. RoseLEAF might be listened to perhaps upon the sinfulness of waist-pinching, whereas a deaf ear would be turned to a mere medical adviser. The example of the EMPREss would, however, be more heeded even than a sermon; and if EugéNIE succeeds in abolishing tight lacing, she will earn the lasting gratitude [...]
Punch16.12.1865
  • Datum
    Samstag, 16. Dezember 1865
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] fill up the inside of his articles with sand, solder, MR, HADFIELD's lead, MR. Roebuck's brass, or anything he pleases. That, however, is a mere case of caveat emptor, to which Mr. Punch, as President of the Customers' Protection Society, incidentally calls attention, himself expecting many presents this Christmas. But what [...]
[...] OBODY'S BUSINESS.–Nobody has any business to be without a copy of Punch's famous Almanack. To take merely a glance at it will strengthen a weak mind, ald refresh even a strong one; while carefully to read the wit and wisdom it contains will be “a liberal education." [...]
[...] and distinguished brother should be put into, small type, while the letters of excited and rampant fanatics, and their ridiculous verses, should be accorded all the honours of prominence, was merely so much more provincialism and bad taste, º that the sister should be dis missed with a sneer proved, very needlessly, that the Morning Star is [...]
[...] for by the work secured for us in the Probate and Divorce Court. The British jury, with the natural sympathies of respectable men, look merely at the wrong done by the plaintiff to the defendant and her parents in a breach of promise case as a matter of damages in pounds, shillings, and pence. appily, they do not consider whether he would [...]
[...] has led landlords to increase their rent. This is of course mere drivel. But it is not only the farmers who are interested. All who want to eat cheap food [...]
[...] sparse sowing, and liberal manuring, are the means whereby at Tiptree corn has sprung out Of a bog; and the result of MR. Mechi's experiments, in , farming has been elsewhere widely followed with infinite success. It is, indeed, “mere drivel” to contend that rents are raised where bad land is made good, and that therefore MR. MechI is an enemy to farmers, who, but for his experiments, would [...]
Punch27.08.1859
  • Datum
    Samstag, 27. August 1859
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] always are on Sundays. All we do on Sunday is, to go to church, and dine, and go to church, and go to bed. §. occupations we have nationally none, excepting when we cut our throats for the mere sake of amusement. Of course every English reader knows how false are these impressions, [...]
[...] and of confidence in, Punch. His Lordship said the claims of Punch were so well known, that no one but a spoon or a Spoon ER was not conscious of them. (Hear!) Were he to mention, for example, how often Punch had saved the country, he should merely be repeating what everybody knew: and though, as Premier, it was his place to be a watch }. the House, there, in this case was no need for him to act as a repeater. (A laugh.) He [...]
[...] ‘wits' would cut it short: but so far from people wishing that Punch should be cut short, every one who knew him longed to see him longer. Besides voting him their confidence, which was a mere matter of course, the nation therefore plainly should present Punch with [...]
[...] The gun, and friendly fishmonger PIMM, seem alike to have been let off without other notice, so no more upon that score; and Mr. Punch will merely make PolicEMAN SMITH, K 253, º life by con; H gratulating him on not going with his Oculus Er. His inspector will translate this to him. [...]
[...] Case ! Čieu º you may notoriously buy that in albata for eightpence, in silver for half-a-crown, in gold, for a few shillings more. A paltr Pencil-Case! Why, the mere subscriptions screwed out of the ballet §: Fivº something better than that to a beloved manager. A Pencil ase! As hath been said, how the painters must writhel [...]
[...] the Athenaeum wished to sneer at a graceful act of artist-homage, not perceiving that had the present been a mere cure-dent (which the Athenaeum would probably have translated “a dentist”) or a couple of wrist-studs, the homage would have been equally honouring, and that [...]
PunchPunch's Almanack for 1860
  • Datum
    Sonntag, 01. Januar 1860
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] off by a fashionable Frenchman, may, like wise, be compared to a “Feu d'Artifice,” the artifice being merely the transparency of a false flame; and so ridiculously trans #. that every young lady, who has [...]
[...] MY DEAR, she's A MERE CHILD-A MERE Child " [...]
[...] from their advertisements, there is very little doubt that their profession pays them. Yet their judgments, after all, are mere matters of guesswork. They base them, as the gipsies do, on the mere pretence of [...]
Punch19.06.1858
  • Datum
    Samstag, 19. Juni 1858
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] It is clear that ship-building is merely in its cradle. The Yankees are determined not to be outreached by the Leviathan. We are informed that, at New York, they are building a ship so tremendously [...]
[...] THE Ethiop has seized the Rºsa Caeli, while in the possession of a cargo of kidnapped negroes. The French Naval Commander com plains of the seizure. The case is one of mere tit for tat. The Regina Coeli had first seized the Ethiop. [...]
[...] We are surprised the Government Gazette does not assure us, that all is tranquil in the Kingdom of his most Catholic Majesty—that the fires of Ottaviano and Resina are mere feur-de-joie on the occasion of BoMBA's last defiance of MALMEsBURY—or that, if there have been any trifling internal disturbance, it is entirely due to the pestilent [...]
[...] MR. Osborn E was evidently meant by nature for something better than a mere Minister. A junior lordship of the Punch treasury is vacant. We offer him the post : his salary will begin at £30,000 a-year, with an official residence at 85, Fleet Street: he may do worse: he [...]
[...] Assizes. It is not, however, true that the Scottish clerical body contains so large a propor tion of rogues, as to necessitate a distinct gaol-delivery to its own cheek. These Assizes are held not merely for the purpose of trying cases of clerical delinquency, but also for that of deciding on objections made, under the Scotch Beneficies Act, to presentees. The objections in question appear to be sometimes of a somewhat absurd character. “Great [...]
[...] You vote for the Jews; Ope the house to the nation's Mere paupers and snobs, Whose qualifications Will go in their fobs. [...]
Punch23.01.1864
  • Datum
    Samstag, 23. Januar 1864
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] most signal success. The two sharp-sighted seers into the middle of next week agree on most points, especially those of the compass, and there is but one little difference between them, and that is merely nominal, for whereas Mons. MATHIEU is the meteorological Prophet of the Drôme, ADMIRAL FitzRoy may be called the Prophet of the Drum. [...]
[...] know, what he means;, and scandalous story be present with you, as becometh men gifted with we also find it difficult, to the talent of duly appreciating the science of health. ... reconcile the facts that I pass over Dessert, a mere barbarous excrescence which, I take it, PAssMoRE EDWARDs cannot will disappear with the last bottle of the “Fine Qld Crusted.” My spell, and that there are so, Christian dinner-eaters, what is this Dessert?. Why does it yet hold [...]
[...] leisure to prepare and ponder over their next year's election speeches. The toils of hunting, shooting, fishing, and other highly necessary senatorial occupations, are of course, we know, of far superior importance to any mere political study or employment; and we are aware that many Members consider they best do their duty to their country by living out of town, and out of troublesome Saint Stephen's, [...]
[...] we shall, in point of Parliament, regard him as a cherub, and would give little for his chance of getting a seat there. Unthinking º possibly may argue, that these matters are mere London subjects, and that country candidates will not be bored about them. But Punch hereby gives notice that he will not give his support to any candidate who shirks the test-points he has mentioned: and any [...]
[...] to turn a bad man into a savage, and a good one into an idiot. There addition to all the usual objections that have been urged to solitary have been philanthropists who have gone so far even as to denounce it punishment, here is the fresh one furnished by MR. FALCONER, that it as a prolonged murder, the mere withering a man to death, by which may eyen be considered an enjoyment. However, let us be just to him. society indulges in a brutal revenge upon a criminal instead º endea. He intends the whole affair as a joke, and its chief originality, consists, [...]
[...] vouring to bring him to some sense offiis misconduct. Whether these not merely in its requiring two hours and a-half for utterance, but in its | [...]
Punch28.11.1863
  • Datum
    Samstag, 28. November 1863
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] to what it is my duty to do. 1 feel crushed and bewildered. Mr. N. Consult your family, Madam? What do you mean by that? I have merely to inform you that if your family takes the liberty of intruding its impertinence upon me, I shall make very short work with your family, MRs. NAGGLEton. [...]
[...] TAKE a robin's leg, Mind, the drumstick merely: Put it in a tub, Filled with water nearly. , [...]
[...] he might 'ave 'ad a castle in the 'air.” The Legend of the Castle of Unspunnen is a very touching one, and will be sung to you by any peasant for a mere song. The following is a translation adapted to the well-known and once exceedingly popular air, Willikins and his Dinah: [...]
[...] -from the banging of your guns. If mere rapidity in killing be con sidered as “good sport,” why don't you use blunderbusses in the lieu of common fowling-pieces, and have your hares and rabbits penned up [...]
[...] extend their paraphrasing, and talk of “fatal chalices” where they mean common pewter pois. Such poetry is ap! to put a stage gloss upon criminals, and to make us view their villanies as merely stage effects. Many a man would shrink from murder, who, were it simply called a tragedy, might feel a smaller dread of acting in it; and to our [...]
[...] on speaking of a murder as a tragedy, they will soon talk of a murderer as simply a tragedian; and an act that should excite the deepest feelings of abhorrence, may in time be merely viewed as a theatrical performance, and if carried through with cleverness, as not unworthy of applause. [...]
Punch08.12.1855
  • Datum
    Samstag, 08. Dezember 1855
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] however, a precedent for taking little heed of kings. At the Congress of Erfurt, the §. of FRANCE and Russia, on their arrival at the theatre, were each saluted with three rolls of the drums: mere j. had only two. We are told that the officer, deceived by the outside splendour of he King of Wurtemberg's carriage, was about to, order [...]
[...] pickles, periodicals, greengrocery, baby jumpers or perambulators? Is it a safe House, or a cheap and dirty House? Is it respectable, or merely ashabby-genteel House that gives dismal evening parties, where you can get nothing but Marsala and ham-sandwiches? As yet, we only know that the House is to be Sold in Three Wols, and as we have [...]
[...] about his House, excepting that the valuation modestly put upon it is lls. 6d., we are not very likely to become tenants or visions of his. |The agents for selling the House (whether it consists merely of one story, or several stories, we are not told) are Messrs. Hurst AND Blackett; but we believe any one can become a day-tenant upon the [...]
[...] not with any great idea that the proposals will be accepted, but to win dicate an industrious Opposition from the suspicion (natural enough, certainly) of having put into circulation a mere falsehood. [...]
[...] - - - - - - these compliments being paid to our Allies, but we merely point out the tº: º: tºº, tº: }}}.}: fact, that # Sweden º: with us (as we are told it will), if, Austria which seems to have escaped the learned counsel's memory, the time should become our ally (as we hope it will not), and if Prussia should * [...]
[...] must be invulnerable! The Cossack, who on the battle-field feels he has Cobden or GLAbstone by his side to defend him, is sure, by the mere force of inspiration, to perform prodigies of valour! [...]
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