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145 Treffer
Suchbegriff: Anger

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PunchBd. 011 1846
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. Januar 1846
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] of birds flew past me ; but they flew so high, it was impossible for me to discern if there were any canaries among them. And here—I must confess it—I felt some anger towards the respected principals of my Blackheath Boarding-School. I have said that I was nominally taught the Use of the Globes; my learning was down in the bill, and [...]
[...] patience—a word expressive of the fidgets. Both ER means trouble, irritation, teasing, vexation. It is a word of petulant anger in great request. “Don’t bother me" is equivalent to the French “tu m’embétes.” LovE is only used when coaxing is required, as “Do ; there's a [...]
[...] been born and bred, and whence it had been found impossible to release him without taking off the roof of his domicile. We wandered up, more in sorrow than in anger, towards the Edge ware Road, and had not gone very far when we heard, in advance of us, a laugh of frantic derision from the populace. On looking before [...]
[...] He would not embitter a leave-taking day, Nor send an old Dragon in anger away; He sees the Mint's order that bids them depart, And he presses the brute to his sorrowful heart. [...]
PunchBd. 010 1846
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. Januar 1846
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] Sterne-like conclusion we had just arrived, when we received a tap from that pink of polite ness, the Policeman—if anything can be called the pink when it is perfectly blue—who observed, in a tone of sorrow rather than of anger: “Come, sir, this is against the orders—you must move on, if you please.” We were so rivetted to the spot, that we did not stir, when he pulled us down and conducted us away from the hoarding. We need not say that we went away, [...]
[...] Ye foremoste honteres wroughtey" spotte In hopelesse angere sunke, To fynde,-sole relic of yº stagge,_ Hysaunciente hayrie trunke. [...]
[...] remember that “forty centuries were looking down upon them from the manoeuvres with a mixture of good humour and firmness Pyramids;” one of those very fine things that the world has consented that was truly laudable, K25 seemed to carry out the orders to receive as fine, without troubling itself to analyse their meaning. of his superiors, in sorrow rather than in anger; and, the [...]
[...] “Well I know,” said ABD-EL-KADER, “That, if ta'en, I should be smok'd : Yet your hasty father's anger, Damsel, I have oft provok'd. [...]
PunchBd. 028 1855
  • Datum
    Montag, 01. Januar 1855
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] may, it seems, be no joke at all for anybody but the recipients of,the various fees, which may form the crushing penalty of a little burst of humour. An unfortunate young gentleman excited, not long ago, the anger of the Court by attempting to pay his addresses to one of its wards: and, as Chancery allows no liberties with its young ladies, the would-be wooer was deprived of his own liberty, as a terrible [...]
[...] infinitely beneath the episcopal? Are the hands which have once wielded the adze, and the axe, and the saw, and the plane, and the gouge, and the chisel, and the anger, and the gimlet, and the centre-bit, to be for ever debarred from grasping the crosier? Is the brown paper cap exchangeable on no conditions for the mitre? It was not so at the [...]
[...] have observed the extreme fastidiousness with which he selects his dentifrices, and the mode in which he rows the perfumers, if stupid, would not again assert that he never smelt powder in anger. Such are the men who are ridiculed and despised by a plebeian press and public for their exertions in putting down the Nineveh Nuisance. [...]
PunchBd. 014 1848
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Januar 1848
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] accent, go up to Colonel the HoNour ABLE OTTo DILLwATER of the Guards, and make some dreadful remark about Louis FEELIP, which caused the Colonel to turn pale with anger. I saw a Bishop, an Under Secretary of State, and GENERAL DE Boots, listening with the utmost gravity and eagerness to little BOB NoDDY, who pretended to have [...]
[...] The Emperor Vulture of the North, from his Carpathian height Looked with a restless anger on that stern but short-lived fight; And uneasily kept pacing his eyrie to and fro, And spread his broad black wing to hide from his brood what passed below. [...]
[...] the place)—and no argument has hitherto convinced the Duke that that copper half-crown was not put off by a guileful man of the Hebrew persuasion. His Grace, to keep his anger warm, has had that bad half-crown nailed to his dressing-table; and every morning shaves with one eye upon his wrongs. [...]
PunchBd. 009 1845
  • Datum
    Mittwoch, 01. Januar 1845
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] administered an oath, winding up with the most impressive words, delivered by the worthy Baron with a most searching glance at GIBBs, and an accent of sorrow rather than anger. The words in question were-“Michael Gibbs, deliver your accounts as a good accountant ought to do.” Then somebody read a warrant of [...]
[...] Surely, any one of these gentlemen will naturally be angry if found out and pronounced to be an impostor. “BuckINGHAM is so angered. He speaks after his fashion. He bawls out rogue, forger, impostor. He says you are a malignant attack—a disgusting exhibition, that nobody will be safe from you without buying a [...]
[...] joke? Regard the long-eared animal to which he has been compared. He prefers a thistle to a peach. To express his griefs or joys, his loves or anger, he has but his heehaw, and brays softly or loudly as nature prompts him. When he lifts up his voice, other far-off donkeys catch up the strain, and echo the peal. [...]
PunchBd. 023 1852
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. Januar 1852
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] be fetched to a party at the ARCHBishop of CANTERBURY's—or that my father had written to me, commanding me, under pain of his per petual anger, to wait his arrival, as he had some painful news for me— or all three excuses together—must look first at me, and then at MRs. Gittings, and then smile, and then look at all of us, and finally [...]
[...] “But now for the Truth. Alas! my very dear Sir, it is, in the first lace, from your heretics all over the continent, from them alone, that anger is threatened to human liberty. The freedom of mankind is menaced #. that debasing despotism, calling itself a faith, of which the supreme Head is MR. SUMNER. This *:: and intolerant pseudo [...]
[...] will the innocent DB. CAHILL, not in anger but in good faith, bite at Quaker's drab? [...]
PunchBd. 019 1850
  • Datum
    Dienstag, 01. Januar 1850
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] if you were hustled, Policeman X. would stand by you; and you compli ment the Lord Chief Justice, who would give you a fair trial. Only, if you hear a shout of defiance and anger from one end of the country to the other, do not, most reverend and dear Sir, express a wonder at hearing it. If we cry out, it is, because we feel ourselves [...]
[...] us, and consign §. souls of our race and people, of our dearest and best beloved, to hopeless perdition? You do all this—you have the Truth absolute, and can’t do otherwise—and then you wonder at the anger of Englishmen, and that what you call a death-whoop is raised about your ears. - [...]
[...] [Looking at Moody, who scowls. Gave me a poke enough to stir the fire Of anger in my breast—you call us bears. You’re not far out in one respect, at least; For what we bear, bears out the name you give us. [...]
Punch or The London charivari (Punch)Bd. 005 1843
  • Datum
    Sonntag, 01. Januar 1843
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] allude, of course, to the public press—that is attached to it. But if we have been irritated on other occasions, where shall we find bounds to our anger now t If we have written in gall before, we ought now to dip our pen in the essential oil of vitriol. Put arms into the hands of the Chelsea pensioners, forsooth ! Why, it [...]
[...] much of the fluid was an average dose 2" ingeniously replied, “Thrippunce a pint;" and then inquired “whether we liked it with the chill off ” For an instant we turned away in anger, imagining that the youth took advantage of our defenceless position in such a wild region of solitude, to insult us. But we must do him the justice to say, however, that con [...]
[...] The sins of the age ; Then, instead of making too much of a din, Let Anger be mute, And sweet Mercy dilute, With a Drop of Pity, the Drop of Gin [...]
PunchBd. 022 1852
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. Januar 1852
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] They hate us, Brother JonATHAN, those tyrants; they detest The island sons of liberty, and freemen of the West; It angers them that we survive their savage will to stem; A sign of hope unto their slaves—a sign of fear to them. [...]
[...] Not much restrain’d by laws: You’ll then reflect with comfort, that, His anger to avert, You did whatever you could do, By truckling in the dirt [...]
PunchBd. 020 1851
  • Datum
    Mittwoch, 01. Januar 1851
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] How many lose their temper! SMITH, of the fiery brain, Bids Hobson of the overcoat “not to do that again.” Pitt, of the Poncho wrapper, with anger in his look Darts lightning in the savage face of guinea tweeded Cook. Edwards, the bunion-martyred, protests with dismal groans [...]
[...] 300 years, and under which the Cardinal was marching upon our country. For this is amongst the consequences of religious debate: it separates brethren; estranges parent and child; parts dear friends; angers and embitters honest, hearts. By JupiteRAMMON, Sir, rather than have lost our friend the Professor of Mediaeval Design, I would have foregone a bench of Bishops and a whole conclave of Cardinals—the Pope can make those any º [...]
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