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Punch21.11.1874
  • Datum
    Samstag, 21. November 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] “No Casualty is reported.” The Representatives of the Press not having as yet arrived on the spot where the accident took place. “The Accident was not serious.” Only half a dozen railway officials killed and wounded. • “The Accident was caused by unavoidable circumstances.” [...]
[...] EDITH in things of this sort, so I got my basket, and off we went. The fair was held in a regular street of booths, which had been built on purpose, and was about a mile and a half or two miles long, and it certainly was a good place for MIss EDITH's business, for it had in it a good manythings that People might want, and pretty [...]
[...] they were quite different, were called “Au Choix.” Some of the au choix were sold at two sous, and some at a franc, and some at a franc and a half a piece, but they were all called “Au Choir.” MISS EDITH was so busy with her shopping, and I was, so busy packing what she bought into the basket, that I didn’t find time to [...]
[...] ontrez. All this, I believe, meant that his master would draw a tooth for half a franc. Just as the man on the coach-box had done blowing his master's trumpet, for a few minutes, and was blowing his own to attract [...]
[...] tooth-drawing is too expensive. It is a luxury for the rich! This man appeals to the millions-he puts his wonderful art at the service of the crowd for half a franc, and see how they flock to him !” I might have known before I turned round that the fat voice could only come from, BLATHERWICK, C.B. Nobody else would have [...]
[...] of this town with the numbers counted by you, we shall be able to get the *# of the people in France who would be tempted to have their teeth out once or twice for half a franc. We are on the eve of a great discovery, so pray be careful!” Then he and MIss, EDITH went away, and left JoHN and me face [...]
[...] ARAGo was of such a drowsy disposition that, to keep him wide awake while pursuing his researches, his wife was forced to pull his whiskers once in every half-hour, 's the piano with all her might and main when she saw him nodding. It is probable that CICERO would never have been famous, but for [...]
[...] There is reason to suppose that the petitions for the above specified objects will have been signed by at least half of the Peterborough electors. £ t Peterborough to send two Members to Parliament when Colney Hatch does not contribute one? The promoters of an idiotic [...]
[...] rate. as £ would say, “there is trouts,” in the Itchen-and, by the way, “there is salmons” too, the Wood Mill" salmons.” (cost half-a-crown a£ on the spot), which Southampton gets from the £ but would not get if it got what Winchester might have Sent it. [...]
Punch13.05.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 13. Mai 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] of women to be let alone and live quietly should be set at nought for the sake of a small set of demonstrative talkers. Some of them he half believed to be men in women's clothes. He thought the #ººuld demand the photographs of the women who wanted 1s - [...]
[...] DR. Lyon PLAYFAIR held that real “politics,” separate from party, was the science of governing, and we had no right to shut out from it half the population. He disapproved of the definition of woman's mission as being that of “making life endurable.” . MR, HENRY JAMEs strongly assailed the Bill. He denied the [...]
[...] ANYRopy who wishes to oblige, Mr. Punch will go to the Duke of WELLING ToN's Riding School at Knightsbridge, where there is to be a great Fancy Bazaar this week, supported by half the Lady Peers, and will select some exceed .# charming object from one of the stalls, of course paying whatever is asked by the exceedingly charming vendor. . The fortunate, purchaser [...]
[...] tude, perhaps, and a feeling of increased fatness, that is, what the tailors mean when they inform you cheerfully, having shouted out to the man in the box, “Ninety-six and a half l’” they add, cheer § “A trifle stouter, Sir, I think, than last time; ” and you sud denly R. yourself up very º; expand your chest, and [...]
[...] says ys, .. Northink the practice idleness destroys, The half unconscious act promotes its joys, Yet aids the mind in its attempt to chain The thoughts engendered in the busy brain.” [...]
[...] eighty-five votes. That is not much. But if he pours on the Church half the fury with which he assails the Press, there will soon be “mitres on the green.” [...]
[...] thunders at the newspapers:– “Whenever we say we will bear it no longer, they will do something for us. Commercial interest is with them the main interest. Half-a-dozen columns are given on what is going on in France, a column and a half is given for sporting intelligence, and then they have not room to report the proceed [...]
[...] room Gardens, indeed! I say, fºliº has gone.to, pot altogether. Scotch gardeners! . Pooh! Pedants, with a half-educated itch for [...]
Punch02.06.1866
  • Datum
    Samstag, 02. Juni 1866
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] sweet things in a linen-draper's eyes, they can't be half so sweet for dinner as good jam ones. Men always think it funny to crack jokes about one's toilette; and with all their college learning and superior [...]
[...] | Well? Wague Respondent (satisfied that his friend won't understand it a bit better if he talks for half an hour, hesitates as to finishing at once or not): | Yes—and so we-we-er-talked it over several times (“several times. | is artistically thrown in to give the idea that the conversations weren't [...]
[...] His Friend, not a Pogue Disciple, but one really seeking information). Well, what is it. " Kague Questioner (half laughing, as if there was something so utterly ludicrous associated with a Rantoon as to beggar description). Oh (little tague laugh) it’s a thing that runs along—(Friend thinks he’s going to [...]
[...] It is an old saying that one half the world does not know how the other half lives. The Monde, however, by its fashions and phraseology appears to be quite sufficiently [...]
[...] HYDROPHOBIA AND HALF-A-CROWN. [...]
[...] dogs, it was monstrous they should be destroyed in the face of the public. The delendant was no doubt, doing his duty, but as he did it in some respects im Properly, he would mark his sense of the excess of duty by fining him half-a-crown.” [...]
[...] doing his duty, but as he did it in a rather bungling manner, the reward which would be given to him, for the courage he had; exerted in destroying a dangerous animal, would not exceed half-a-crown.” How could a most sagacious Magistrate fine a man half-a-crown in any case, for putting a dog to death? Half-a-crown is far too small a [...]
Punch03.08.1861
  • Datum
    Samstag, 03. August 1861
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] same complaint from ladies, who have piteously £al. that two hours in church is “a long time,” but who have on the previous, Saturday night sat out five hours of the opera, and stood another half-hour wait ing for the carriage. [...]
[...] saved my siller from the Scylla of one stall, than my gold was swallowed up in the Charybdis of another. A giance from sunnyfaced Peg affington, cost me half-a-guinea for sixpennyworth of pipe-lights, and at the bidding of her º I paid a fivepound note for a doll that squinted horribly. MRs. MATHEws made me buy a thirty shillin [...]
[...] book-marker and an embroidered pair of braces, for neither of whic articles have I the slightest use. , Miss AMY SEdgwick tempted me to take a half-crown pincushion, which I shall wear next to my heart to my dying º Miss — iſ wifi not write her name for fear of the Excise—sold me without a licence a most infamous cigar, for which she [...]
[...] had the modesty to charge but eighteenpence; while at Missolver’s request, or I should rather say command, I made myself ridiculous by purchasing a baby-jumper, and had to pay her half-a-sovereign to take it off my hands. “Then I paid a visit and some shillings to the Post-Office, where [...]
[...] Made in the dyke a hole, And quick the treach’rous barrier through His head and half his body drew, And soon had drawn the whole. [...]
[...] On his detective bull's-eye turned, And the bound-breaking knave discerned Half inside and half out. [...]
[...] terious in point of subject. The scene is laid in the dungeon of an old castle, date about the-let us say—castellated period. Through the half-open door we see a knight disguised as a friar, apparently bribing a porter to allow him to enter. In the dungeon just behind the door stands a gentleman in a slashed doublet, evidently only waiting for the [...]
[...] to be too particular. The next—I would scorn to conceal anything from you, M'm, and I am not sure that he is safe pay, his mother goes out teaching singing, and owes me a half-quarter, but he is a smart-looking child, and good to call up when a parent comes with a new pupil. The next is going away, and a º thing, for he is a iº trouble [...]
[...] !be punished; but I shall do what is right by you, and give him a prize, because he has two brothers whom I think may be h The next is. a valuable boy, he is half an idiot, and is only sent to be out of the way—we never teach him anything, and, as you see, he is sucking hard bake in class—it is a good example to the others, and teaches them [...]
Punch03.04.1858
  • Datum
    Samstag, 03. April 1858
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] This brute has a low half-globular head, very wide and bulging out enormously at the lower part of the temples, just above the cheek bones, where phrenologists place the swelling which indicates propen [...]
[...] India is to belong to the QUEEN. . There is to be a Council, men with a Minister at its head, but instead of there being only |com eight members, there are to be eighteen, half to be named by the ºt Government, the other half to be elected. The nominated nine are to be men who have been connected with India, and the names of the [...]
[...] greatest fondness for the errors of his own raising. To his taste, the errors of others, though every bit as green, are not half so sweet ! [...]
[...] painful history written on it. It reminds one of Joinville in his handsome days, but the features are sunk, or flattened, and appear, like an antique, half-oxidised with neglect, or age, or exposure. As for the eyes, the torch that once blazed in them is completely extin †† There is more light in two old recerbères than you can now [...]
[...] beautiful waist, the circumference of which barely exceeded that of a wedding-ring, has bolstered out until he is the same width all the way down, like the shaft to a coal-pit. His clothes are half stuccoed with mud, or inartistically pointed with straw; and though his battered hat is half-cocked on one side, still it is wanting in its old chique, and the [...]
[...] being taken at an open attic window, and Mrs. G. fearing he might take cold in the head. At precisely thirteen minutes and three-quarters, after noon the cat, disappeared behind a stack of chimneys, and in half a jº later, timed by MR. GREEN’s chronometer, a sparrow was seen fluttering from the same direction, and manifesting symptoms of excitement and distress. It will Ée for scientific º: to decide, whether these marked variations from [...]
[...] the bird's normal state were probably occasioned by the cat, or the Eclipse. Another close observer, MR. Spoon E, of Islington, has recorded in his journal, that at half-past twelve o'clock one of his canary birds, suddenly stopped singing, and continued silent for above ten minutes. It is, however, doubtful if the observation can be considered of much value, inasmuch as MASTER SpoonB chanced to give the bird a lump of sugar at [...]
[...] in the City, her brute of a husband, leaving her to mind the house, joined a bachelor Eclipse party at the Star and Garter, Richmond. This MRs.J. discovered by taking a close observation of her husband's pocket-book, when she let him in next morning at half past 3 A.M.; and although at breakfast time the brute of course began to make an affidavit of an alibi, the production by his wife of the discovered dinner-bill proved a bit of evidence [...]
Punch09.04.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 09. April 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] affected to be looking out a hymn. Your sisters evidently sniggered. I will (for the present) keep my hands off your ant brother. §: Sunday I repeat the experiment, and with half-a-crown. If I fail, Convocationshall hear of it? Am I to be mocked in church 2–0RLANDo FURIoso. [...]
[...] of condemning the play, when the failure, fairly judged, is not the author's but the management's. In a word, I have continually seen a hastily and half-cooked dish presented to the public when it expected, and had a right to, expect, a carefully and thoroughly prepared one— and have suffered thereby in temper always, and, too often, in the effect [...]
[...] | “There is but little doubt that trained dresses will be discarded for ball-dress, and the half-long adopted instead—a fashion more graceful and conve nient for dancing.” [...]
[...] This is a wise reform; but we are haters of half-measures. Half-long dresses, for the ball room are certainly not likely to be half so bad as longer ones. Still, a man who waltzes with a [...]
[...] room are certainly not likely to be half so bad as longer ones. Still, a man who waltzes with a girl in a long, or half-long, dress, is pretty sure : to put his foot in it. #. dresses surely iſ can't be half so convenient for a dance as sº [...]
[...] : to put his foot in it. #. dresses surely iſ can't be half so convenient for a dance as sº iſ short ones. A similar improvement, going half way only, is described as follows:– [...]
[...] and prove, beyond a doubt, that after the war began with America, LoRD CHATHAM neglected his personal appearance, and used, in the week, barely half the number of cravats he was in the habit of wearing before the rupture between the Mother Country and her Colonies. The bills themselves bear testimony to the careful and methodical [...]
PunchRegister Bd. 030 1856
  • Datum
    Dienstag, 01. Januar 1856
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] Great A.B.C. Meeting (The), 143 Great Dunup Loan (The), 218 HALF-AND-HALF Advice, 38 Handel and Hanging, 119 Handsome Young Clergyman (The), 224 [...]
[...] Humdrum, 193 ILLUMINATIONs (The), 221, 222 In the Matter of two Half-Crowns, 68 Incorrect Alley-gation, 127 Invitation to the May Meeting, 209 [...]
[...] Fogey Pogeys (The), 57 Footman and a Poet (A), 62 Fortune for Half-a-Crown (A), 251 - Fred Peel's Memorandum k, 255 French Alliance (The), 22 [...]
Punch06.02.1858
  • Datum
    Samstag, 06. Februar 1858
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] Directors. The two portions of the double government have mis governed India between them; in what degree. º Parliament will have to inquire; perhaps in the ratio of six of one to half-a-dozen of the other. [...]
[...] fast both together, which spoiled my Breakfast, and I fear my Diges tion also, and an Article in the Times against Advancement by Interest did go still more against my Stomach and trouble me. Off at half-past nine to be in readiness for the Presence, where my LoRD PAMM was in Audience, and had to wait a quarter of an hour in the Ante-room, [...]
[...] he meant Something, though I could not well divine what... So, to my Chamber, where of a Rump Steak, being mighty hungry, I did, make a great Supper, with a Pot of Half-and-Half, for which I sent Qut, cost me 8d. hilst I was at Supper, and thinking over, the Day, and considering in º Mind whether I had made any Mistake or no, comes [...]
[...] have seen the Service I, have seen, and to be made a Knight Com mander of the Bath with all my Limbs and Bones entire in a whole in. So having finished my Steak and Half-and-Half with a good Appetite, to Bed with great Content, and mighty pleasant, Dreams of Stars and Ribbons, and my Name in the Gazette the next Morning. [...]
[...] decline of the proper Pantomime, and justifies our fear that it is surely dying out. It is true we hear of theatres still crowded upon boxing nights, and of their managers being crowned and half-crowned with success. But these triumphs are achieved by the gasmen and the scene-painters, and in no way can be looked on as “legitimate” results. Moreover the infusion of the acrobatic element is clearly tending to destroy the purely pantomimic, and [...]
[...] fully half the cause of the decline we are de ploring may be traced to the bad influence of doubling the parts. It may be that a Pantomime [...]
[...] we shall live to see the night when half the Pan tomimes in London will be “mounted” as at [...]
[...] HARRIs, who undertook to return them finished for le. per pair. HARRIs has a machine which effectually performs the stitching portion of the labour, and for that he reserved one half of the le... giving MEARs the remainder to complete the work. MEARs in turn i. the prisoner, and furnished her with twist, thread, &c., on the understanding that she was to receive 8%d. for finishing the job, but she, as [...]
Punch28.12.1861
  • Datum
    Samstag, 28. Dezember 1861
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] As another very marked peculiarity of theirs, these apes are spoken of as being pretty often up a tree, in fact, as passing in that manner a full half of their existence. But this is not a habit special to the simious creation. Our poor friend MR HARDUPPE has for years been “up a tree,” to quote his own confession; and the chances are, we think, [...]
[...] rint which is stuck up inside most of those vehicles on the part facing the door. his picture represents two degraded beings of opposite sexes, fashionably attired, the hair and whiskers of the man half grey, half black, and the tresses of the other black on one side and red on the other. Both the gent.and his counter-part are represented with a countenance in which a ridiculous ruefulness combines with a [...]
[...] is “No more Gray º and the two snobs, male and female, whose portraits illustrate that inscription, are supposed to have resorted to staining their hair, and to have allowed their likenesses to be taken when that process was half done, in order to exhibit the contrast between its results on the one side, and the state of nature on the other. They look very much as if they had been paid to sit, and felt [...]
[...] y He half has conquered, who dares defy: [...]
Punch02.03.1861
  • Datum
    Samstag, 02. März 1861
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] better. For instance, the French teacher who is patted on the back by Monsieu R DE GIRARDIN, informs his countrymen, that more tha half the British population is compelled to live by begging of the other half, an assertion which the columns of relief that have been advertised will be held no doubt to prove. And not less truthful is the statement, [...]
[...] “Dry Germans opened at 59% reals, but declined to 58 for half ox half cow, and 60 for ox, this quotation being merely nominal." [...]
[...] specimen of dried metaphysics and transcendentalistic Kantism. Another puzzle that bewilders us still more is the revelation that our “dry German’’ is “half ox, half cow.” We have heard of an rish bull; and of a Wache espagnole, and of other curiosities belonging to the animal kingdom; but we must confess that such an ethnological [...]
[...] strong attack of animal spirits, had had a hand in stitching this new hybrid together for the enrichment of his New York Museum. We sup: pose that the “half ox” is a delicate compliment to the obstinacy of Prussia, and the “half cow’’a graceful allusion to the calf-like attributes of Austria. However, our Foreign Office, that always evinces such a [...]
[...] cover of black calico will suffice. Appropriators of fragments and epigrams from the same source will insert black bookmarks or strips of black ribbon. Half mourning to commence on Easter Monday with the holiday spectacles, and on SHAKsPeARE's birthday the authors will go out of mourning. [...]
[...] offence, he pardoned him, for the reason he was now labouring under a physical infirmity with a reeking wound, received in a personal encounter. If his colleague had a like fracture in his thigh bone, and had been crippled for two-and-a-half years, he would find a bullet not a comfortable sensation. (Laughter.) He did not desire to be *. in a caricature in Punch or Vanity Fair, as leaning on a cane with [...]
[...] NotwitHstANDING, all that Punch has said upon the subject, the accidents from Crinoline are, it would seem, upon the increase. Half a score at least have occurred through fire since Christmas, and several others we could cite have taken place from other causes. One of the [...]
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