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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 - [...]
Punch07.10.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 07. Oktober 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] of the mess. Deck sloppy on account of the fish. WETHERBY an CAPTAIN DAwson, deeply interested in the mess on deck. MIss STRAITH MERE trying to stand on a chair near CAPTAIN DAwson, and holding on by a rope. “Q,” she is saying, as I apprºach; “I must hold on by you [...]
[...] “No, thank you,”, returns LADY WETHERBY, quietly smiling; “I prefer being here,” and the two ladies, sitting together, exchange one glance only, and then they both smile at Miss STRAITH MERE. I think to myself what do they mean by that smile P Flash.-Note it down. A work on “Smiles.” A Series. Next [...]
[...] As if aside mere forms to fling, Occasion when just cause created, Were not about the wisest thing [...]
[...] Some *. y the estimate, made by parties likely to know, that the expenses of the Hampshire Campaign will fall within £100,000. hat is £100,000?. A mere gnat-bite, Why the whole amount of that money invested in the Three-per-Cents would yield an income of § £3,000 a-year; not enough, in these days, to [...]
[...] The Curate left SLYBoots in the dining-room, where he continued giving his opinion to the cold chicken, tongue, and viands on the table from mere force of habit, and putting it down at six and eightpence, every time, in his pocket-book. ADY BUssíT thanked MR. BANJo, the Curate, for his prompt [...]
[...] He never writes but to defend the cause of the weak and the help less. His works teem with all the Christian virtues. The numbers of people that have been converted by merely reading the titles on the covers of his books, would alone form a small London Directory. He is thoroughly in earnest. There is his secret; and being so, has [...]
[...] Interest yourself in all the agricultural operations which may be in progress while you are under your cousin's hospitable roof. Do not be satisfied merely to ask after the harvest or the turnips, but be earnest in your inquiries about the rotation of crops, corn averages irrigation, subsoils, the newest improvements in implements, an [...]
Punch12.08.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 12. August 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] into Berkshire, and should there encamp, as in an enemy's country, and learn the German system, and prove what they are good for, besides mere manoeuvres. This was a sensible project. But to carry it out was beyond the intellect of the Authorities. They give it up, saying that the Harvest is exceptionally late, and that after the [...]
[...] that England shall feel Her protection not left to a mere Garde Mobile. “For defencenot defiance,” we stand like a wall, [...]
[...] you, because Miss” —here it occurs to him that we are not alone and he turns brusquely—“let me introduce you to Miss STRAITH MERE, Miss JANIE STRAITH MERE,”—Here it strikes him that something is the matter somewhere, but LADY WETHERBY is now again erect, and CLASPER [...]
[...] my arm round her, and say “JANIE be mine !” - [Note at Night, on consideration. Is this love at first sight, or is it merely the effect of the sudden contrast between what is, at WETHERBY's, and what was: viz., My AUNT, DoDDRIDGE & Čo. united ages, amounting to a hundred and twenty, including [...]
[...] for doing something or not doing something with the Government stores and the Rajah of somewhere. ... Mem. for the Future, When in doubt as to relationships merely, if absolutely necessary to speak at all, mention surnames. For instance if I had spoken to LADY WETHERBY only of her brother-in [...]
Punch17.08.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 17. August 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] and cleverly as he himself could wish. It is rare to see an actress with such natural play of feature, and subtle power of expression, not in voice-tone merely but in gesture and in look. She appears to hold the floodgates of her heart in her com mand, and to have the power at will to flush or blanch her cheek. It [...]
[...] Are they right as to their belief in the general principles - What is the brain? Qf what use is the mass of delicately organised nervous matter which fills the head 2 That of mere stuffing? Is it a substance no more important than so much fat? Has the brain any connection with the mind? Does its development really in general [...]
[...] applause was rained down upon all of you, as if you were personal friends of everybody in the house. You said–I don't suppose it was merely said to tease me, though you are quite capable of it-you said that after the performance you were entertained at a splendid supper at the Queen's, and the leading men of Manchester, came to do you [...]
[...] signally occur, In, plain words, when DR. MANNING represents good faith towards the Church of Rome as identical with bad faith towards the Church of England, he must be understood to speak merely as a private doctor, and not with any authority. Certainly with none at [...]
[...] it, and we are not yet sure that we have got that; so that, for aught we know, the whole of what is ſºlº abused under the name of Popery may be a mere accumulation of the opinions of private doctors. If Protestant bigots will only leave off denouncing the creed of a large portion of, their fellow-countrymen until they understand what it [...]
[...] CANNING, at the corner of Great George Street, Westminster? It has a very papistical appearance. There are little images all round the top. Will it be merely water for public use at that fountain? Our reliance is on MR. WHALLEY. More of this anon. [...]
Punch11.10.1862
  • Datum
    Samstag, 11. Oktober 1862
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] as it was told the nature of his ill-fated journey, says he considers the Frog had been crossed in love, and that that had something to do with the abnormal position in which it was found. This, however, is merely a conjecture. The Frog was visited during its short sojourn in the International Exhibition by several distinguished men of science, among others, by SIR RodeRick MURChisos, [...]
[...] pronounced as above on MR. BLANK was wholly undeserved. But if the evidence really proved that the deceased was starved to death by his fault, the verdict ought to have gone beyond mere censure. It ought, indeed, also to have implicated the Board of Guardians still more highly than their officer; but no coroner's jury can be expected to be [...]
[...] founders than the comfort of its inmates, and that the money which has been laid out in bricks and mortar might have been better distributed in doles of out-of-door relief. I don't think this myself, for mere alms giving is not the object of the charity, which is intended to provide a iouse for such old actors as by God's will are left homeless in the last [...]
[...] and mortar would find the funds for giving out-of-door relief, they might emulate the good work of the patrons of the College, which surely would be better than merely finding fault. “As you know everything, my Punch, of course I need not tell you that when actors first appeared in England, some three centuries ago, [...]
[...] them. Segniºs irritant—you know how HoRACE puts it: and much as many parsons may now condemn and execrate it, I am sure that a good play well mounted and well acted is capable not merely of giving people pleasure but of doing them much good. At any rate our clergy ought not to forget that Charity will cover a multitude of sins: and when they [...]
[...] help each other and work for a good cause this newly opened College is now a standing proof. “Merely hinting that the College is not yet quite completed, and that there are several acres in the hands of its trustees quite ſit to be built over when the public finds the funds (the name of the treasurer is J. W. [...]
Punch09.11.1872
  • Datum
    Samstag, 09. November 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] in the extreme. It is merely acºle of [...]
[...] find an Englishman who shall be at once a good Low Comedian and a good Tenor P Such Opéras Bouffes as L'Eil Crévé, Chilpéric, Petit Faust, &c., are merely burlesques in three acts, with original music. .They ºl. burlesque acting and burlesque singing; but the singing must be good, and the singers musicians. No, somehow [...]
[...] for any critic moderately impatient of condescensions to coarse and brutal and stupid minds, obtuse to the grotesque. Buton such minds, among the dangerous classes, and not the merely gross and ignoble vulgar, the delineations and daubing which disgust human beings, distinctively human, are calculated to produce a good effect, if any; [...]
[...] never identified with the ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY. But now, by the above episcopal showing, the Catholic Church is the Pope. It was, until two years ago, merely Popish; now it has resolved itself into Pope altogether. ... It is no longer an abstract entity, but a con crete individual, to wit, His Holiness. An emblematic artist might [...]
[...] things. He'll also, he says, buy vegetables and bacon: the same condition as before to be observed, namely, that I must send up for orders. How P Nothing more simple—merely a pony and cart; the outlay a mere trifle, and it would pay enormously. How many different sorts of business I am to undertake, according [...]
Punch21.10.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 21. Oktober 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] as the loss of good looks, but the cold-blooded reference of the pho tographer to “clients least remarkable for personal attractions,” seems to render the case of la belle mere ten times more cruel. Let us hope that if one of qur own mothers-in-law should ever, in the bad time coming, be reduced to the same sad plight, she may find [...]
[...] Y dear MISs STRAITH MERE,” I commence, quietly and solemnly, “When you ask why [...]
[...] deeply sometimes, I can only reply,”—the slightest pause merely to collect a pailful of the heaviest three syl [...]
[...] e Dirol. “No,” she replies ingenuously. “Why does it?” I can't descend from parable into mere natural history. I like a person to seize on a simile at once, and to see what you mean, if anything, rather better than you do yourself. Enter the ices. She [...]
[...] Miss STRAITHMERE. “No P” I reply carelessly, as much as to intimate that that is her fault. “You are glad to go?” says Miss STRAITH MERE, looking up from her ice, and then looking down again immediately. Then she adds, “Why are you glad to go?” [...]
[...] . Morning.—RoBERT arranges mythings for my getting up. That is, he turns everything inside out. Can't understand why. [“Why” reminds me of MIss STRAITH MERE. “If she wasn't so’” ... (here I pull on my boots) . . ., “I think I might” . . . (braces) . “but she is really so " . . . (buttoning collar, head well up). . . . [...]
Punch17.07.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 17. Juli 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] any reason to be afraid of Popery. It has not, and had not when it rebuffed Papal Aggression, any objection to Roman Catholicism as a mere religion—for those who belong to it, or choose it. The Ecclesiastical Titles Act has done its work. Perhaps, Mr. Punch will possibly sub [...]
[...] tions for House of Commons adornments without getting a specific vote of leave. He defended himself with spirit, and successfully, having a general and continuous right to deal with mere details. He paid a deserved tribute to Messrs. Moore and Poynter, had been much struck with the works of the former in the Academy, and said that the [...]
[...] "And nothing but the BUI," And deem good, by unfriendly hands If proffered, merely ill? Must we so lump in black and white Our Whig and Tory views, [...]
[...] by over-manuring and working off three crops for one, nor to under- fertilise it by constant drainage. This (I say, thoughtfully, as I cannot sit there without making some observation) is mere common sense. Milburd retorts, with some sharpness, "Of course it's common sense; but who does it?" to which I can only reply, as he seems [...]
[...] surgeon, yet living, remembers having heard people, in the early days of vaccination, declare positively that they knew persons on whose heads that process had developed cowhoms. It was not merely that they had been told so, and believed it. They vowed and swore they had actually seen those who had been vaccinated, with horns growing [...]
[...] of "Medical Dissenters," so calling themselves, founded by Morison, the great original advertiser of the Universal Medicine. Freedom of medi cal conscience, medicine being obviously a mere matter of persuasion, clearly ought to be respected much more than it has been by a too scientific legislature; but still there is one consideration which Mr. [...]
Punch18.02.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 18. Februar 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] self. I say it now; MILBURD agrees with me, that it is a bad thing, and it appears that he too never takes luncheon, only sometimes a mere, “snack.” BoopFLs says, “Yes,” that's his way precisely; “Only a mere snack, but never luncheon.” Here we are, three men who never, take any luncheon, only [...]
[...] (this is the soup which happens to be ready ; it was prepared, it appears, by order, for some one who had since counter-ordered it), sole aw gratin, game-pie-they think they can just take a mere soupçon of game-pie—and a “finisher,” as MILBURD calls it, of Stilton. Happy. Thought.—To “suppose they’ll have a light wine—we've [...]
[...] be permitted to change his mind P’’ Q, certainly. . No sole to follow * Not that, but, on second thoughts, he doesn't know but what a mere nip of punch wouldn't be a good thing, eh? I am his host, and return, “Let’s have it,” in a sort of fine Old Englishman tone. BooDELs changes his mind. I change my mind. Three [...]
[...] tone. BooDELs changes his mind. I change my mind. Three punches. We drink. Very good. Really, remarkably good. MIL BURD, again interrogatively, puts it that just half a nip more—merely half a nip—wouldn't be too much, eh? “By all means. Three more punches.” . After this I find myself offering them champagne, [...]
[...] Well, cynics may sneer at Parisian frivolity; but there is some thing not quite frivolous in a people that for four months can keep their roughs in order by merely moral force. How should we fare in London were our policemen all withdrawn, and half the gas lamps left unlit P W. fear that London's difficulty would be BILL [...]
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