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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 [...]
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 [...]
Punch15.11.1856
  • Datum
    Samstag, 15. November 1856
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] course to pursue, even if that course, in its inevitable end, drove a Prime Minister of England to the block. Let history judge and acquit us of all personal ill-will, all mere party malice. No: we do not scruple to affirm that there were many qualities in Wiscount P-LM—ST-N that had our cordial respect; would they had been sufficient to have saved [...]
[...] attention to the circumstance that the Metropolitan Central Board, representing, as it does, the entire respectability and enlightenment of this enormous capital, has other duties to perform besides the mere routine of business! It has to give [...]
[...] fatal affection of the heart. It will make him perspire instead. The effect of his consternation, at suddenly conceiving the possibility that total abstinence might kill him, was merely an increased secretion from the cutaneous pores. It might have been worse. [...]
[...] of the extent of whose territory a most exaggerated estimate will pro bably be formed by many of our readers; since it, although he himself is styled merely a Prince, is denominated a kingdom. They may imagine that the sway of this monarch may, perhaps, extend over a region, only a little inferior in magnitude, to the county of Rutland. [...]
[...] In any other country could you wag . - - Your tongue according to your mere discretion? What Government would fail your jaw to gag, Though mildly you remarked on huge oppression? [...]
[...] Upon being questioned by the Austrian authorities, he explained that he was an astronomer, and that he was merely forwarding to a friend his current observations upon the then Eclipse of the Moon! The trembling enthusiast, upon being liberated, was warmly congratulated [...]
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 [...]
Punch17.05.1873
  • Datum
    Samstag, 17. Mai 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] provement in our Cabbies, for which it may be#: there is actually room. Who drives clean, Hansoms should himself be clean, not in person merely, but in raiment and in speech. So, projecting our prophetic mental eye into the future, we can see the British [...]
[...] Cabman gourteous, civil, cleanly, cheerful, and content edly receiving his proper legal fare. A Cab will be no longer a mere vehicle of abuse, and its driver will no more offend against the laws of grammar, or show his lack of chivalry when a fair lady is his fare. Instead [...]
[...] CLEARLY, Servants now-a-days are not to be contented with mere payment of their wages. To judge by this advertisement, they have more than mere pecuniary expectations, when they condescend to [...]
[...] “MR, WAL.” is slightly familiar, the Catalogue merely giving the gentleman's initial; but the Critic would probably have us infer an intimacy between himself and MR. P. The existence of this is [...]
Punch01.02.1862
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Februar 1862
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] quarter, and simply want compliance with your just demand. Very right, and proper, and very neatly put, When a blackguard prigs one's handkerchief one can “dispense with compliments, and is merely anxious to get back what one has lost. There are, however, compli. inents which no one can dispense with; and these are the compliments [...]
[...] for £5 on account of Income-Tax from A.S.S.” Magna est ceritas, et praevalebit / No doubt the advertiser thought, by sending merely his initials, to conceal his real name. However, it has slipped out, spite of his attempts to hide it. For there is no doubt that a person, sending conscience-money to the CHANCELLOR “on [...]
[...] attachés have to tread in the steps of the secretaries. The total of salaries, paid by John BULL for these onerous and distasteful duties amounts to a mere fleabite of £180,000 a-year—of which sum £50, goes in the salaries of the Ambassadors at the capitals of the Great Powers, and don’t enable these poor men, with the strictest economy, [...]
[...] amused; and this is possible with operas as well as with mere farces, feature, for it is lined only with tissue-paper, and to look upon that as provided that the operas beneatly written and composed, and pleasantly an acceptable substitute for a currency of specie, is nothing better than performed. - a tissue of absurdity. [...]
[...] |||||A MERE TRIFLE. [...]
[...] portion of HER MAJESTY's subjects, by the intelligence that out of upwards of thirty Protestants of the south of Spain, who, many months ago, were committed to prison for the mere exercise of their religion, some of those most noted have been brought to trial and condemned to seven years of the galleys. The chief offence committed by MATAMoRos [...]
Punch19.01.1856
  • Datum
    Samstag, 19. Januar 1856
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] ficence; it is not enough, forsooth ! And for a mere author! And what are the Sun's arguments? We must say, they are tainted with dis affection and vulgarity. The Sun implies ſhat even “HERRRAUçHER, [...]
[...] a mere scholar in his claims be [...]
[...] collision with British troops has probably taught them the inutility of bucklers employed as bugbears, and the wisdom of using swords solely for striking at antagonists, and not at all for striking mere terror into their minds—at any rate in case of the antagonists being those said British troops. • [...]
[...] the vulgarity into which it has lapsed by its familiar treatment. John JENKINs is about to take MARY Jones for his wife, Thomas BRowN intends to marry SUSAN SMITH, and this is all very well; they are mere flesh of clay, and so may become flesh of flesh; they are made of frame work of mere bones, and may therefore be bone of one another's bone. [...]
[...] work of mere bones, and may therefore be bone of one another's bone. It is otherwise, however, as we ascend the primrose way of May Fair. There it ceases to be mere vulgar marriage; the chain is so beautifully wreathed with flowers (never mind if they are artificial) that it never rattles. Does LoRD GRATEswell, take the HoN. Miss WASPAINT for [...]
Punch26.10.1861
  • Datum
    Samstag, 26. Oktober 1861
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] doctrine,” “offspring of darkness,”, “pernicious and abominable writings,” &c., turning up like “sidera coeli’’, and “consonat omne nemus,” in a schoolboy's verses. If it was merely a traditional allocu tion, we can only conclude that the Pope was too tipsy to adapt it with any verisimilitude to existing facts; intoxicated insomuch as to make [...]
[...] may be one of the reasons why every one has laughed at the notion of the KING or PRUssíA visiting the EMPEROR OF THE FRENCH merely to “exchange civilities.” It is seemingly something so very new for monarchs to be [...]
[...] of burning the obnoxious volumes quietly, as another more discreet ecclesiastic disposed of certain story-books of knight-errantry, treating them as mere mischievous trash. But he fortunately thought proper to make their cremation public, and cause it to be performed with all the honours of exorcism. "No doubt the riest, who attended cross in [...]
[...] on spiritual phenomena, and have caused the former, under the name of necromancers and, sorcerers, to be reduced to ashes along, with the latter. That would not be so pleasant for Spiritualists as the merely symbolical and typical martyrdom of being burnt in print. As it is, §.". can burn nobody along with forbidden books except himself, [...]
[...] Seek the bubble reputation In the war of North and South. If, above mere murderous fooling, Some advantage you pursue, Go and get a martial schooling [...]
[...] the greatest man that ever lived, except ourselves, has declared of him that hath no music in his soul. For such a fellow has no music in his soul. His music, such as he has, lies in his mere acoustic faculty of perception, and not in his soul at all; and it is very doubtful whether a creature capable of adulterating and diluting MozART, being a brute, [...]
Punch02.04.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 02. April 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] If this be really feasible, we may hope that the invention may lead not merely to medical, but moral good results. Besides assisting in the diagnosis of disease, the diascope may aid in the detection of ill feelings, and bad workings [...]
[...] O Scotia, thus thy pious sons, they say, Qf “sweet religion” make a mere “rhapsódy,” Killing the tedium of their Sabbath Day With copious and clandestine draughts of toddy. [...]
[...] IT is a mistake to suppose that Ireland will ever be satisfied with any measure of mere justice: What Irishmen want is not justice but generosity. There ought to be an Irish Rate, levied on all the property of Great Britain, for a subsidy to Ireland, paid annually and punctually. [...]
[...] orthography, imagine that these sermons are intended to be mere frothy declamation. [...]
[...] EMOLLIT MoREs. Shoddyspeck (a mere Millionnaire in the Midland Counties). “'FRAID I shan'T BE ABLE To GIVE You A LADY To TAKE IN To DINNER, Young BRowN—” [...]
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