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PunchTitelblatt 08.1844
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. August 1844
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] where she sets and becomes invisible. Rules for Ascertaining the neather. It is said to be a sign of rain when a dog eats grass. There fore, carry a handful of grass about with you, and offer it to any dog you happen to meet. If he eats it with appetite, there will be much [...]
[...] fore, carry a handful of grass about with you, and offer it to any dog you happen to meet. If he eats it with appetite, there will be much rain. If he only nibbles, it will be showery. Sentiment for the 2nd of this Month. The memory of Nelson, and may Britain ever have a T. P. Cooke [...]
Punch09.02.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 09. Februar 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] STILL raining. - Happy Thought—I’ve stopped here, but the rain hasn't. I shall say this as SHERIDAN’s, or DEAN Swift's. [...]
[...] write for Punch regularly, and they’ll send it you ºl. .” (Stupid joke, after mine.) Poss FELMYR shakes hands warmly and apologises for the rain. MRs. Poss says good-bye, and I feel that I almost sneak out of the drawing-room. I wish I could say something by which they’d remem [...]
[...] than another that sets me º a place it is to be told that “It will set me up,” or “It’ll make my hair curl.” I point out, that it’s beginning to rain. MILBURD, replies, “Oh, no–sea mist,” as if sea |mist was healthy: why can't he own it is rain? I express myself to the effect that it is raw, to which MILBURD returns, being in boisterous [...]
[...] writing materials laid on; good fires in winter throughout the day, and let the room have a good view from its windows. | Pouring with rain—and we came here for a change! [...]
Punch12.07.1873
  • Datum
    Samstag, 12. Juli 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] And their miles upon miles of merchant ships; And all but bids skies for me to shine: If without the ferashes and their whips, At the Crystal Palace, EFFENDI GRove Manchester gathers, and Liverpool runs, With the rain itself for my pleasure strove: With voices of men and thunder of guns And out of the water brought the fire To the light of the face of the SHAH-IN-SHAH, To compass the SHAH-IN-SHAH's desire. [...]
[...] that you shall run no risk from the want of a quick circulation. Venator. O, Master | 0 || Marry, I am warm throughout. Piscator. I warrant you. But look how it begins to rain. We will leave our lines in the river, our rods on the bank, and sit close under this sycamore tree, where I design to eat the chicken sand [...]
[...] Venator. Nay, good Master, bear with me, and I will undertake your charges at the next Inn we come to ; and, indeed, I would that this rain were finished so that we might be there now. .. Piscator. Now I will tell you somewhat about angling. And, first, as to the Perch. The length of the Perch is five and a half [...]
[...] IN an admirable review of a meritorious poem, Mr. Punch, you refer to the virtue ascribed by SHAKSPEARE to potatoes. When he made Falstaff say “Let the sky rain potatoes,” think you he meant the tubers of the Solanum tuberosum ? The divine WILLIAMs most probably never ate a potato; probably knew of potatoes and their [...]
[...] Having weighed these considerations, most excellent Mr. Punch, do you think it possible that the potatoes which Falstaff wished the sky to rain were intended to be taken as potato apples? Say, if you like, that is a question which might be expected to *to a UMPKIN. [...]
Punch16.07.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 16. Juli 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] battles have coincided with heavy showers, has proposed that, in order to terminate a drought, the attempt should be made to shake rain out of the clouds by a general can nonade. This, with the view, apparently, of getting the popular mind of France to entertain the idea of it, he [...]
[...] mind doing that, but a true English one would. We would dissociate the theological from the scientific experiment for the deduction of rain. Invoke St. Swithin on St. Swithin's day # you like, but try your cannonade on some day before or after. [...]
[...] pleased as if we had heard all about them. t Goºgh says, “There! now we’ve done Lille, let's go back to the rain.” We all feel the better for this episode, and presently, about four hours after, arrive at Ghent. [...]
[...] Have e'er a word to speak for them as feels the drought the wust. The soap hard water takes to use you'd think past all belief, There’s none as grieves for want of rain like washerwomen's grief. [...]
[...] Saint Swithin is a comin', which if then, it rains, they says, 'Twill arterwards rain every day, or night, for forty days. It never rains but what it pours; that's what they means: that’s all. [...]
Punch18.01.1873
  • Datum
    Samstag, 18. Januar 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] certainty, at any rate, of getting a good ducking. The only proverb wholly suited to the weather of this winter is the saying that “It never rains but it pours:” the truth whereof, for the last four months, has been copiously manifest. [...]
[...] Return of my Aunt-The Nook after the late Rains-A Surprise— The End in View. [...]
[...] the front gate, they are º, at horses on the gravel-path, which seems to be, frº out to ENGLEMORE, nicely dry in spite of the rain. They are affectionate children. On seeing me, they run away, crying. “They think you're ‘Bogie,’” ENGLEMORE remarks. [...]
[...] “WHEN that I was a little tiny boy,”. And used bad words because of rain, My parents, with reverse of joy, . - #. me, and—I shared their pain. [...]
[...] #. me, and—I shared their pain. But now I’ve come to man's estate, And curse kind rains in language rash, There's no one who can smite my pate For talking thankless, idiot trash. [...]
Punch05.03.1864
  • Datum
    Samstag, 05. März 1864
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 1
[...] Wh learn from Southampton the arrival of the Poonah with the Madagascar ambassadors—their Excellencies RAIN-AND-RAIN and RAIN-For-INGLA. Really, considering the wet weather we have had lately, RAIN-AND-RAIN had better have º and RAIN-For [...]
Punch27.11.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 27. November 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] against cold, wind, and rain, &c., and would appear thus: [...]
[...] 'Tis the old, old stºry over again, - We are shower-bath'd now with perpetual rain, Thames, Severn, and Trent conspire, and fain Would drown our municipalities. [...]
[...] Would drown our municipalities. To the Patriarch NoAH, we’d say, “Ah, no!” But the Sun won’t come, and the rain won't go, And the Summerless year begins to grow A mass of dismal realities. [...]
[...] Now, can a fellow be jolly and gay, And pretty things to his sweetheart say, When “the rain it raineth every day” With a vicious regularity? Can you gladden at wit from a Lady's lip, [...]
[...] . (As well read Doctor KENEALY 1) East wind .# your fibres throb, Rain like a school-girl's sulky sob, You drink mulled claret, and sit by your hob, And feel like a martyr, really. [...]
[...] Bring us a little quiet and ease By disestablishing rivers.” * Always there, Q rhymer l Read Punch, and defy rain and all other miseries of human life. t College Wacation Exercise: Anno aetatis undeviginti. [...]
Punch06.11.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 06. November 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] comes, so much easier. Of course it doesn't much matter. You may rave till all is blue—in TYNDALI's sense—and not stay a seemingly superfluous rain-drop, divert a too torrid sun-ray, or ruffle my equanimity. Indeed, you may thank your lucky stars that I am impervious to abuse as to entreaty, and do not put the reins of my power into the hands of every pseudo-Phaethon [...]
[...] and are familiar with the manners and customs of well-tended but recalcitrant donkeys. Look here, then! Why not try and work with me, instead of railing, at me?. E.g. I supply the rain—more than you appear to relish sometimes—you provide, the cistern, the watercourse, the sluice, the umbrella, and the waterproof. I furnish the material, ou the means of utilisation, distribution, defence or prevention, as the case may be. [...]
[...] ou the means of utilisation, distribution, defence or prevention, as the case may be. &; this partial co-partnership out on, the large scale, and there, you are; Twig P The rain. I send must fall on the just and the unjust, the thirsting plain, and the thronged romenade, the turnips, and the turnip-growers, who want it, and the ripening ears and #. pleasure-seekers, who do not. A Local-Sun-and-Shower-Distribution Company, [...]
[...] Science,” as the newspapers say. Let human ingenuity, which, after so many rain-discomforte enerations, achieved the (Gingham and the Macintosh, set to work on the great scale at the task of [...]
[...] and store your floods, and they will serve instead of º you; rightly manage your streets and subways, and my rains will be not much less welcome or more worrying on the flags than on the furrows. [...]
Punch22.07.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 22. Juli 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] from the glories of Putney, he regretted that he was not provided with a Boyton dress. Last summer the rain it rained every day, and the rifle contest very nearly assumed the appearance of a military regatta. The weather was pleaded as an excuse for many, a shortcoming. LIEUTENANT SMITH, of the [...]
[...] rifle contest very nearly assumed the appearance of a military regatta. The weather was pleaded as an excuse for many, a shortcoming. LIEUTENANT SMITH, of the 217th Administration Battalion of Diddlesex Rifles, pointed to the rain as a reason fºr appearing in a meat, uniform, composed, of regimental overalls, an eld yellow shooting coat, a straw hat, and an umbrella. , And PRIVATE Jones, of the same [...]
[...] shooting coat, a straw hat, and an umbrella. , And PRIVATE Jones, of the same llant corps, wore quite as picturesque a costume as his smart and soldier-like superior officer. This was a year ago, when Jupiter Pluvius was out of temper. In 1876 the scene has changed. Instead of constant rain there is only too much sunshine. Thé sun it shineth every day, and raises mirages that would spoil any shooting but that of the crack shots of Wimbledon fame. The weather, at least, can no longer be given as an excuse for slovenliness. - - - [...]
[...] of this gailant officer will wish him “to go to Bath”—except at the time of a general election: The flowers outside several of the tents were exceedingly pretty, and everything would have been perfect had trenches in all cases been dug, round the tent Fº (Note by Toby.—Who wants a # of flowers in an encampment It would serve the Wolunteers right were the rain to fall for a fortnight. They would then learn the value of proper drainage. No trenches indeed!) - - * ...l.: - - - Concerning the Luzury, of the Staff—Mr. Punch had always been under the impression, that the Regulars' chief objection to the [...]
Punch04.02.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 04. Februar 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] This FACE BELONGs to PATERFAMILIAs, who HAs JUST BEEN Told THAT THE NEw KitchEN-Boiler HAs Burst. As A Coxsola TION IN THESE TRYING CIRCUMSTANCEs, the RAIN is PouriNg stEADILY Down, AN ORGAN is GRINDING A HATEFUL TUNE Round The CoRNER, the TAx-GATHERER Is Just going to KNock AT THE Doon, AND AN IMPUDENT CostER PERSISTENTLY OFFERs him Fort SALE A WEGETABLE which HE (PATERFAMILIAs) PARTICULARLY LOATHEs. [...]
[...] Now really, my dear Oracle! Do you know that rain has fallen over London at the rate of four inches in the hour? That about Rome, such falls may take place for several hours, and at not [...]
[...] over London at the rate of four inches in the hour? That about Rome, such falls may take place for several hours, and at not distant intervals.” . That thirty inches of rain in twenty-four hours have been recorded at Geneva’’ Why how often have you yourself, noted the effects of sudden [...]
[...] a storm like that *-As JoHN THoMAs would say, “gone to everlast ing smash.” Seriously, are §". aware what an inch depth of rain means? It means 22,400 gallons, or one hundred tons, of water on every square acre of land ; and supposing four inches to come down in an [...]
[...] pounds; while larger reservoirs in the higher mountain gorges would swallow up hundreds of thousands of pounds, and then might be filled to *...* º the rains of one weekl - - My dear John, on't advise you to go into the City, with a Roman Anti-Inundation Company; or, if you do, shirk the [...]
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