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1057 Treffer
Suchbegriff: Abraham

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The ramblerRambler 11.02.1752
  • Datum
    Freitag, 11. Februar 1752
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] worthy of a philofopher; I ſhall therefore openly confefs, that I owe the firſt hint of this inefti mable fecret to the Rabbi Abraham Ben Hannafe, who, in his treatife of precious ftones, has left this account of the magnet: spºris; spri, &c, [...]
[...] for magnetical fame. It would furely be unjuſt to fufpeċt that any of the candidates are ſtrangers to the name or works of Rabbi Abraham, or to conclude, from a late edićt of the royal fociety in favour of the Engliſh language, that philoſophy [...]
[...] imagined, that a ftone, naked or cafed only in the . common manner, will diſcover the virtues afcribed to it by Rabbi Abraham. The fecret of this metal I ſhall carefully conceal, and, therefore, am not afraid, of imitators, nor fhall trouble the offices: [...]
The nation15.05.1873
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 15. Mai 1873
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] —One of the despairs of Shakespeare commentators, or at all events of their readers, has always been the epithet applied by Mercutio to Cupid: “Young Abraham Cupid, he that shot so trim,” or, as most of the later editions have it, “Young Adam Cupid,” etc. [...]
[...] “It is ‘Abraham' in all the old copies,” say the commentators, “but,” add nearly all of them in substance, “it must be changed to ‘Adam,' for Abra ham means nothing, and evidently Mercutio here makes reference to Adam [...]
[...] and we at least owe to Mr. Dyce the efficient protection which it must give to the original text.” An odd way, it will strike most people, to pro tect a text that does read “Abraham ” by saying that it ought not to read “Abraham,” and, on the contrary, ought to read something else. But Mr. Dyce's friends might rejoin to a caviller making this objection that he quotes [...]
[...] the chasm across which the true commentator will lightly throw the “un questionable” sort of bridge on which to trip dry-shod, we quote three passages where “unquestionably" auburn is corrupted into “Abraham.” The first is from a play called “Soliman and Perseda,” which bears the date of 1559. It is as follows: [...]
[...] “Where is the oldest sonne of Pryam, That Abraham-colored Troian : Dead.” [...]
[...] culty by three; what, we are compelled to ask, is this “Abraham-color” which corruptly creeps into one text in 1559; then, thirty or forty years aſter, creeps into another, keeping out “auburn" in both cases; and [...]
[...] “We have been called so of many. Not that our heads are some brown, some black, Y. Some Abraham, sotne bºld, but that our wits are so diversely colored.” [...]
[...] IIere, to our mind, is our original difficulty still further increased, until we are ready to say that, inexplicable as this word “Abraham ” may look, there must have been in Shakespeare's time, and before it, a term “Abram colored" or “Abraham-colored,” which was often applied to the hair and [...]
[...] “a more than plausible suggestion,” to use Mr. R. G. White's words, and as if we at least owe to its author some sort of “protection to the original text”; for “Abraham ” it finds there, and “Abraham ” it leaves there, and it leaves the strange term with something like an intelligible—if withal an intricate and ingenious—justification for its existence and position. Very briefly and [...]
[...] 13earing a Tartar's painted bow of lath, To fright the ladies like a crow-keeper.” No mock Love, no young Abraham-man, such as Mercutio professes later in the night to believe is really the archer who has wounded Itomco. In this latter view the color question is wholly disregarded, and Abraham Cupid is [...]
The evening-post22.09.1835
  • Datum
    Dienstag, 22. September 1835
  • Erschienen
    Stuttgart
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    Stuttgart
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] - About twelve years ago, a cottager, who lives on Coningsby Moor, na me Anthony Cox, had a son named Abraham who enlisted and was sent to the Indies; for serval years he corresponded with his friends, but after an ab sence of six or seven years he ceased to write, or the letters never came to [...]
[...] both Anthony Cox and his wite. On his being released, they took him home, and clothed him; he lived with them as their son, and got married. About a month since, however, the real Abraham Coa, came home; upon which their adopted son took himself off, leaving a wife and family, and has not since been heard of. (Herald.) [...]
PunchRegister Bd. 048 1865
  • Datum
    Sonntag, 01. Januar 1865
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] !ABRAHAM Lincoln, 182 - Advantage of being Bad-Looking (The),145 Advertisements, 26 [...]
[...] Dizzy's K'rect Card for the “Derby?"227 Dock Leaves, 24 Doctor Abraham Lincoln, 31 Dog Show (The), 249 Doing it “Like a Bird,” 85 [...]
Punch21.02.1863
  • Datum
    Samstag, 21. Februar 1863
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] MR. IsrAEL ABRAHAMs, a gentleman whose names induce us to think it possible that if elected to Parliament he will take the oaths with his hat on, offers himself to the electors of Devizes. He goes in [...]
[...] think of ordering him to fetch us a cab, because he had signed a letter to us “your obedient servant.” But there is one novel phrase in MR. ABRAHAM's address, and Mr. Punch begs to say that to the promise thus distinctly given he does mean to pin MR. ABRAHAMs, and more: over designs to run avery large pin into him should he prove unmindful [...]
[...] Very well said, MR. ABRAHAMs, and no matter who may oppose you, Mr. Punch recommends you to the men of Devizes. As you have onl to secure 187 of them to obtain your seat; go it, and prosper! Mind, [...]
Punch25.03.1865
  • Datum
    Samstag, 25. März 1865
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] Esq., who married a niece of the LoRD CHANCELLoR-an appointment created under the New Bankruptcy Act; fourth, the berth of Architect to the Court of Bank ruptcy, to Augustus B. ABRAHAM, brother-in-law to the LoRD CHANCELLOR-an appointment found, necessary under the New Bankruptcy Act. In addition to these, a Secretaryship of Presentations has been given to A, B, ABRAHAM, Esq., and [...]
[...] appointment found, necessary under the New Bankruptcy Act. In addition to these, a Secretaryship of Presentations has been given to A, B, ABRAHAM, Esq., and a MR. R. J. ABRAHAM has been appointed Second Clerk in the Land Registry Office, and his Lordship's son-in-law holds the Official Assigneeship to the Exeter District.” [...]
[...] LoRD WESTBURY's Act, that they have been able to bring it to a dead lock, in spite of an executive strengthened by this powerful force of BETHELLs and ABRAHAMs. But why should the public strain at the last two gnats, after swallowing all those camels? [...]
Punch19.03.1864
  • Datum
    Samstag, 19. März 1864
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] “EMMANUEL ABRAHAMs, of Cable Street, said he purchased the silk and ivory pointer of the prisoner between twelve and one o clock on Thursday for 2s. 2d. º: were three pieces of blue silk, three pieces of ribbon, and six pieces of yellow [...]
[...] silk.” No one, surely, but a man far too innocent to be a thief would have taken such property for sale to the shop ºf MR. ABRAHAMs, who proceeded to state what the accused must clearly have been ignorant of, namely, that: [...]
[...] he had been told by EMMANUEL ABRAHAMs to bring him property at any time, whether he obtained it right or wrong." [...]
[...] on both of those points will not fail to recognise, in the abstraction of a Pentateuch from an Ark in a Synagogue, and the conveyance of its furniture to such an establishment as that of MR. ABRAHAMs, a striking º: of the connection between deficient education and crime. Any Put a very ignorant fellow would have known that, whatever might be [...]
Punch17.10.1863
  • Datum
    Samstag, 17. Oktober 1863
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] The REveREND HENRY WARD BEEcHER so worships the Union that he is ready to sacrifice his son to it “ſaster than ABRAHAM was going to offer up Is AAc.” This looks like pretty considerable idolatry. One would think that MR. BeECHER must be a queer sort of a Christian. So he is. MR. BEECHER is a War Christian. [...]
[...] looks like pretty considerable idolatry. One would think that MR. BeECHER must be a queer sort of a Christian. So he is. MR. BEECHER is a War Christian. The less he says about ABRAHAM the better. His only ABRAHAM is ABRAHAM LINCOLN. From MR. BEECHER's speech at Glasgow we are surprised to learn that the [...]
Punch28.11.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 28. November 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] probably be better to say WILLIAM LANGFELDT. WILLIAM is a Christian name, and LANGFELDT does not seem to imply descent from ABRAHAM. And the funny little trick of selling wooden nutmegs for real spice is just that which one can hardly º a gentleman, who really rejoices in such names as Woolf Levy, playing. [...]
[...] if he had, it would of course have produced a little explosion of feeling, like that evinced in the succeeding dialogue:– “MR. ABRAHAM. M.R. DEPUTY Lott was in the foremost rank. “Deputy Lott. You are stating that which you know is untrue. “MR. ABRAH.A.M. You were. [...]
[...] meeting—a time happily past. The courtesies of debate, however, were thus further exemplified : “MR. ABRAHAM. I witnessed it with my own eyes. MR. DEPUTY Lott was present in the chapel during the whole of the first stage of the proceedings for more than half an hour until we went out to perambulate the grounds. He might have [...]
[...] read the sentence of consecration—it was printed. “DEputy Lott. I had a right to be inside to hear it. “MR. ABRAHAM. You were standing within a few feet of the Bishop. “DEPUTY Lott. That's wholly untrue. (Confusion.)" [...]
The general evening post29.01.1756/30.01.1756/31.01.1756
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 29. Januar 1756
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] Engineer William Roy, ---- Lieutenant. Lieut. Abraham Hill, (late of Falmouth’s). Enſign. Quarter Maſter Serjeant John Widdows, - Enſign. Ridgeway Owen Merrick, Gent. – Enſign. [...]
[...] Lieutenant Abraham Hofkins, (from Half Pay of Cholmondeley’s Foot) Lieutenant. - Sullivan, [...]
[...] . Lieutenant Thomas Bennett, (from Half Pay of Pawlett's) , . Second Lieutenant Abraham Brocket, (from Half-Pay of Agnew’s) - Second Lieutenant William Pye, (from [...]
[...] defirous of further Particulars. | I am, Sir, Your obli, ed humble Servant. Ostober 6, 1755. ABRAHAM Fow LE R. I keep the Turk’s Head, Milbank, Weſtminſter. The underwritten are fome of my Friends who knew [...]