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140 Treffer
Suchbegriff: Anger

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PunchBd. 007 1844
  • Datum
    Montag, 01. Januar 1844
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 1
[...] you with the intolerable shafts of our wit—raise our anger, and we can lash the three kingdoms in a fury against you. Pause, pause, infatu [...]
PunchBd. 006 1844
  • Datum
    Montag, 01. Januar 1844
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 1
[...] The presence of the holy fathers caused considerable annoyance in the forts. Especially the poor English, as Protestants, were subject to much petty persecution, to the no small anger of JENRINs, their commander. And it must be confessed that these intrepid footmen were not so amenable to discipline as they might have been. Re [...]
PunchBd. 009 1845
  • Datum
    Mittwoch, 01. Januar 1845
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] administered an oath, winding up with the most impressive words, delivered by the worthy Baron with a most searching glance at GIBBs, and an accent of sorrow rather than anger. The words in question were-“Michael Gibbs, deliver your accounts as a good accountant ought to do.” Then somebody read a warrant of [...]
[...] Surely, any one of these gentlemen will naturally be angry if found out and pronounced to be an impostor. “BuckINGHAM is so angered. He speaks after his fashion. He bawls out rogue, forger, impostor. He says you are a malignant attack—a disgusting exhibition, that nobody will be safe from you without buying a [...]
[...] joke? Regard the long-eared animal to which he has been compared. He prefers a thistle to a peach. To express his griefs or joys, his loves or anger, he has but his heehaw, and brays softly or loudly as nature prompts him. When he lifts up his voice, other far-off donkeys catch up the strain, and echo the peal. [...]
PunchBd. 011 1846
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. Januar 1846
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] of birds flew past me ; but they flew so high, it was impossible for me to discern if there were any canaries among them. And here—I must confess it—I felt some anger towards the respected principals of my Blackheath Boarding-School. I have said that I was nominally taught the Use of the Globes; my learning was down in the bill, and [...]
[...] patience—a word expressive of the fidgets. Both ER means trouble, irritation, teasing, vexation. It is a word of petulant anger in great request. “Don’t bother me" is equivalent to the French “tu m’embétes.” LovE is only used when coaxing is required, as “Do ; there's a [...]
[...] been born and bred, and whence it had been found impossible to release him without taking off the roof of his domicile. We wandered up, more in sorrow than in anger, towards the Edge ware Road, and had not gone very far when we heard, in advance of us, a laugh of frantic derision from the populace. On looking before [...]
[...] He would not embitter a leave-taking day, Nor send an old Dragon in anger away; He sees the Mint's order that bids them depart, And he presses the brute to his sorrowful heart. [...]
PunchBd. 010 1846
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. Januar 1846
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] Sterne-like conclusion we had just arrived, when we received a tap from that pink of polite ness, the Policeman—if anything can be called the pink when it is perfectly blue—who observed, in a tone of sorrow rather than of anger: “Come, sir, this is against the orders—you must move on, if you please.” We were so rivetted to the spot, that we did not stir, when he pulled us down and conducted us away from the hoarding. We need not say that we went away, [...]
[...] Ye foremoste honteres wroughtey" spotte In hopelesse angere sunke, To fynde,-sole relic of yº stagge,_ Hysaunciente hayrie trunke. [...]
[...] remember that “forty centuries were looking down upon them from the manoeuvres with a mixture of good humour and firmness Pyramids;” one of those very fine things that the world has consented that was truly laudable, K25 seemed to carry out the orders to receive as fine, without troubling itself to analyse their meaning. of his superiors, in sorrow rather than in anger; and, the [...]
[...] “Well I know,” said ABD-EL-KADER, “That, if ta'en, I should be smok'd : Yet your hasty father's anger, Damsel, I have oft provok'd. [...]
PunchBd. 012 1847
  • Datum
    Freitag, 01. Januar 1847
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] Edgeware and that of Gray's Inn. | letting themselves into the quiet house with the Chubb key 5–think In my grandfather's time it used to be Free-Masonry that roused of them, the hypocrites, taking off their insidious boots before they slink their anger. It was my grand aunt (whose portrait we still have in up stairs, the children sleeping over-head, the wife of their bosom alone the family) who got into the clock-case at the Royal Rosicrucian with the waning rushlight in the two-pair front—that chamber so Lodge at Bungay, Suffolk, to spy the proceedings of the Society, of soon to be rendered hateful by the smell of their stale cigars 1 I am [...]
[...] getting dingier and dingier. The original stood the firing of Waterloo, but the copy cannot even tolerate the smoke of London. He is beginning to get black in the face, as if with anger at the treatment he has experienced. [...]
[...] (Says REveREND MR. CRick.) We grovel at your royal boot; Ah! don't in anger kick, Great Prince 1 the suppliants at your foot, See how our lips cling fondly to't, [...]
[...] J of indignation should be adroitly thrown into it. There would be, perhaps, a little of the “more in sorrow than in anger” in the gesture above de scribed ; but this is an improvement upon the more offensive mode of protesting that sometimes pre [...]
PunchBd. 013 1847
  • Datum
    Freitag, 01. Januar 1847
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] e by any means angered at what I’m a going to say—but there’s lines, in your hand that tells me ple's pockets. You’ll be trying this on again—I’m afeard you will—when I wouldn't give a brass it of luck, however, to folks of your sort–you're never hanged for it.— [...]
[...] at our mutual discomfiture. Her scorn only made me more mad; and, having spurs on, I began digging them, into CAMBAC#REs’ fat sides as We . on the carpet, until the Marshal, howled with rage and anger. “This insult must be avenged with blood!” roared the DUKE OF [...]
[...] return to more wholesome nutriment. We hope our illustrated con temporaries will take in good part, and profit by, the warning we have given to them “more in sorrow than in anger,”, which is, no less important to their own welfare than to that of the classes to whom they . themselves. [...]
[...] Really, this is worse and worse; What’s to be done? Coerce! Coerce' [Ireland, at the word “Coerce,” expresses great anger, but presently seems to reflect, and becomes calm. [...]
PunchBd. 015 1848
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Januar 1848
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] having mentioned the subject. The next day he calls to inquire if you want anything in his way; the generous creature forgives, as quickly as he forgets. is anger is only roused when you leave him to go to another tailor. He is very jealous of any one else doing a kind action, and would like to enjoy the monopoly of all the Schneider virtues. [...]
[...] another tailor. He is very jealous of any one else doing a kind action, and would like to enjoy the monopoly of all the Schneider virtues. In his anger he has been known to send a lawyer's letter; but if you go to him, and tell him what you think of his conduct, and order a new wrap-rascal, he will settle the matter himself, and assure you that the [...]
[...] wrong. If any breakage takes place, it wasn't the child's fault; she tells you she’s only to blame. She stays the father's arm when his anger is about to fall, and stops his voice when his paternal passion is rising. If any of the boys have gone to the theatre, she sits up to let them in. When questioned the next morning as to the hour they came [...]
[...] in fact, in the art of putting a person off, that the Government Clerk, is especially clever. e does this so politely, that, though offended, you are yet afraid to give explosion to your anger. “He will be with you in one instant;” and he retires with a new coat into the next room to give audience to one of his tailors. “He shall [...]
[...] | carried his antics a little too far, and the Parliament took the great Constitutional liberty of declining to send an answer when he called for a subsidy; and in these cases i. anger was shown in his declaring that if he was not enabled to liquidate his debts, he could at least do something in the way of liquidation by dissolving the Parliament. This [...]
[...] are in prison. Dogged from the cabbage-groves of Boulagh, to the clanking dungeons of Clonmel, they have met, without blenching, the anger of the Law, and would have died resolutely under her fasces, had the bloody Government not let them off. Honour to the Martyrs of freedom | Next to coming to America, it would have been most [...]
[...] Thus thought SIR John, by anger wrought on, And to rewenge his injured cause, He brought them hup to MR. BRoughton, [...]
PunchBd. 014 1848
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Januar 1848
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] accent, go up to Colonel the HoNour ABLE OTTo DILLwATER of the Guards, and make some dreadful remark about Louis FEELIP, which caused the Colonel to turn pale with anger. I saw a Bishop, an Under Secretary of State, and GENERAL DE Boots, listening with the utmost gravity and eagerness to little BOB NoDDY, who pretended to have [...]
[...] The Emperor Vulture of the North, from his Carpathian height Looked with a restless anger on that stern but short-lived fight; And uneasily kept pacing his eyrie to and fro, And spread his broad black wing to hide from his brood what passed below. [...]
[...] the place)—and no argument has hitherto convinced the Duke that that copper half-crown was not put off by a guileful man of the Hebrew persuasion. His Grace, to keep his anger warm, has had that bad half-crown nailed to his dressing-table; and every morning shaves with one eye upon his wrongs. [...]
PunchBd. 016 1849
  • Datum
    Montag, 01. Januar 1849
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] WHO can estimate the value of a Word? Once from our lips, who can tell what it will go for? In kindness, or in anger; in scorn, or in approbation; in criticism, or in good nature, who can weigh what a word too much, or a word too little, may amount to? [...]
[...] After SAM HALL, to pay for my Supper, which cost me 2s. 2d., besides 4d. to the Waiter; and then home in a Cab, it being late, and f fearing to anger my Wife, which cost me 2s, more; .# money, having been much diverted, and so to bed. [...]
[...] She started up with a scream, which terrified me as I upset the glass: and with empurpled features and a voice quivering and ...i with anger, she vowed she would never forgive me. . In vain I pleaded that I was ignorant of the whole of these disgraceful transactions... I went down on my knees to her, and begged her to be pacified; I called [...]
[...] Raving. Such Violence, methinks, do only prove that there are other Bigots besides Papists; and is the worst Means of enforcing . Truth; for they that speak in Anger and Passion are commonly concluded by indifferent People to be in the Wrong. The Society complaining of want of Funds, which I do not wonder at, for I fear methe Subscribers [...]
[...] that did anger the Park Keeper by mocking him. I doubt me that the young Leatherbreeches be not the happier as long as they can get a [...]
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