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Punch27.07.1872
  • Datum
    Samstag, 27. Juli 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] TELFord's friend will have nothing but Cochins. TELFoRD him self says, “No, have Dorkings and Spanish.” TELFoRD wants us to guess how many eggs he had from November to February. I am inclined to say, thoughtfully, “Well, let me, see”—as if I were making a stupendous calculation—“six a day.” TELFoRD's friend [...]
[...] asks, “How many hens?” I note this question as being naturally the common-sense one to put to a man who wants you to guess about eggs. I wonder how it is that I didn't at once think of this ques tion. I was simply occupying myself with the vaguest probabilities without any data to go upon. TELFoRD's friend, having obtained [...]
[...] without any data to go upon. TELFoRD's friend, having obtained his data, which means fifty hens, expresses his guarded opinion that TELFoRD ought to have had a good lot of eggs. TELFord replies that, as a matter of fact, he had, and informs us that they numbered over two thousand. “Put 'em at twopence apiece,” says he, know [...]
[...] amusing, and I dare say where you cannot always calocate on such a very returnable remark-I mean,” she says, with a sudden gasp “a very remarkable return of eggs, the mere looking after and attending to the chickens, as we used to do at home, where we always kept Dorkshires and Fowldoor Barns, as I told my nephew, [...]
[...] repusing than mofitable.” [Evidently, “more amusing than profitable,” vide Dixon's Johnsonary.] TELFoRD's friend now informs us that he has sold eggs at four pence apiece. We all say “Indeed!” Mental Calculation.—Sixty eggs at fourpence equal a pound. If [...]
[...] as ENGLEMORE would put it, “out of Mister Chicken.” Happy Thought.--To ask TELFoRD's friend, can he do this (this meaning sixty eggs at fourpence apiece) regularly. He answers, decidedly, “Ono, nothing i. it. And then,” he adds, “you must deduct for their food.” [...]
[...] much for labour. How many cripples to roll a meadow P) 4. Poultry. Give them nettles, pepper, and oyster-shells. . [The result would be probably curried eggs. But go into this moref #: When Hens get old, or measly, make 'em into Mulligatawny. The worse the hen, the better the Mulligatawny. To induce them [...]
[...] When Hens get old, or measly, make 'em into Mulligatawny. The worse the hen, the better the Mulligatawny. To induce them tº lay, give 'em chalk eggs. ſº understand the principle of this. Must master, the principle with, a view to scientific farm ; TELFORD's friend #. know, “why,” but so it was. The [...]
[...] this. Must master, the principle with, a view to scientific farm ; TELFORD's friend #. know, “why,” but so it was. The only other use of chalk eggs that I’ve hitherto known has been [...]
[...] to encourage Divers. You threw in a chalk, egg and a Diver went in for it. Six chalk eggs for threepence. A chalk egg is a sort of doll to a Hen. And yet when one comes to reflect—but it is [...]
PunchTitelblatt Bd. 011 1846
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. Januar 1846
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] this mighty Pudding. Up early—down late—the marvellous work has been the sole possessing object of his life. How has he not laboured to obtain the best ingredients! For, as the immortal Soyer profoundly observes: “Some eggs are much larger than others; some pepper stronger; salt salter; and even some sugar sweeter.” Therefore Punch, knowing that he was making a Pudding for the whole Human Race—(a very different thing, mind you, from the Pudding that your dear Mrs. CAUDLE, Sir, makes for you and all the little C.'s; though, may that [...]
[...] Eggs (Golden) from the bird, the property of Mother Goose; with the Egg of a Phoenix—the only one ever laid—taken from a nest of Cinnamon-sticks, and found in a Nutmeg Tree, in Arabia Felix. Beat well in a crystal bowl with a spoon of satin-wood. [...]
Punch22.08.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 22. August 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] For the goose without feathers, its master, Fº of genuine gold, at the rate, we were told, f one egg per day, but no faster. [...]
[...] For some time the man-goose was content to make use Qf the egg daily brought by the bird to him, Till fired by disdain of such slow rate of gain, A short-cut to millions occurred to him. [...]
[...] Till fired by disdain of such slow rate of gain, A short-cut to millions occurred to him. If his goose thus could lay one gold egg every day, For him to put by in his būreau, 'Twas an obvious idea, inside her must be a [...]
[...] For him to put by in his būreau, 'Twas an obvious idea, inside her must be a Mine of all the gold eggs in futuro. [...]
[...] The thirst for her murder prevailed when he heard her Cackle loud o'er the egg for the day, As, in proud sense of duty, to say, “Here’s a beauty, At the feet of my master to lay!” [...]
[...] On some Southern Line of his . - Who accustomed his public to humbug or hector, For his daily gold egg put the squeege on, Till at last putting screw on to force out a new one, He finds the more sternly he squeezes, - [...]
[...] Till at last putting screw on to force out a new one, He finds the more sternly he squeezes, - Far from new eggs out-shelled, that the old egg's withheld, And that geese can’t be bled as he pleases' - [...]
[...] E’en on Railway Directors, they’ll reach 'em. If §. cut up your geese, that they’ll not only cease or your needs to lay gold eggs enough, Sir, But the eggs will be lost, and the geese, to your cost, Mill cut up exceedingly rough, Sir. [...]
Punch31.10.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 31. Oktober 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] Swan Egg Lane, E.C. [...]
[...] should take care how you use baking powders, not merely because if you don't you may use vermin powders, instead. In the first place —witness the Lance!—the baking powders, if egg powders, may be coloured with chromate of lead; in which case you might nearly, as well use vermin powders. In the next, baking powders are, accordi [...]
[...] tartaric acid, with a small quantity of rice or flour, and act by producing a sham fermentation. You would, perhaps, prefer the real. Egg powders not containing chromat of lead may be innocuous, Ladies, but they are innutritious...They may be very good to make puddings for children and others with whom eggs disagree. Otherwise [...]
[...] Ladies, but they are innutritious...They may be very good to make puddings for children and others with whom eggs disagree. Otherwise there is nothing so true than, as the popular saying affirms, that “eggs is eggs”–and that nothing else is. And the worst of these powders, be they ever so harmless is, Ma'am, that if cooks are not looked sharp [...]
[...] is eggs”–and that nothing else is. And the worst of these powders, be they ever so harmless is, Ma'am, that if cooks are not looked sharp after, there will be eggs in your bills, but, in lieu of eggs, egg powder in your puddings and pies. or further.information on this subject, see a fourpenny pamphlet, [...]
[...] xx with eggs - - - - - - . . More egºspensive. Sitting-room, Three to Five Shillings. Standing room, gratis. Attendance charged in the bill, but waiting in the passage. [...]
Punch23.12.1865
  • Datum
    Samstag, 23. Dezember 1865
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] A Fortune is to be made from Kºgs—That statement will cause a few people to prick up their ears, I take it. Yes, Sir, a fortune is to be made | from eggs, or to narrow the boundary, let me say from One Egg, and [...]
[...] that a good one. That one egg produces a chicken, that chicken becomes a hen; should it be a cock, sell it, or what is better, if you can, keep it, and procure another egg. Very good, at last you have your hen. [...]
[...] keep it, and procure another egg. Very good, at last you have your hen. Now, this hen, if a good one, may be calculated upon for at least six eggs per week. In a very short time? You will thus have a good stock of poultry about you. Turn the original hen into a Limited Liability Company, and make arrangements to supply London, the Country, the [...]
[...] of poultry about you. Turn the original hen into a Limited Liability Company, and make arrangements to supply London, the Country, the Continent, and the Colonies with eggs. Calculate, (for 'tis only a mere matter of figures) the cost of the egg, the feed of the hen, and the demand, the enormous demand for which you will have to provide a [...]
[...] forward you my plans when I see if the public are inclined to .# the present attractive bait. I wish I had a few spare pounds, and I’d work that egg business next week. - -- I remain, Sir, Yours truly, [...]
Punch09.07.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 09. Juli 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] POACHED EGGS AND THEIR POACHERS. [...]
[...] THE Agricultural Journal, under the heading of “An Egg Poacher,” narrates an exploit of a gamekeeper who, in the neighbourhood of Camborne, Cornwall, after several ineffectual attempts to catch a [...]
[...] Mr. Punch omits, he being of excessive politeness. baited first with a rabbit, then with a bird, and next with a weasel, MR. RYLANDs (Liberal), formerly Mayor of, and now Member for finally succeeded in trapping it with the bait of an adder, which he had Warrington, moved the Second Reading of a Bill for closing Public killed, coiled up as though it were living. Aha! and so the egg Houses on Sunday. MR. BIRLEY (Conservative Member for Man- poacher was caught at last, thinks MR. BENJAMIN Bow BELL. Not chester) seconded. MR. ALDERMAN LAWRENCE opposed, until the exactly so, BENJAMIN; the egg-poacher was the mere vermin used for [...]
[...] confounds with the sparrowhawk. They are very beautiful birds, an not only ornamental but useful, especially the harrier hawk that destroys such egg-poachers as adders. When a gamekeeper shoots a bird like this he makes much the same mistake as that of shooting at the pigeon and killing the crow, or rather shooting at the crow and [...]
[...] but about whose habits and manners the majority of them know nothing, and entertain a variety of absurd persuasions The idea of teachin your gamekeeper anything on the subject of eggs ought to be as absur as that of instructing your grandmother in a method of eating them ; and at any rate gamekeepers might be expected to know all about [...]
[...] as that of instructing your grandmother in a method of eating them ; and at any rate gamekeepers might be expected to know all about poached eggs; but few of them probably are aware that adders poach them, and that in killing a harrier hawk they are destroying their own ally against egg-poachers. [...]
PunchRegister Bd. 021 1851
  • Datum
    Mittwoch, 01. Januar 1851
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] Grand Protectionist Goose-Club, 210 Great Dowager Question (The), 46 Great Egg Myth (The), 54 Great Needle Case (The), 23 Great Peacemaker (The), 267 [...]
[...] Education in the Army, 187 Effects of Bloomerism, 180 Eggs-emplary Hussars and Lancers, 23 Electric Compliments, 169 Electric Lying, 219 [...]
[...] Punster's Fate (The), 6 Queny by Cromwell's Ghost, 251 Question of Stale Eggs (A) 111 Rack Ponche à la Romaine, 68 Railway Dialogues, 74 [...]
Punch04.03.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 04. März 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] HARD-BOILED EGGS. [...]
[...] “The answer to the Andrassy Note was ready on Wednesday, but was kept some days awaiting the approval of the SULTAN, who was ill with cholera from having eaten eighteen hard eggs at one meal, and could not be communicated with.”—Constantinople Correspondent. [...]
[...] Diplomacy attention begs, , While you digestion over-tax, By this excess in hard-boiled eggs. Look, where your Rayahs evil-starred Oppression's cup drain to the dregs, [...]
[...] Oppression's cup drain to the dregs, A*think your yoke on them lies hard, As on you yolks of hard-boiled eggs. [...]
[...] And you may spare your powder-kegs— And find it easier to digest - Hard-worded notes than hard-boiled eggs; [...]
[...] You cross with rather shaky legs, Rayahs will speed you o'er the ri With blessings on those hard-boiled eggs! [...]
PunchTitelblatt 10.1844
  • Datum
    Dienstag, 01. Oktober 1844
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] 18 Sumban after Crimitm. R 22 Tu *:::"#.” -anº, Titat º Eggs arr axxually used in France, [...]
[...] 842. Then the eggs in France must be in better odour than those they send here. [...]
Punch02.01.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 02. Januar 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] I have just returned from the play-house, and hasten to give you some slight account of the pantomime I have just witnessed. It is called Harlequin and Mother Goose, or the Golden Egg, and was originally played at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden, by His Majesty's Servants, on the 29th of December 1806. It was written [...]
[...] and then presented Colin with the celebrated Goose. The next scene showed how Colin secured Collinette, by giving up the Golden Egg to the Squire. However, Colin having consented to the death ºă. sagacious bird, the Golden Egg was thrown into the sea as a punishment by Mother Goose, *}; changed Colin, Collinette [...]
[...] length (in the Last Scene) the Golden Egg was found, and the lovers were rendered happy, I hope, for ever. And now, my Dear Father, you have received a short account of [...]
[...] of unused eggs into, a testimonial to MR. SKINFLINT and the Guar dians who voted with him—after they have been kept a week longer. [...]
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