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Suchbegriff: Maria-Rain

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Punch30.05.1863
  • Datum
    Samstag, 30. Mai 1863
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] After Breakfast on the Derby Day, 1863. Rain pouring. A few Carriages are seen passing, either closed, or covered with umbrellas. MR. NAG GLETON rings the bell. [...]
[...] Mrs. N. (smiling). Don't be angry with me, HENRY, because it hap H. to rain on the Derby Day, and you are obliged to give up your oliday. I cannot command the weather, you know. Mr. W. No, nor your tongue neither, or you wouldn't aggravate a [...]
[...] affectation that is perfectly ridiculous in a man who does not know one horse from another. Mr. W. MARIA, you’re an antiphonetic—no, you are not—you are an antipathetic woman. If you had a good genial nature you’d give me a kiss, or a box on the ear, which is all the same, and say, “I’m glad you've [...]
[...] Wry lace. rs. M. You are deceiving me again, HENRY. Mr. W., Am I, by Jove. Put on your bonnet, it don't rain, and come round to his house, and see. He’s in no humour for bed, and we'll finish the evening there. [...]
[...] -THE sky with clouds was overcast, the drizzling rain did fall, 'Twas bitter cold; the wind north-east, and blew a frequent squall, The road to Epsom whilst we took it poured on all the way. [...]
[...] The road to Epsom whilst we took it poured on all the way. The deuce a bit of comfort was there on the Derby Day. Rain, rain drench, drench, rain, rain away, The deuce a bit of comfort was there on the Derby Day. [...]
[...] So much a º: his donkey-cart could say To Epsom as he urged his moke on that damp Derby Day. Rain, rain, &c. [...]
[...] Scarce was the bit of muslin blue about the hats of males; . The flunkeys might have said they missed the customary veils. But, ah! the rain that laid the dust the jokes did also lay; The deuce a bit º there was on that moist Derby Day. , Tald, &C. [...]
[...] And Nigger minstrels washed half white could shoe-blacks only play, Instead of twanging banjos on that soaking Derby Day. Rain, rain, &c. [...]
[...] Whilst pigeon-pie, and veal-and-ham, with some º: of Ai, And more of rhubarb, were consumed on that wet Derby Day. Rain, rain, &c. [...]
Punch05.03.1864
  • Datum
    Samstag, 05. März 1864
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] 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 [...]
[...] I distinctly saw the head of a lady suddenly appear out. of a door on the landing, and from its pale lips, a solemn and peculiarly plaintive voice proceed, saying—“MARIA, bring me my body.”, . What fearful crime has, at some previous time, stained those floors with gore, I know not. But I can testify that on the above occasion [...]
[...] What fearful crime has, at some previous time, stained those floors with gore, I know not. But I can testify that on the above occasion I with my own ears heard a lonely head piteously imploring MARIA, (who, it appears, is the lady's maid, and will henceforth be narrowly [...]
[...] the family, I will take | my pen to write these few lines, in which I conscientiously assert, that on last Tuesday, the 7th, I, while giving a few directions to MARIA, the lady's maid, heard a voice distinctly saying, “MARIA,” addressing, as I have since had reason to *Pººl the same servant to whom I was speaking, “Bring me my body.” I did [...]
Punch22.09.1860
  • Datum
    Samstag, 22. September 1860
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] OFF with your rain-clouds, evaporate mizzle ! Wat’riest, weariest, wettest of saints; O'er your blue nose draw your night-cap of drizzle, [...]
[...] You made the Lake car-men perforce sinecurists; . . E’en the Volunteer movement you aimed at restraining, But it went on full gallop, in spite of your raining; And the soldierly spirit, in Curragh and Camp, [...]
[...] But you without orders, sent your heavy wet? And all in these islands were singing one song: “Here’s Down with Saint Swithin-his rain is too long!” [...]
[...] And the world seemed a vista of weary wet Sundays, And mankind's occupation to chant “de Profundis; ” And barometers stood as if fixed at “much rain; ” And we thought we should never see sunshine again; And all of our blindness and bitterness, too, [...]
[...] But the sun in the heavens was steadily shining Behind the dark rain-clouds, for all who could see ; - - And the fº we deemed perished, the fruit we thought pining, Kept their faith in the future more constant than we ;. [...]
[...] And the fº we deemed perished, the fruit we thought pining, Kept their faith in the future more constant than we ;. The rain-cloud must pass, and the growing things knew it,. And garnered each glance of the sun that pierced through it; For now that St. Swithin is chased from his hold, [...]
[...] Edwin an - Tijo. Edwin and MARIA cannot live. [...]
[...] rain—drops. [...]
Punch or The London charivari (Punch)Titelblatt 04.1842
  • Datum
    Freitag, 01. April 1842
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] Battle or (Eau de) Cologne, 1746. Jean Maria Farina whops the allied forces of Price and Gosnell. [...]
[...] late on. rain; [...]
Punch or The London charivari (Punch)Titelblatt 07.1842
  • Datum
    Freitag, 01. Juli 1842
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] have some rain, But soon [...]
[...] Domestic.—Now rub your bright bars and fire-irons with suet, pre viously to the exhibition of Anna Maria's silver paper arabesque. Cover bilious gold frames with lemon-coloured Leno. Suspend fly-temple from centre of ceiling, and carefully bag your chandeliers. Clean bed [...]
Punch05.08.1865
  • Datum
    Samstag, 05. August 1865
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] I am arqused by something falling on, the tip of my nose, which is just under the apex of the crown of my wideawake. Odd. Rain? No. "I think what it can be. Another!...It’s a pebble! Two or three. Irise suddenly, and see little boys scurrying away over the beach. I [...]
[...] my coat collar and down the brim of my hat. If I turn back, I shall have it in my face. Never mind, after all it is not so bad as a storm of rain would be. (Perhaps this is the reason why Slawford and Stanton didn’t come out.) In another half-hour the wind has gone down. Pleasant [...]
[...] don’t like to ask for a book, having lost the Adieu, so I devote myself to the Eastern Counties Railway Time-table and the Pig. The Pig won't come out because of the rain, so I must tut up with watching the Stye. I dine in bed, smoke in bed, and meditate on the Pig. When it is so [...]
[...] nacks, that after August, September, and October, will come November, December, and January. During these latter months it is not impos. sible that rain may fall, and in that case London will once more become what Parochial wisdom leaves it—a sea of foul mud, which a handful of scavengers helplessly attempt, sometimes, to remove. Wu this fact, we [...]
[...] most sacred promises as idle words. Mr. N. (aside). Said so. (Aloud) Putting this and that together, MARIA, I gather that you accuse me of having made some promise about the new Opera. Mrs. N. And of having broken it. That is all. But as I said, you [...]
[...] all about it. Mrs. W. Quite natural that you should. Mr. W. I understand you, MARIA. Perhaps, however, you may some day discover that on that very Saturday I remembered my children to a better end than taking them to a theatre. But I have [...]
Punch20.01.1877
  • Datum
    Samstag, 20. Januar 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] MAKE Hay in wet weather. Take opportunity to store water. he midst of rain remember drought. [...]
[...] in the Gardeners' Chronicle that the total fall of rain during the month of December was [...]
[...] which cross roads he means.” It was by this time six o'clock, but there was an hour and a half to dinner, and though it was a trifle colder than in town, and the rain was beginning to come down pretty heavily, yet, at all events, there was a cheerful room to look forward to in an old country mansion, a hearty welcome from a hospitable Squire, the best of everything, a brilliant [...]
[...] Thus meditating, we fell into a dreamy doze, then into a pleasant slumber. We were awoke by a sudden stoppage. It was dark. The wind was howling. The rain was beating against the windows and sides of the fly. The driver shivering and drenched, opened the door, thereby admitting a hurricane an a shower, and said, “’Ere's the Cross Roads, Sir, but I don't see nobody.” [...]
[...] is was irritating. We put it to his common sense, “What on earth could be the fun to us of driving about Hertfordshire, hungry and tired, in the wind and rain, for the sake of playing a practical joke on an unknown [...]
[...] down a narrow lane, and, finally, the weary horse stuck fast in the heaviest clay soil... On each side was a É. ditch; in front was a gate leading into a field. The rain was pelting, worse than ever. The Flyman hadn't the smallest notion of where he'd got to. Then, for the first time, we began to lift up our voice, and bless MAJOR JAWLEY SHARP. And, all the while, [...]
[...] LADY MARIA MERRYWEATHER is glad to be able to inform Mr. Punch that since one of her great-nephews the other day sent her his Seventy-First Wolume, the LADY M. M. has found herself [...]
PunchPunch's Almanack for 1871
  • Datum
    Sonntag, 01. Januar 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] “What Do You INTEND to be “this' rime, MARIA! Last TIME, You were THIRTY-‘oNE, AND THIRTY THE TIME BEFORE / " “TELL THE TRUTH, DFAR—Thirty-Two. HEIGHo! How TIME FLIES l’” [...]
[...] A song For WINTER. (By a Jolly Gardener.) WHrlE rains and winds descend and roar, All outdoor planting now is o'er; But indoors we may still be jolly, [...]
[...] - iro ee uting in Tra falgar Square by ºś. 2. Possible rain of meteors—certain rain of cats and dogs. 3. Archery Fetes commence, President, [...]
All the year round04.11.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 04. November 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] FIRE AND RAIN. [...]
[...] FIRE AND RAIN. [...]
[...] predict, or rather I calculate, that this terrible fire will be followed by a heavy down-pour of rain upon Chicago.” [...]
[...] and starving. The conflagration raged until an early hour this morning, when a heavy rain fell and extinguished the flames.” There was a slight, a very slight degree [...]
[...] ture which it previously held in solution. Thus the winds that blew so furiously over the unhappy city of Chicago, and the rain that fell in such copious torrents, were alike produced by the immensity of the [...]
[...] by historians and philosophers that great battles by sea and land are invariably followed or interrupted by heavy rains. It was not so in ancient times when men fought hand to hand with sword and [...]
[...] on shore, and great heat generated over a large space occupied by the combatants, the rain descends with the certainty of cause and effect. In like manner, and for a similar reason, [...]
[...] cause and effect. In like manner, and for a similar reason, rain in such great and populous cities as London, Manchester, and Glasgow, is always more frequent and more copious than in [...]
[...] and the taller chimneys of factories—that pour not only smoke but heat into the atmosphere, produce the rain, from which the more sparsely peopled villages and towns, beyond the reach of the too [...]
[...] glass by which to measure his sermon. He knelt down at the chair for about an Ave Maria, but uttered no audible prayer. He then took the Jesuit's Testament, and read for the text the Gospel for the [...]
The London and China telegraph23.10.1871
  • Datum
    Montag, 23. Oktober 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] covered with two-eighths of an inch, thus showing the waters of the adjoining plains still rising, notwithstanding that there had been no rain since daylight of the 15th. During the last two days the water in the west plain remained very much about the same height: some say it has gone down [...]
[...] canse such a slight difference. It was expected the whole district would be turned into a lake, till winter brings ice and northerly gales. Rain fell again on the 22nd, but it appears that the Chi nese always expect rain on the seventh day of the seventh moon ; and last night's was only a shower, so it was hoped the wet season [...]
[...] heavy floods have had to be recalled in Chekeang, Kiangsu or Hunan ; while in the North the usual harvests were witheld from the want of a due supply of rain to moisten the parched fields; and inland communication, in the absence of proper roads, became almost impossible, owing to the drying up of the water. [...]
[...] became almost impossible, owing to the drying up of the water. Courses. . For some years back the authorities at Peking and Tientsin have prayed earnestly for rain, while those in the more central provinces have, with fasts, implored the rain-god to spare from excess of favours their crops and houses. This year, the [...]
[...] tending beyond our globe itself. Seen from such a point of view, how useless are the miserable and petulant appeals to the Rain deity which, under different forms, are now being offered up in Chekeang and Pechihli. We remember a tale of an old Scottish [...]
[...] of condemning himself, and the Emperor through the formality of handing him over to the Board of Punishments. A Hankow correspondent writes that very heavy rains have been falling in that district, accompanied by strong winds, and that considerable damage has been done to the standing cotton. [...]
[...] DEPARTURES.–From Rotterdam, for Java, Johanna Maria; for Ba tavia, Maria; Oct. 18, from Cardiff, for Singapore, Eastern Star; Oct 20, from London, for Singapore (via Cardiff), Palm Tree ; 21, for [...]
[...] A R IR IV A. L.S. Date. Ship | Captain. From | At Oct.11|Christina Maria de Veer .........|Batavia, for Amtdm. Off Portland [...]
[...] Forward-Ho (ship.), Shangi. to Lndn., July 18, 3 S. 12 E., in Pitts Riveb EDEN (barq.), for Singapore, Sept. 14.4 N., 22 W. MARIA TEREsA (Spanish barq.), Manila to Bilbao, Oct. 3, 36 N., 32 W. DEFENDER (ship), Singapore to London, July 26, 32 S., 31 E. [...]
[...] ports part of crew arrived at Batavia, Advices from Amsterdam, dated Oct. 16, state that the Christina Maria, de Weer, which arrived there, 15, from Batavia, had chains broken, having encountered heavy gales. [...]