Volltextsuche ändern

4242 Treffer
Suchbegriff: Rain

Über die Volltextsuche können Sie mit einem oder mehreren Begriffen den Gesamtbestand der digitalisierten Zeitungen durchsuchen.

Hier können Sie gezielt in einem oder mehreren Zeitungsunternehmen bzw. Zeitungstiteln suchen, tagesgenau nach Zeitungsausgaben recherchieren oder auf bestimmte Zeiträume eingrenzen. Auch Erscheinungs- und Verbreitungsorte der Zeitungen können in die Suche mit einbezogen werden. Detaillierte Hinweise zur Suche.

Datum

Für Der gerade Weg/Illustrierter Sonntag haben Sie die Möglichkeit, auf Ebene der Zeitungsartikel in Überschriften oder Artikeltexten zu suchen.


Galignani's messenger21.12.1821
  • Datum
    Freitag, 21. Dezember 1821
  • Erschienen
    Paris
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    Paris
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] dreadful account of a shipwreck – “sy DNEY, JUNE 9. “Just as Captain Raine was on the eve of leaving Valparaíso for this part of the world once more, he was informed of a marvellous aſſair, relating to an American [...]
[...] something of whose disastrous history we have been ſa voured with, and shall present the same to our readers. Captain Raine received information that there were three men on Ducic's Island, who had preſerred remain ing there rather than venture across the ocean in a boat, [...]
[...] as it is to hear such things, and painful as it is to relate them, it is nevertheless asserted as a fact by Captain Raine, that the fingers and other fragments of their de ceased companions, were in the pockets of the captain and boy when taken on board the whaler. The Com [...]
[...] a miserable end ; particularly as this island was no great distance out of his track from Valparaiso to New Holland. On Thursday, the 5th of April, Capt. Raine considered himself within a very short distance of Du cic's Island, which is laid down in Norie's Epitome to [...]
[...] discharged, and shortly after the three poor men were seen to issue ſorth from the woods. The boats were presently lowered, Captain Raine taking one himself. On approaching the shore it was found not only dan erous, but utterly impracticable to land, of which cir [...]
[...] The whole island appears to be a rock of volcanic mat ter, and is replete with caves and caverns of consider able extent; in one of which Captain Raine was inform. [...]
[...] he cast a wishful eye towards the sea, and joyously beheld a ship, , which was destined to release them from a miserable death. , Captain Raine conveyed then on board immediately, and it would he super fluous to dilate on benevolence and humanity which [...]
[...] that had exerted themselves in snatching three human beings and fellow mariners fron an otherwise inevita ble destruction. These men are now with Capt. Raine, and declare their names to be, Thomas Chappel, Win. Wright, and Seth Weeks; and the following is the [...]
[...] the southward, in consnquence of which, on the ºoth •of December they made the island from which Captain Raine took them, and which was taken for Ducies' Island; at which place the boats remained one week; but the island affording hardly any nourishment, in fact [...]
[...] those of their ship-mates, we are by this opportunity favoured with an account; and certainly they are poig inant in, the extreme. Capt. Raine has put into our hands the letter that was left by Capt. Pollard on this island, which was inclosed in a tin box, and of which [...]
NatureInhaltsverzeichnis 04.1871/05.1871/06.1871/07.1871/08.1871/09.1871/10.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. April 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] Theory of Sun-spots, 164; Observations of Comets, 359 “Birmingham Saturday Half holiday Guide,” 225 Black Rain, Edwin Lee, F.L.S., on, 161 Blake (C. Carter), Cave Lion in the Peat, 27 Bland (Thos.), Conchology of the West Indies, 307 [...]
[...] Browning (John, F. R. A.S.), on a Universal Atmosphere, 487 Brussels Museum, Geological Collection at, 76 Buchan (Alexander), on Great Heat in Iceland, 202; on Rain fall in January and July (Br. A.), 358; on the Rainfall of Scotland (Br. A.), 398 [...]
[...] Eozoon Canadense, John B. Perry on, 28; Notes on, 7.2, 85 Ericsson (J.), the Temperature of the Sun, 204, 449 Ernst (A.), Yellow Rain in New Granad 1, 68 Erskine (Lieutenant Vincent), “Meteorology at Natal,” 305 Essex Institute, Salem, U.S., Proceedungs of, 43, 501 [...]
[...] nical Science (Br. A., Section G), 318 Jeremiah (John) on Daylight Auroras, 7, 47, 142 ; on Yellow Rain, 160 Jevons (Prof. W. Stanley), “Helmholtz on the Axioms of Geo metry,” 481 [...]
[...] Lectureships at London Medical Schools, 1, 61 Lee (Alec), “Romance of Motion,” 45 Lee (Edwin, F.L.S.) on Black Rain, 161 Leicester Literary and Scientific Society, 211 Leighton (Rev. W. A., F.L.S.), “The Lichen Flora of Great [...]
[...] at Natal, 305 Meteorology, Japanese Ignorance of, 435 ; Lieut. A. M. Davies, F.R.A.S., on, 159 ; Observations at Greenwich, Io.4; Rain after Fire, 83; Storm-Atlas for Norway, 63 (See Rainfall) Meteoric Stone found in Australia, 212 [...]
[...] (Ceratodus) discovered in, 406, 428, 447 Radford (W. T.), a Hint to the Longsighted, 142 Rain after Fire, G. P. Serocold on, 83 ; Chicago, 494 Rain, Black, Edwin Lee, F. R.S., on 161 Rain, Yellow, J. Jeremiah, on, 6S, 161 [...]
[...] Seeley (H. G.) on Ornithosauria, Ioo Sensation and Science, 177 Serocold (G.P.) on Rain after Fire, 83 Sewage, Prof. Corfield on, 287 Sharp and Dresser’s “Birds of Europe,” 398 [...]
[...] “Year Book of Facts,” Timbs's, 239 Year Book of Science Advocated by Sir W. Thomson, 264 Yellow Rain in New Granada, 68; J. Jeremiah on, 161 Young (Prof. C.A.) on the Solar Aurora Theory, 345; on the Solar Spectrum, 445; on an Explosion (?) on the Sun, 488 [...]
All the year round15.07.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 15. Juli 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] The unbent rays pierce through and through The thickest covert. All in vain The dying flowers sigh for rain, For rain, sweet, freshening, balmy rain. [...]
[...] The magpie shelters in the fir, The kingfisher and heron in vain Seek river-bank, and pine for rain, For rain, sweet, blessèd, balmy rain. [...]
[...] It wipes the ãº: from the eaves, All earth revives, and sings again, Glad pasan for the gift of rain, Rain, rain, sweet, freshening, balmy rain. [...]
[...] wreck, for Mackay and the rest, spreading out their clothes, from which the heavy rain soon washed the salt, squeezed the fresh water out of them, and gained such life and vigour, that for a time, cheered as [...]
[...] no doubt have eaten their shoes, had they not partly adopted the Lascar habit, never wearing shoes when it rained, as leather dressed in India is soon spoiled by wet. The few pieces of leather about the rigging [...]
[...] when rain fell the men were comparatively easy. The nights grew more chilly, and the weaker the men grew the more they suf [...]
[...] easy. The nights grew more chilly, and the weaker the men grew the more they suf fered from the cold. The cold heavy rains after sunset benumbed them, their teeth chattered, and they sometimes feared they [...]
[...] again, and they wondered how they could ever have wished the cold and paralysing night rains to have ceased. Kind death stole in, and hurried off more victims. Some struggled hard, wrestled [...]
[...] And the boy's eyes, which the dull film half glazed, Brighten'd, and for a moment seem'd to roam, He squeezed from out a rag some drops of rain Into his dying child's mouth—but in vain. [...]
Punch15.08.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 15. August 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] and MRs. MARRow, our worthy butcher's wife : we may find after all that LoRD and LADY CHURCHMOUSE are only gracious when it is raining hard and nobody else is in the way, and begin to snub us directly the sun shines; or the trip may end in no grand acquaintances at all; but we shall have gone to a certain number of places and to a [...]
[...] SIR,-Your account is probably correct. Can't find cheque-book, too hot to look for it. Wait for the rain. W. S. [...]
[...] “WEATHER PREDICTIoNs, July, 1868–Storms, hail, and thunder at first; 3rd and 4th, rain; high winds, thunder, fair intervals; 6th and 7th cool, some rain ; 8th to 11th, fair, dry air; 13th and 14th, heat, lightning, and meteors; 15th and 16th, rain and thunder prevail; 18th and 19th, fairer; [...]
[...] meteors; 15th and 16th, rain and thunder prevail; 18th and 19th, fairer; 21st, violent thunderstorms all through the land; 23rd, cloudy; 25th, ve unsettled; 27th and 28th, misty, drizzling rain prevails; 30th and 31st, coo and cloudy. Much rain this month, nº on the 21st day violent thunder; deaths frequent by lightning.” [...]
[...] other is going to get, or intends doing, “ Much good may it do you,” we know what he means. ZADKIEL’s meaning was the same as that when he announced “Much rain this month.” Obviously. Seeing what a hit has been made by ZADKIEL in Kºtling the drought, we should be prepared to find his exactness equally instanced [...]
Punch04.07.1874
  • Datum
    Samstag, 04. Juli 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] RAIN IN OWERDUE SEASON. (HAwFINCH sings.) [...]
[...] THE country sadly wanted rain; It han’t come none too soon. O' drought the Farmers did complain [...]
[...] REGATTA RAIN. [...]
[...] AT Henley the rain you can never restrain, The glass may goW' but ’tis perfectly vain; The Clerk of the Weather, with utter disdain, [...]
[...] The Red Lion's hostess must snobs entertain, But no one observes her to greatly complain; And, by this time, she’s probably used to the rain That annual deluge that ne'er seems to wane But swells Father Thames till he widens his lane, [...]
[...] - O, SIR CHARLEs, by the train Did you come? What a treat! What a love of a cane! I’m delighted to see you don’t care for the rain.” [...]
Punch12.01.1867
  • Datum
    Samstag, 12. Januar 1867
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] MAT wants to know, if, before ºt: to work, I'd like to see the Castle. I should, but don'tle metal him away from his work. Not in the least: they'll all show me over. We take umbrellas (it is rain ing) and look at the moat. The moat is swollen and has risen. If it #. on like this, says, MAT, the baker will have to come in a punt. [...]
[...] view, as Bovor lies in a valley, and is hemmed in by hills. If they were snow mountains it would be grand, but they’re only spongy. There are no gargoyles to discharge the rain. I want to know which is a bastion ENGLEFIELD, who is an authority on all these º as he is getting them up for his historical drama, [...]
[...] inconvenience. Why? Analyse this feeling for Vol. XII., Typical Derelopments, Sec. 2, par. 3. We meet at luncheon time: it is still raining. The ladies regret that we’re running into winter because there’s, no more croquet; MRs. MAT CHILDERs says if the rain continues the feudal castle will [...]
[...] a man can be such a humbug,” having evidently had a scene with MRs. CHILDERs in consequence of my observation.] Poss wants to know if I’d take a walk in the rain. For exercise. I will. STENTON stops at home to do something with some photo graphs he's been taking. When he's not writing for a review, he’s [...]
[...] my hand. My difficulty is to get an expression on my face which shall be neither a scowl nor a grin. To be taken to-morrow. Walk now—in the rain. [...]
[...] Spots on the Sun. Chapter WI. The Ring at the Front Door Bell. - VII. In the Rain behind the Haystack—Avice ELDON's first Kiss. - - - VIII. Sleaping Churchyard at Midnight. [...]
NatureInhaltsverzeichnis 11.1870/12.1870/01.1871/02.1871/03.1871/04.1871
  • Datum
    Dienstag, 01. November 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] Field (W.), on Hereditary Deformities, 7 Fielding (Dr. G. H.), on the Frost of 1870–71, 327 Fires, Rain produced by, 448 Fishes in the British Museum, Catalogue of 342 Fiume, Earthquake at, 269 [...]
[...] Lunar Halos, 245, 366, 407 “Lumière Cendrée,” Prof. H. G. S. Smith, F.R.S., on, 167 Lyall (W.), on a Wind-direction Rain-gauge, 448 [...]
[...] Rain Guage at Aldershot Camp, 509 Rain produced by Fires, 448 Ranyard (Arthur C., F.R.A.S.), Obituary Notice of Prof. De [...]
[...] Science in Paris during the Siege, 490 Rugby, Natural Science at, 372 Russell (R.), on Rain produced by Fires, 448 Russia, Archaeology in, 373 Russian American Telegraph, 74 [...]
[...] Winchester Scientific and Literary Society, 398, 414 Wind Charts of the Meteorological Office, 213, 232 Wind-Direction Rain-Gauge, by J. R. Napier, F.R.S., 433 Wind-Direction Rain-Gauge at Aldershot, 509 Wines of Victoria, 373 [...]
Punch02.02.1861
  • Datum
    Samstag, 02. Februar 1861
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] a rainy day. In this instance, their object covertly is to shelter themselves against too sudden a fall. Some of the ducks are so lame, apparently, that they are actually afraid of the water! Besides, the rain might tell tales; it might unfortunately, by falling on a pair of very hardened shoulders, let drop the secret as to who was solvent, and who was not. For ourselves, we never knew till now that a City man was so easily melted. However, considering [...]
[...] in the right. Allow me to call your attention to a fact which strongly corroborates the view propounded by, you that nursery romance, so galled, is real history. ... I allude to the coloured rain which fell at Sienna, on the 28th of December last, and whereon M. GiovaNNI CAMPANI has just published a letter, addressed to the celebrated PRo. [...]
[...] FºssoR MATTEUCGI. An account of the phenomenon is given in the Times. On the day and, at the place above-named, three distinct showers of red rain fell; the first of them lasting two hours. Again on the 31st of December, and once more on fe 1st of January, it rained a species of red ink. You are, no doubt, aware that the same [...]
[...] rained a species of red ink. You are, no doubt, aware that the same thing has often occurred before. The nature of the red stuff in the rain varies. . At Blankenburg, in 1819, it is stated to have been chloride of cobalt. In this instance the water has been ascertained by PRO. Pessors GABRIELLI and CAMPANI to contain no cobalt at all. It must, [...]
[...] explain the showers of fish and frogs; but whirlwinds will not explain the fall of stones and red rain, any more than they would explain a rain of cats and dogs, which we believe to be possible—do we not? “I need not point out to you—though I may to my readers—the [...]
[...] strong corroboration that the descent of so many different things from the sky affords to the popular legend of Jack and the Bean-Stalk. I dare say it will turn out that the red matter in the rain which fell at Siennais, I was going to say, the blood of a giant shed by some modern climber of an aerial bean-stalk, which may still be growing in some [...]
[...] chairs, ay, and coalscuttles, and fire-irons, and all manner of domestic furniture, utensils, goods, and chattels, tumbling down upon us one of these days... I fully expect that there will ere long occur, a rain of unknown coin, which must convince the most sceptical... When we do have a golden shower, I only hope it will fall in my way.” [...]
The Englishman09.09.1713
  • Datum
    Samstag, 09. September 1713
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] * îmbibed with water, made a kind of a dry and barren * Soil. . That Place lying to the South, and out of the “ Reach of the wind and Rain, befides the Neighbour ! hood of a Granery, was a moſt delightful Spot of “ Ground for Ants; and therefore they had made three [...]
[...] clear, I could perceive no Reaſon for it. But half an Hour after the Sky began to be overcaft, and there fell a fmall Rain which the Ants forefaw; whereas the Mi lan Almanack had foretold that there would be no Rain upon that Day. [...]
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 [...]
[...] all points of the compass to fill up the vacuum, and coming in contact with the heat below, precipitates in rain the mois ture which it previously held in solution. Thus the winds that blew so furiously over [...]
[...] 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 [...]
Suche einschränken