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PunchBd. 015 1848
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Januar 1848
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] say, less of it—elsewhere. msgate lights up beautifully. Seen from the water it is like a little Vauxhall, without any of the rain. From the Sion Hill the town looks like one of the views that “cover an area of 10,000 square yards of canvas,” which we have so often, admired at the Surrey Zoological. [...]
[...] nation, could be called a 'dog-day. The so-called ‘dog-days have just expired, and it would puzzle the most ºf dog to decide, whether more rain, has not fallen, during that short period than ever since Vauxhall opened its dripping doors for the benefit of umbrella-makers. It must be sensible to any one who puts his hand [...]
[...] London. All last week, watering-carts, when it was pouring the most multitudinous cats and dogs, were quietly going up and down our principal thoroughfares. The more it rained, the more industrious they were. Never before was the water laid on London at such an awf rate 1. The gutters were working double tides...We think the English [...]
[...] despair. We were told it was somewhere in that direction, but shall not believe it till we see it with our own eyes and spectacles. We intend to make another venture next week, and then, if it does not rain, and we have any time left after our long walk—two very great improba. bilities—we shall take a trip on the new line to Nine #. and make [...]
[...] By the bye, if she has a weakness, it is on the score—rather a º: one—of wagers... She is always betting. If you happen by some od accident to says,"I think it will rain,” the chances are, she will imme diately say, “I’ll bet you 5 to 1 it doesn't.” She keeps a little pocket book to register her, bets. Towards, Epsom and Ascot it is almost [...]
[...] any one to enter when it is raining; but this generous privilege is very rarely abused, as there is never º º at the place. At low water there are certain difficulties that require a strong [...]
[...] wonderful than the wonder which set everybody wondering on. h Mayor's Day. Future ages will be astonished to hear that ºff. passed through the City without a drop of rain, and reached f all without the ghost of a fog. The Sun was distinctly visible ‘M This is the first time within the recollection of the Oldſ", * in [...]
[...] duals—lived, it appears, in many arts: namely, in the various rains of various monks. Yes: “The Monks,” says E. S. Dick son, “were the authors of those [...]
[...] I'M STEPHEN WITCHER, labouring man—of Andover I be, A pauper of the workhouse, and a cripple in the knee; The Guardians there have sent me out, here, in the cold and rain, To zit all day, a breakin' stones in agony and pain. [...]
[...] There shone a bright planet, beatitudes raining, To gladden the union of husbands and wives; The honey-moon there, at the full, never waning, [...]
PunchBd. 011 1846
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. Januar 1846
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] We readily give admission to our correspondent's benevolent remon strance in behalf of the injured Plush family. But if he had seen, as we did, at the DUCHEss of Douche's déjéuner, (where the rain came down in torrents, and the breakfast was served under a mackintosh marquee,) the dripping condition of several of the nobility's footmen [...]
[...] THERE have been three fêtes at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiswick, without a shower of rain [...]
[...] We noticed a shower of black rain two numbers back. This has been followed in the north by a shower of red. It seems that the “inky clouds” can pour down any coloured ink they please. The next [...]
[...] safely lowered among my other goods. I sank upon the deck, and grateful tears ran, like rain-drops on cottage casements, down my cheeks. Finally recruiting myself for my great effort—to land my goods-I [...]
[...] “It is an ill wind that blows nobody good,” and the storm must be very pitiless indeed which does not shower down advantages on somebody. In the first place, the tremendous rain of Saturday week came to the aid of the LoRD MAYor, who had been calling in vain upon the water companies to open their hearts and their sluices. The Clerk of the [...]
[...] My smoke-dried aspect tells my lengthen'd years, And many a furrow, worn into a creek, The rain has made a channel for its tears. , [...]
[...] telegraph has the advantage of being interrupted by the fog, and enjoys the superiority of being stopped suddenly in the midst of a most important communication by a summer cloud or a drop of rain. It can be only worked, also, during the day. All these advantages are well known by Monsieur THIERs, Louis-PHILIPPE, and others, who, on [...]
[...] Of curates, starved on eighty pounds a year 7 WREN's work in ruins crumbling canst thou see A prey to rain, wind, GIRBs, and Chancery : And count thy coppers as the showman bawls, “Sixpence the Abbey, tuppence for St. Pauls?” [...]
[...] paint him a large picture of a study of animals. The subject suggested iy His Royal Highness, has been—“Raining Cats and Dogs." [...]
[...] It has been proposed by a benevolent individual—the same, we believe, who held the umbrella over the duck in a shower of rain—to provide the horse of the Duke of Wellington's Statue with a nose-bag. The poor dumb creature will never want for victuals, as there is [...]
PunchBd. 008 1845
  • Datum
    Mittwoch, 01. Januar 1845
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] carriages for the conveyance of the poorer passengers, for (with but few exceptions) the third class carriages are little better than loco motive sheep-pens. During continuous rains the annexed sketch is scarcely an exaggeration. [...]
[...] | Oh! from the weather, when it snows and rains, You might as well, at least, defend the Poor; It would not cost you much, with all your gains: [...]
[...] their third-class carriages constructed so as to serve the double purpose of a locomotive and a washing-tub. They are supplied with water from the rain, which pours in upon all sides; and enough to constitute a bath is provided in a very few minutes, if the weather happens to be favourable to the benevolent object. [...]
[...] mas. What were you to do Why let him go home in the rain, to be sure. I'm very certain there was nothing about [...]
[...] cold than take our only umbrella. Do you hear the rain, MR. CAUDLE I say, do you hear the rain And as I’m alive, [...]
[...] ing away your property, and beggaring your children—buying umbrellas ! “Do you hear the rain, Mn. CAUDLE * I say, do you hear it? But I don't care—I’ll go to mother's to-morrow : I will; and what’s more, I’ll walk every step of the way,+and you know that will give [...]
[...] often that I step over the threshold; indeed, I might as well be a slave at once,—better, I should say. But when I do go out, Mn. CAUDLE, I choose to go as a lady. Oh! that rain—if it isn't enough to break in the windows. “Ugh ! I do look forward with dread for to-morrow ! How I am [...]
[...] Petishuners, is to atend their Patrons and Patronesses professionally to the Opera, which Generally appens at least two Nites a Week. “That on these occashuns, Rain or Fine, your Petishuners have to Wait outside with their Carridges for witch they are not wanted, the Coachman being Sufficient. [...]
[...] line—without stopping at any of the intermediate stations. Q. Why is MR. Roebuck like our third class carriages, which get half full of water whenever it rains : A. Because he's open to both sides, and represents Bath. Q. Why is Colonel Sibriiokp the most liberal man in the IHouse of [...]
PunchBd. 010 1846
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. Januar 1846
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] | alternately with an umbrella and a musket; for it was found, during the old Militia campaign, that the soldiery suffered more from the rain than from the enemy. [...]
[...] the reduced fives—or old clarences that will hold five at a cram—were buoyant at eighteen-pence, with a prospect of improvement. Open cabs during the rain were steady at º: and the list shows no transaction. There was a rush of bears from the Adelphi Theatre, which caused the Cab Market to assume a very active appearance for a short time; [...]
[...] has to wait before he can procure a money-order. We are sure, after his Postmaster-Generalship has waited in the rain a couple of hours, he will in stantly acknowledge the wonderful despatch with which all matters connected with the Post-office [...]
[...] has likewise left the Metropolis, and gone—the proprietor only knows where. The popular fresco of NElson fighting a broadsword combat with six polar bears, which had weathered the fog and the rain over the balcony ever since 1833, has also “walked its chalks.” It is rumoured that it has retired into private life, for the purpose of being [...]
[...] THE Worcestershire Guardian says:—“A most extraordinary storm of black rain fell in the northern part of Worcestershire last week. For two hours this extraordinary shower lasted, and the pools, water. courses, and even the Severn itself, were completely turned black.” [...]
[...] some recent attempts, been throwing his ink-stand at MELPoMENE's head 2 or had old Vulcan been washing himself, and upset the basin Ż We see no other way of accounting for the raining powers in Wor- cestershire having gone into mourning. [...]
[...] IN consequence of the fine weather, we have been disappointed of a number of jokes which we had prepared upon the opening of Vauxhall. We had expected that it would rain, as a matter of course, directly the doors were opened; but as the moon has taken the “royal property” this year under its protection, and is likely to prove a harvest-moon [...]
[...] think, however, that some extraordinary triumph should commemorate the unparalleled event of Vauxhall having been opened so many successive nights without a single shower of rain; and we propose, in order to do the thing handsomely, that a grand transparent y be got [...]
PunchBd. 018 1850
  • Datum
    Dienstag, 01. Januar 1850
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] GRIMEs has come to assist.” And yether characteristics are so patent that none but a Countess,who had been confined all her life in a drawing-room, could possibly be deceived as to her appearance. The dirty mob-cap, the battered bonnet, generally black, that perches on the top of it, the soiled ribbons that, sun or rain, are never tied, the tucked-up gown, and bare arms, that are of an unpleasant redness all the way up to the sleeve, are so many witnesses making oath to her identity. - - - The Charwoman, it must be confessed, is of a most forgiving disposition. Loaded, as she is, with the insults of the entire house, she is [...]
[...] umbrellas, dirty pattens, and teething children, to say * of being continually called upon ‘to go outside (during a shower of rain) to oblige a lady.' I should like to see a lady ever doing the same for a gentleman! [...]
[...] water sends them flying, and they do not stop till they get under shelter. This is most extraordinary in this bird, for it is well known to naturalists, that the Duck is, generally speaking, very fond of the rain, and, instead of running away from water, takes it as naturally as a tee totaller. The London Ducks, which are the surest signs of an early [...]
[...] malice upon inanimate type and paper reminds us of the school boy in SEYMoUR's caricature, ". the weather-glass that would point to “Rain,” or of children generally, who beat or kick, the object over which they have stumbled. The Billericay act of faith—or act of folly —will not tend to lessen the peculiar reputation of Essex; for whilst it [...]
[...] and ſeeding in the kitchen, is, as I tell MouseR, a responsibility I can’t put * with. . “Occasionally l’’; Well, arn’t the 'bus men to be pitied, who, let it shine or rain, must drive a pair continually * . But here’s something that’s humble, and makes amends for others' impudence:— - [...]
[...] scale P Come, paint me your Dragon. Bonze. The Dragon is as no other Dragon. A Dragon ten palm trees in length, and four in compass., A Dragon, coloured as the rain bow, with precious stones, that, melt into one another. , A Dragon, whose teeth are of onyx, whose tongue is of coral, and whose voice is [...]
[...] biggº on 'em but a little grease-spot. - We marched on victorious to within six yards of the Governor’s, where showers of balls from the house-tops rained, hailed, and snew upon us. They ed our army considerable, but no wus. CoLoREL WHEAT come in for a sprinkle of the pepper, and a spice or two on it [...]
PunchBd. 006 1844
  • Datum
    Montag, 01. Januar 1844
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] never recover it. But this is not the worst of it; for just as we got to where we might have seen something, up there came a cloud in a minute as it were, and down there came a pelting rain that drenched us to the skin in no time. We therefore hurried down, miserable enough, and more dead than alive ; but when we reached the carriage at the bottom [...]
[...] THERE has been a pressure lately upon “Ham Sandwiches,” owing to the heavy rains having had the effect of glutting the market with that commodity. “Apples, oranges, and ginger-beer,” are still in loud demand in the higher circles; but a “bill of the play,” unless there is something [...]
[...] The LADY. HEIGHo ! what a morning of drizzle and gloom 1 The rain like a deluge, the sky like a tomb 1 That stupid new footman must surely be lost, Who went to inquire why they don't send the Post. [...]
[...] The Weather.—The Mails, The drizzling rain, that set from the North East directly into the eye of the guard of the Hounslow Mail, occasioned the greatest inconvenience to that functionary, who, however, maintained his self-possession during the [...]
[...] But Thou art no changed one, my Latch-Key; and so, Since I find it’s beginning to rain, By thy leave, gentle Key-hole.—Eh! What t Here's a go That woman has put up the chain . [...]
[...] wonderfully increased. ITALIAN OPERA House ARcADE.-This Arcade is suffering sadly from the want of rain. The traffic, in consequence, has been limited, for the last three months, to the daily visits of the lamplighter. It is proposed, however, in order to facilitate the navigation of this dangerous passage, [...]
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