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Punch or The London charivari (Punch)Bd. 001 1841
  • Datum
    Freitag, 01. Januar 1841
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] Ban - bu - ri [...]
[...] he subject on which we have directed him to employ his wast scientific acquirements, is one which must come home to the firesides of the mar ried and the bosoms of the single, namely, the art of raising a flame; in humble imitation of some of Young's Knights' Thoughts, which are directed to the object of lightening the darkness of servants, labourers, [...]
[...] whom “Bess” owed her birth ! - Pitt, Fox, and Canning, are matched with Courvoisier, Gould, and Collins. Liston is ris a ris to Joe Hume, while Louis Philippe but shares atten tion with the rivalling models of the Bastille and Guillotine! ** Verily there is a moral in all this, “an we could but find it out. [...]
[...] co-partnership rendering each liable for the acts or accidents of the other; therefore, as may be (and we think is) clearly established, under these cir cumstances, “They could not be mar-ri-ed!” There is something deliciously affecting in the beautiful drawing out of the last syllable !—it seems like the lingering of the heart's best feelings upon [...]
[...] Again, how many members from their long experience in the small jobbery of committees—from their profitable knowledge of the myste ries of private bills and certain other unclean work which may, if he |. fall to the lot of the English senator—how many of these ights of the times might build small monuments of their genius in [...]
[...] Our master’s “ire” as often ; Would they but raise our “hire” a bit, 'Twould much our mis’ries soften THE ShormºEN-Poor DEVILs? [...]
[...] brought to such perfection? By a process not very prevalent amongst English singers—practice the most constant, study the most unwea ried. ... Punch will beta wager with any sporting dilettante that Miss Kemble has sung more while learning her art, than many old stagers while professing and practising it. [...]
[...] said, “Dr. &c. Bedford is a gentleman what I have had the honour of knowing on for many long ears. His medikel requirement are sich as ris a Narvey and a Nunter to the summut of the temples of Fame. His political requisitions are summarily extinguished. It is, therefore, with no common pride that...I second this abomination.” [...]
Punch or The London charivari (Punch)Bd. 003 1842
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Januar 1842
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] The world is quite large enough for you; let fools, if they will, leave their snug arm-chairs, and sea-coal fires, to extend its bounda ries. What matters it to you where the Niger begins or ends ! Have you not the pleasant banks of Thames, the tens of thousands of unsophisticated natives thronging its shores; all of them ready to [...]
[...] tors who shall exceed in number one hundred and eighty. CLAUSE II.-Provides that no elector who, walking in procession, car ries a flag or other emblem, shall receive more than six pounds sterling per day—always providing that the opposition candidate do not offer him seven pounds per diem and his victuals, in which case it shall be lawful [...]
[...] The squirrel in bright treadmill pent— No more shall my fondness engage, Such pets with sad mem'ries are blent. To mama's sage advice I'll attend,- In a hamper these gewgaws I'll pack, [...]
[...] Austria where Richard was, and seeing a big house, thought he might as well venture a tune; so he began that sweet one “Cherry ripe, che-erry ripe, ri-ip I cry-y;” and the Austrian soldiers, who were smoking their pipes, and are very fond of music, exclaimed, “Potztausend was ist das für ein herrliches Lied ?” [...]
[...] they not generally old f" “Convict on all counts, I confess. But then, their designs are car ried out with such spirit and dexterity—their sophistication so fre quently amounts to the art which conceals art, as to seem like the most ingenuous simplicity; their manners are unembarrassed— [...]
[...] they are generally so pestered by their relations, that they are brought into a state of unendurable disagreeableness, and suddenly get mºr ried out of spite. Some will, however, stand a very tough courtship, and I knew an old widow who was so long making up her mind, that [...]
[...] Nor worth A nu's ri. [...]
[...] DROPPING RIS AcquaintANCE. [...]
Punch or The London charivari (Punch)Bd. 002 1842
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Januar 1842
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] (Mr. Ledbury waits to be asked something about Norma, which inquiry not arriring, he rubs up an idea upon another tack. Mr. L. What do you think of our ris-à-vis Miss H. Which one * Mr. L. The lady with that strange head-dress–do you know her ? [...]
[...] for 1–how earnestly an introduction is requested l—how fortunate it is even to be her ris-a-ris! and what a thrill of inexplicable happiness pervades our sense—what an ecstacy of admiration—what a mesmeric throb of pleasure as we take her [...]
[...] bard ; and the abduction of the spoon by the dish means, no doubt, to convey an intimation that many spoons will be completely dished and car ried off by the expected calamity. Having thrown, as we think, a perfect light upon the earthquake, we take leave of our readers, in the hope that, should they be swallowed up [...]
[...] feel I have all the works of the present generation of authors on my shoulders, and a heavy load it is to bear. It has hitherto been car ried—not the bill, for that was lost—but the burthen, by Mr. Serjeant Talfourd ; but as the Reading constituency, now, like the reading public long ago, will have nothing to say to him, I must do Atlas in [...]
[...] 16. I. Bulls-Probably a remote connexion of the Indian Cow-ries. II. Hogs.--So called because they always want more. “Increase of appetite doth grow with that it feeds on.” “Crescit amor [...]
[...] exclamation of “Lud a mercy upon us!” fixes the building of the city at once upon Lud; whose name, by a process peculiar to ingenious antiqua ries, has been corrupted into London. his is the account of only one antiquary : but Camden goes further, for he declares that it was formerly a town in a wood, and hence we have Camden's or Camden [...]
Punch or The London charivari (Punch)Bd. 005 1843
  • Datum
    Sonntag, 01. Januar 1843
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] monopoly of titles and the lion’s share of the dignities and offices of the State, instead of hoarding, it nobly expends its revenues in those luxu ries which emanate from the ingenuity and labour of the industrious.” [...]
[...] Tooral, to be ; looral, or not ; lay, to be ; that is, fiddle ; the ques tion, iddle de dee. To, yoddle ; be, doddle ; or, fol; not, dol; to, de; be, rol; that, ri; is, tol; the, lol; question, de rido. Yoddle doddle fol de rol, to be; hey down derry diddle dum, or not; [...]
[...] Lord CAMPBELL then moved that the House adjourn, which was car ried, and their Lordships broke up. [...]
[...] That I loved my grog, my sovereign, Old England and its beef, And so I do upon this happy day. “Singing ri, fol, &c. &c. Sir Henry danced a few steps of the hornpipe at the end of each verse. [...]
[...] I talk'd in language nautical, and call'd the stern the starn, And other naval terms, my boys, I learn'd to say. “Singing ri, fol, &c. &c. Sir Henry dances again. * I've sail'd "- [...]
[...] RI. 211 [...]
Punch or The London charivari (Punch)Bd. 004 1843
  • Datum
    Sonntag, 01. Januar 1843
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] on Zephyrus, who had become enamoured of a charming young lady called Flora, had made a goddess—a real one—of her, and had mar ried her. His delightful task was to tend spring flowers, and waft perfume to the nostrils of immortals and of men. Her lovely Hama dryades were appointed by Terra to posts, that is to say, trees, in the [...]
[...] with the fewest words. I had at least this consolation—I was an unwilling traveller. Otherwise, I had deserved all the mise ries of ship-board—the darkness, the fetor, the hubbub and violence of the place. I have some pity for anything that in its ignorance of salt-water first trusts itself to its mercies; but none for the fool that [...]
[...] - - and strength and Force, the minister of his wn eance. an – her. They suspended her from a hook (some º: ri'onj º: [...]
[...] lustre to the jewel on its breast; I have seen the man of birth, whose great ancestors were to him as continually present; whose memo ries were as protecting angels, denying aught of mean, or low, or selfish to approach the sanctuary of his soul ; men with hearts and minds sweetened and purified by that everlasting fragrance breathing [...]
[...] in that way. These are only a few of his gallant ries. Considerably up wards of a dozen similar exploits were achieved by [...]
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