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All the year round29.06.1872
  • Datum
    Samstag, 29. Juni 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] The valuable selection I received for my thirteen stamps was as follows: “Back Prince Charlie to win, and Drummond a place for the Derby, to win a good stake, and please put me on a present.” This [...]
[...] INVERESK 1 INVERESR ' | SOUCAR – ARTHUR WEBB'S success.-On Saturday picked Inveresk at 33 to 1 and Soucar to win the Chester Cup; Prince Charlie for Two Thousand ever since November last. Subscribers, we are as certain to win [...]
[...] AN OUTSIDER WINS THE DER BY.—A certain clinker now at a tremendous price has just won an extraordin trial. The trainer considers, it good [...]
[...] good stake on the undermentioned at once, knowing it to be a certainty—Sunbeam Colt, win and place. Please put me on five shillings.” [...]
[...] inclosed names of horses are real good things, and ought not to be neglected if you wish to win money, and have a good start for the season,” gives Queen's Mes senger to win the Derby, and the Sunbeam [...]
[...] By another post came a piece of red tissue paper, on which it was that “each subscriber stands in to win ten shillings to nothing on Laburnum,” which sum, in case of that horse winning, would be remitted. [...]
[...] of that horse winning, would be remitted. Beneath was the following: “Tip—La burnum or Prince Charlie to win. Young Sydmonton for place. The Oaks—Delrict.” (sic.) [...]
[...] Sydmonton for place. The Oaks—Delrict.” (sic.) WHAT WILL WIN THE DERBY P TRY FAIRPLAY'S LONG SHOTS. [...]
[...] tract, which enunciated in large type the statement that “Druid or Bethnal Green will win.” - The North of England Turf Guide, sole proprietors, Messrs. Grey and Wilkinson, [...]
[...] pleasant observances. What is known of this song of Dulce Domum ? According to tradition, a Win chester schoolboy was once, for some mis conduct, kept in when all the other boys [...]
All the year round17.06.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 17. Juni 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] has just come round—a fatal whisper. The princess has named the sum at which she means to stop. She will win back her hundred and fifty thousand francs, and go away. My faith ! that suffices. The [...]
[...] sian diplomatic service; and he had been flinging his money about the table right and left, and winning wherever he flung it. Presently the déveine came, and our baron lost as usual, not only all his win [...]
[...] one pledged himself to play only in strict accordance with my instructions, and we were to share our winnings in due pro portion. Our winnings Ha, ha! The very next morning I took my turn, played [...]
[...] play, and always with the same result, Then why, you ask again, do I not “go in and win.” I'll tell you. For precisely the same reason which, when I do go in, results in my winning. I have an insuper [...]
[...] that kind of luck is not my kind of luck at all. Very much otherwise. So I have no overweening anticipation of winning [...]
[...] “infallible " method of the martingale pure and simple—the just doubling your stake every time till you win. Of course, also, it is precisely the system most effectively combining the minimum of [...]
[...] profit with the maximum of risk. Still, it is on a modification of this system that the bank wins three hundred and sixty-four days in every year; in leap-year three hundred and sixty-five. [...]
[...] If you have, you will have already learned two things. First, that it is not the system that wins, but the person who [...]
[...] small; rolls up its losses like a snowball on a hill-side. Its value will be in exact proportion to its power, not of winning, but of cutting short a loss. A third requirement can be supplied only [...]
[...] events, thoroughly depend upon it; for so it is. And the bank has its days of “déveine” too—days when everybody wins and in [...]
All the year round07.09.1872
  • Datum
    Samstag, 07. September 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] interest in the person or thing insured—so that they had been playing the game vulgarly known as “heads I win, tails you lose.” After all, however, there was not much wrong done, for when the chevalier [...]
[...] genuity, skill, or endurance of one of the bettors come in a different category, and there is some merit in winning them. When the Earl of March undertook for a wager of a thousand guineas to provide a [...]
[...] M“Keene. Darkness set in before the horses started for the decisive heat, which there was every probability of Butler win ning. They had not gone far on their journey when a crash was heard, and [...]
[...] less; by-and-bye came Corney, whose jockey quietly observed as he pulled up at the winning post, “You’ll find M'Keene on the track below.” He was found there with his skull smashed in. A board had [...]
[...] a mouse.” Had Mr. Ord been a jockey himself, he would never have had the courage to back himself to win Derby and Oaks, and get married in the same week, as Robinson did to his great profit. Let [...]
[...] the jockey-trainer found them so upon one occasion. Crockford had laid him long odds against his winning the Derby upon Exquisite. Soon after making the bet, the trainer took a strong fancy to another [...]
[...] bookmaker. “You may ride both if you like, for neither has the ghost of a chance.” Forth proved the better judge; he did win the Derby upon Frederick, and the re jected Exquisite obtained second honours. [...]
[...] that belief and a stout shilelagh, went on his way unmolested, and was enabled to re turn home to claim his winnings, and be henceforth dubbed Jerusalem Whalley. Men have done odd things enough for the [...]
[...] place and time. He fixed upon an hour before sundown. At the start, the turkeys went ahead as if they were going to win in a [...]
[...] the quietest and most positive tone imagin able, the tone of a man who, as he himself said, “rode to win.” - One day Letty was sitting in the little morning-room, to which latterly she had [...]
All the year round06.02.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 06. Februar 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] slow of conviction, when he had once adopted this idea he held to it firmly, and determined to do his best to win Anne Studley for his wife. On one point, that of his power to maintain her in proper [...]
[...] City,” and from thence, one after another, fresh swarms of Celts were, it is supposed, alternately sent to found and people Win chester, Dorchester, and Shaftesbury. When those two martial brothers, idealised [...]
[...] of Vespasian's campaign in England, his successor, P. Ostorius Scapula, who de feated the Cangi and Silures, fortified Win chester in the good old mathematical Roman way. The site of the summer camp used [...]
[...] Among the notable miracles alleged to have been worked by St. Swithin is this— that after he had built the bridge at Win chester, a woman came over it with her lap full of eggs, which a rude fellow [...]
[...] they of themselves fastened to it again. In the year 865, says a second miracle monger, St. Swithin, Bishop of Win chester, to which rank he was raised by King Ethelwolf the Dane, dying, was [...]
[...] threw the Mercians on the banks of the Wily, his first act, after he became sole monarch of England, was to turn Win chester into his capital and metropolis, and, in Winchester cathedral, he was [...]
[...] nations. It was in a lull during these fierce forays of the Norsemen, that the Bishop of Win chester made a pilgrimage to Rome, taking with him the David of King Ethelwolf's [...]
[...] fore, that Asser, the chronicler, emphati cally calls Winchester the royal city. All that Alfred could do for Win chester he did: he gathered there the great and wise of the land; and there, [...]
[...] side of the cathedral. And this place be came the chief of the monasteries—Athel mey, Shaftesbury, and St. Mary's, Win chester—that this wise and pious king erected. And when Alfred died, worn out [...]
All the year round30.08.1873
  • Datum
    Samstag, 30. August 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] º win which is Incorporated 2}. 2 jIOUSEHOLDWORDS "S £º [...]
[...] after rewarding the pimpled waiter with absurd lavishness for services he had not || rendered, by no means winning his esteem thereby, or changing his scornful view of me as “a regular yokel”—when I had arranged [...]
[...] THE LOSER WINS 1 [...]
[...] *Charles Dickens.] [August 30, 1873.) 423 THE LOSER WINS 1 [...]
[...] pleasant one. “Yes,” answered Tom, “and, I think, to win. I know nothing in the race to beat Warhawk at the weight, if he stands up, of which there is but little doubt, for he is [...]
[...] to have the pleasure of bringing you and Captain Egremont to the races. How pro voking it is that only one of you can win ; but remember one of you must win, for I am determined that the winner shall belong [...]
[...] THE LOSER WINS 1 [...]
[...] for the ground was hard as iron. I had become madly anxious that Egremont should not win the race. For him I had conceived the most unreasoning hatred. In every look of his I thought I could detect [...]
All the year round11.09.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 11. September 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] Tallis volunteered this statement. My mother, however, has a singular power of winning confidence. It has more than once happened to her to receive the most curious particulars of their private history, from [...]
[...] strictly observed. Sandy Hook, New York, was to be the starting-point: the Needles, off the Isle of Wight, the winning-post. At first the American press roundly de nounced the proposed race as a foolhardy un [...]
[...] her their pet, and loudly hoped that she would win, because Mr. Bennett adhered to his de termination to sail in her. Public sympathy was unanimously with “the only man who [...]
[...] easily gained an advantage at the start, and dashed away before the fresh breeze as if in spired to win. The Vesta followed almost as quickly; but the Henrietta, lying close in shore, had the worst of the start, and lagged [...]
[...] John Falstaff, Artemus Ward, and Joseph Miller. He laughs at everybody, and everybody laughs at him. In rough weather, he wins the cap tain's heart by attentively perusing a pocket bible. In pleasant weather, he makes the hours [...]
[...] places. Seamanship had conquered speed, and the slowest yacht was to be the first to pass the winning-post. On Christmas Day, under every stitch of canvas, with even her stay-sail set, and with her colours floating lightly in the [...]
[...] centre-board yachts, and we might have had another revolution similar to that caused by the triumph of the America. The Vesta did not win; but she crossed the Atlantic with perfect safety, rode out severe gales easily, and sailed into [...]
[...] finch and party landed at Greenwich, and passed the Ship, where one melancholy waiter was yawning at the upper win dows, and where a man was dining off hot boiled beef-fancy hot boiled beef at [...]
All the year round29.04.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 29. April 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] On the course I did nothing. Ever since the Derby ill-fortune has pursued me, and I cannot win anywhere.” The atmosphere of royal racing seems to have provoked more reflection than re [...]
[...] who, when on his travels, vowed a silver horseshoe to the Virgin if his mare should win a certain match, and paid the debt with sporting punctuality, for we find him fourteen years later, just after the Derby [...]
[...] phal plots of an age of conspirators. When the king exchanged racing for hunting, the same merry train followed him to Win chester. }, the quaint old Hampshire town the laughter and racket of New [...]
[...] ever sober, but the progress was neverthe less a glorious one, for did not the appro priately named “Tot” win the Doncaster Cup, and make such heart as “Fee-fi-fo fum” was endowed withal, swell within [...]
[...] was “as slow as a funeral” the day after to-morrow. Hence, when everybody ex pected him to win the Oatlands, his stable companion Baronet won instead; and he ultimately convinced the Jockey Club that [...]
[...] up the new mile at Ascot, perhaps one of the most pleasant of royal pageants. ... He was very anxious to win the Ascot Cup, having almost had time to forget his Derby triumph with Sir Thomas, and on one [...]
[...] Griffith, and my brother found him a very kind friend. He was not a person likely to win golden opinions from young girls on any grounds, and I do not think I ever knew Madeleine Kindersley to be perfectly [...]
All the year round29.05.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 29. Mai 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] that, am I?” returned Algernon, with that childlike raising of the eyebrows which gave so winning an expression to his face. [...]
[...] Gull's Horn Book, 1609, Dekker tells his hero, “before the play begins, fall to cards;" and, winning or losing, he is [...]
[...] scription-rooms, are lying in wait to pounce on members, as they issue from the sacred portals, and “draw" their winnings of them. A certain uneasiness is felt by the outer vulgar, for we are in the midst of [...]
[...] shrewdest and most popular of the new Leviathans; an excellent omen, for did not Mr. Snewing's Caractacus win the Derby in the “sky blue and white cap,” which Lord George himself, the previous [...]
[...] animals without any; descendants of Derby winners and of sires who, in their day, “were sure to win,” but, by some fatality, “walked in with the crowd;” clever cobs; barouche horses; and [...]
[...] from appearances, it is indeed no other than our ingenious friend “’Arry,” whom we left rejoicing over his winnings and determined to become a Leviathan. For a while after he prospered, and was always [...]
[...] I believe the infatuated creature duly invested that dollar on I know not what animal, and I sincerely hope he may win. [...]
All the year round15.05.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 15. Mai 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] sionately fond. It was a lucky thing for Walter Joyce to make the acquaintance and to win the regard of such a man as Terence O'Connor, who had a wonderfully quick eye for character, and who, having [...]
[...] blood had been shed by the rude Pagan hands. After the death of this amorous, wolf-slaying, monk-beloved king, his widow, Elfrida (to win whom Edgar had murdered her first husband), was made abbess of Barking, and the convent [...]
[...] contested election between a Whig and Tory, and where both sides were determined to win—by fair means, if possible, by foul means, if necessary. I was not myself the candidate, but the friend and counsellor of [...]
[...] lunatics in my time. A nod's as good as a wink, you know ; and you say you want to win, which is quite natural. I shall send you a very able man to canvass for you, and please don't ask me any more ques [...]
[...] there's no fear of that ; we shall win by close upon two hundred. Purity for hever! There's nothing like purity when you can [...]
[...] over to the other side if they like. They're of no use to us. We don’t want 'em. We're going to win on the principles of purity; and if we touch such pitch as Mr. Abraham Slugg and the Jolterheads, we shall be [...]
[...] tion. And he had strength of mind enough (with full power, perhaps, to act in another direction) to win by purity, when he found that impurity was unnecessary. I never saw or heard of him any more; and I [...]
[...] In their large and dirty courtyards swarms of children are generally playing in the mud, rags of many colours are hanging from all the win dows, and, stowed in the corners of the dark, damp passages, which emit a sickening odour [...]
All the year round23.01.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 23. Januar 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] tive ways; and a Papist looks on with the remark, “If you all complain, I hope I shall win at last.” Our early caricatures were mostly manufactured in Holland, and this continued to be the case even down to the time of the South [...]
[...] ment, and a kind of pleasant enjoyment abroad. The bank seems to be losing, and every one to be winning. The room is brilliant and every one seemed in good humour. There is a vast rush to the tables, [...]
[...] “Papa,” said one, who I think is Con stance, “has given us a Frederick to play with, and we wish so much to win. Mr. D'Eyncourt says he will play for us.” “But if you lose,” I said, “you will be [...]
[...] “Don't, I conjure you ! Take it up again. You will be sorry if you don't. You won't even win—though that is the next misfortune to losing.” They looked irresolute, but click! the [...]
[...] “Indeed I will not,” said Constance. “You can do so if you like, and Kate also ; but we shall go on winning to gether.” The next time she lost. [...]
[...] again.” So we did, and the next time we did win. It was certainly wonderful. At the end of twenty minutes she had fifteen double florins in her small hand—those [...]
[...] “Go on win [...]
[...] of mind, then, I can extenuate a good deal. The crowd round me, their eager ness, their success in winning, the en joyment, the excitement, the absence of care, the enjoying faces looking into [...]
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