Volltextsuche ändern

1059 Treffer
Suchbegriff: Mering

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.


Punch08.09.1855
  • Datum
    Samstag, 08. September 1855
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] | EMPEROR OF Russia, who can swallow any quantity of train-oil, is thrown into fits by the mere mention of a box of Sardines. [...]
[...] sea at its bluest,--but now, as the sea, they are deep. HER MAJESTY has devoured so many wonders, that she has become, exalted beyond mere Britannic royalty. She has eaten and drunk of the ambrosia and nectar of Paris, and her mien, her looks, declare the influence of the celestial fare. So speculates and resolves, the philosophic mind of [...]
[...] to a Chasseur, a mounted Don Cossack is no more than a monkey on pony-back-Nothing can beat the good-temper of these fellows: they crack a skull as a good joke; and to their teeth bullets are merely sugar-plums. If there be “dogs of war,” then are the Chasseurs war's playful puppy-dogs! The review ended, and, it is said by some who [...]
[...] And not till our moses bleed after collision, Do we feel we’re entitled to say, with decision, “Yes—it is solid stonework, and not a mere vision,” [...]
[...] “But hold”—say the theorists—“mortars, 'tis certain, Will wear out with firing—the fact is well known,” We can’t rest on mere random asserting; [...]
[...] So, too, said the charts; but John BUIL’s not so flat As, without some more practical proof, things to swallow, On mere word-of-mouth and eye-witness, like that So of man-of-war stations our Whitehall assigners, Send into the Baltic our first-rates and liners ; [...]
[...] That Russian forts to the pounding of mortars (Though they mock point-blank fire) soon “peccavi" would sing. Mere reasonings that gunboats are needed, we scout them! Let’s have practical proof, first, by trying without them: To show long guns won’t knock the ſqºs' casemates about them, [...]
[...] The #. kind of messenger to send Those, who to no discourse Save that of mere brute force, Their stupid, savage, servile ears will lend. [...]
[...] and uxorious builders have wives of that name. As for John Street James Street, William Street, Alexander Street, Henry Street, Edward Street, and all the other streets with mere praenomina, they must pre pare to take less ridiculous appellations. A Christian man may be entitled to be called a brick, but bricks are not entitled to the Christian [...]
[...] and the interest only of another's capital; the entire property of Jones, and merely a part of [...]
Punch27.07.1872
  • Datum
    Samstag, 27. Juli 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] attend. The Irish Railways are in an Irish mess. It was prºposed that the Government should buy them up. “Not at present,” said the Government, “as that would merely be an invitation to railway people to be outrageously exorbitant in demand, . But the matter is one which ought to be considered, and shall be.” This came [...]
[...] inheritance of which people ought to be proud. Did they devote themselves to the study of Robert Burns as they ought to do? No-they preferred the Italian opera. What was the opera A mere magnificent luxury for the ear, but nothing for the understanding and nothing for the heart.” [...]
[...] WHY, You'RE scARCELY MoRE THAN A MERE CHILD ! You'd Look A [...]
[...] amusing, and I dare say where you cannot always calocate on such a very returnable remark-I mean,” she says, with a sudden gasp “a very remarkable return of eggs, the mere looking after and attending to the chickens, as we used to do at home, where we always kept Dorkshires and Fowldoor Barns, as I told my nephew, [...]
[...] *As this appears to be satisfactory to TELFoRD and his friend, I merely reply that “of course, they’re not expected to be Prize Pigs,” to which TELFORD's friend returns, “No, of course not.” And so the subject drops. - - - [...]
[...] faction. Then, when you’d expect a hot controversy on a question i. so many weighty interests, you find nothing more said, but merely the words, “The subject was then dropped;” and in a jerky manner, up comes the heading of another matter altogether “Mines,” perhaps-and up gets some one who “wants to know,” [...]
[...] by a Young Man under Twenty-two, a Place under a Butler, where a Pig is kept”—or something of that sort... Forget exact instance. It merely flashes, across me while I put the question.) TELFoRD says it all depends upon the size. Of the place he means, not the plg8. - - [...]
[...] might, from pardonable want of habit of close reading, mistake the meaning of a portion of Mr. Punch's remarks. The B. F. might, it has been thought, suppose that merely because a substance was called Phospho-Guano, it necessarily came into the category of worthlessness. This, however, it is not Mr. Punch's intention to [...]
Punch24.02.1866
  • Datum
    Samstag, 24. Februar 1866
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] Government Bill for dealing with the Rinderpest. As those who are interested in the details of the F. law will study them in all their legal amplitude, Mr. Punch will merely state that as the Bill first stood, it provided for the slaughter and burial of diseased cattle, and for the isolation of suspected beasts. It prohibited the removal of cattle, by [...]
[...] graceful nor amusing, it is as well that the Oath (iſ honest gentlemen are to be asked to swear at all) should be a sensible one. SIR. GeoRGE GREY proposes that an M.P. shall merely swear to bear allegiance to his Queen and defend her against all conspiracies. MR. NewDEGATE sees objections to the innovation, reminds the House of Fenianism, and [...]
[...] course not. Never mind, or at least don't ask, Paterfamilia; until he shall have had time to consult his Cyclopaedia. Then he will tell you that it is the law which prevents persons from being imprisoned at the mere will of the Executive, and º: it is suspended only in cases of public peril. But then suspected persons may be arrested without cause or [...]
[...] facts from credible witnesses. The writer of the novel is a true artist, and while giving all these horrors, he is careful to supply evidence that they are merely the creation of the sable population with whom he gossips, and he displays real art in dressing up the crude conceptions of the blacks into sensational narrative. We trust the Tale of Horror [...]
[...] patrons are satisfied to convert alien Jews at £690 a-head (we think that was the last result of a comparison of the outlay with the number of convertites) we have no right to object. Merely as matter of busi ness, we assure them that the thing could be done cheaper in London, and as one convert is as good as another, we should think that Hounds [...]
[...] their children turned out very unlike their parents, what nice people some in the next generation would be . Shears. It is merely a sentimental question. . - Chaff. Partly, not merely. As far as justice or injustice is concerned, it is merely a sentimental, or, as sentimentalists say, a moral question. [...]
[...] spectacle of a duly re d †. mere orchestra, : like prof ther bad l dalise . by any º: ane swearing, or any other bad language, such as they perhaps [...]
Punch08.08.1863
  • Datum
    Samstag, 08. August 1863
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] specimen. The first part, as it treats of a matter interesting only to lawyers, we will pass over; merely saying, that it refers to the droit du Seigneur, which M. InsoleNT found universally in force. This privilege, was formerly enjoyed exclusively by the LoRD MAYoF as head of the [...]
[...] - - It consists merely in laying hold of the wool in the middle of the back and endeavouring to give the animal a good shake. We advise the novice not to attempt to master the [...]
[...] loyal subjects to send in their names at once to swell the Royal list of helpers in the charity, which, as needless letter-writing is a nuisance this hot weather, they can do by their mere signatures at the bottom of a cheque. *If it had not been for wishing to say a word in favour of this de [...]
[...] pearing from our stage, we must hold ourselves prepared to see French actresses appearing on it, and we must take care not to sneer at them merely for their birth. So, faute de mieur, I’ll gladly welcome a French Juliet, when I find her act the character as a female FECHTER would. But I cannot say that MAAMselle Colas has done this, nor, in spite [...]
[...] attract at the Olympic, and its success must be encouraging, to lovers of the drama, as showing that a play well written and well acted is appreciated even in these, undramatic days, when scenes of mere sensation, are more praised than scenes of sense. The ever, urbane manager M.R. EMDEN takes his benefit next Saturday. At the Bandbox [...]
[...] was the best judge of its pleasures, and that the mere force of po pular opinion would effectually prohibit a [...]
[...] whether practised by Roman patriots or patriotic Roman Catholic Poles, and Revolution in Poland is identical with Revolution else where, with the Revolution, in fact;, which Revolution is not merely an anti-christian confederacy arrayed against the Powers that be; §: whatever the papalini British or foreign may say, considerably [...]
[...] ees : But it was not merely Masters and Wardens, no, the LoRD MAYok didn't invite them on’y, But LoRD HARRIs of Trinidad in the West Indies, Colonel Sykes [...]
[...] This part of our subject; while “at the inside” will relate merely to the pocket, and we shall soon exhaust that. Now then, Ladies and Gentlemen, for our [...]
Punch17.10.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 17. Oktober 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] | contemptible conduct, a vulgar illustration be per | mitted, we would merely | remark, that the more these | Italian irons are stuck into [...]
[...] 'Tis not by mere Swells taste in dressing is shown, And that size is not beauty’tis clear;. Nay, the shapeliest forms when balloon-like out-blown, [...]
[...] Our planetary contemporary may appear, in the concluding part of the above extract, to express a hope of hearing of many additional horrors from lndia, from the merely accidental insertion, either by a common slip of the pen, or an error of the press, of the word “not” before the word “wrong.” But are we so sure of this: May not the [...]
[...] makes the whole world of bigots kin!—would be our remarks on the outbreak in the Tablet against GENERAL NEILL, did.we not rather suppose it to be a mere explosion of Ultramontane malice. The valve of the Ultramontane engine has been held down under popular pres sure; the boiler has cracked; and a jet of nearly red-hot steam has [...]
[...] touching the mutinous Sepoys. If that can be thoroughly done without hurting them, mentally or bodily, let it be done, Pain, mental or hysical, inflicted on them as mere pain, would be idle surplusage. | could not undo the misery, they have caused. But if any treatment they can be subjected to is likely to deter others from repeating, their [...]
[...] These explanatory suggestions we might offer to the Ultramontane Sepoys, if they wanted any explanation, and did not know the real state of the case as well as we do, and were not actuated merely by a venomous and burning hatred of England, which they eagerly jump at every opportunity of venting, ...i. if, by so doing, they think [...]
[...] about it. Of course we can't expect in this business-minded age to discover that mere chivalry will pass current at the counter. Tradesmen get the habit of looking upon matters in what they call “abusiness light.” and will abstain from entering the Army or any other “concern.” [...]
[...] necessary, ...} see that all goes on right. And so I hope you will soon hear that all is going on well. Then, you see, he will show that it was not mere shame and sorrow, but a determination to do good for the future, that induced him to Fast and Humiliate i.i. For sorrow, without reform, is mere [...]
Punch08.02.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 08. Februar 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] lated, or edited any thing for the Stage. I am merely an occa sional playgoer, easy to please, mostly a [...]
[...] If I were writing beautiful poetry, and not plain prose, I should make "cleverly" chime with Beverley (I shall not be surprised to hear that it has been done already), not merely as a rhymical conve nience, but as a just and sincere compliment to the scenic artist of Drury Lane. If any wayfarers will adopt me as their theatrical [...]
[...] In the Regent's Park Garden?, where you have all been: Armadillo, Armadillo, he's armed like good fellows, In mere self-defence front the wild beast that bellows. His back is protected with armour of scale. And he runs about safe clad in that coat of mail, [...]
[...] HOW TO CHECK POACHING. Being a good sportsman, and not a mere game-butcher, Mr. Punch is pleased to see that the Farmers' Club at Hexham have passed a resolution that big battues are a nuisance which ought to be abated. [...]
[...] If every farmers' club in England had the sense to do the same, no doubt a good effect might be produced upon the game butchers. What is sport to them is death, not merely to the birds and animals they slaughter, but to the crops which these same birds and animals consume, and for which no compensation really compensates the farmer. Great game [...]
[...] covert, needs neither nerve nor skill, nor any quality of sportsmanship, and only lazy, idle fools can fancy that there is any pleasure in it. Then think at what a cost this pleasure is enjoyed. Not merely waste of crops, but waste of life is caused by it. Where hares and rabbits swarm, there poachers, too, abound; and labourers are tempted to [...]
[...] mensely so, likewise, is the serious assertion on the part of a woman that her waist was reduced from twenty-three to fourteen inches by mere compression without ever giving any cause for regret to the subject of that process. It is a parallel to the allegation in Swift's mock advertisement about the juggler, who allowed any gentleman to [...]
[...] further, and ask what the Spiritual Police, who are paid to direct wandering theologians, have been about in the district of the Peculiar People. These poor folks had to be told by mere lawyers that though they had read the Book right, they had read but a bit of it. It seems hard that simple people should have to be tried for their lives in order [...]
Punch17.11.1860
  • Datum
    Samstag, 17. November 1860
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] wonders which are worked by advertising tradesmen, who are constantly attracting notice to some new commercial trick:— “By merely pouring boiling water into the inverted lid of BLANK's Patent Coffee [...]
[...] cocted it from a few handfuls of beans. In the case quoted, however, the trick is done without the aid of these accessories, the beverage being brewed by merely pouring boiling water on an inverted lid. No mention is made of either tea or coffee being put into the coffee-pot, and yet either of these drinks is producible at will by the mere means [...]
[...] now be made without the need of tea-leaves; and surely nobody will dream of paying money for “Best Mocha,” when he can get a pint or gallon of the most delicious coffee by merely pouring boiling water upon a bit of tin. [...]
[...] * We have no objection to be called a Pet, but we must protest against the epithet preceding. Old, indeed, young lady!. What do you mean by “old?'" A man who lives a careful life, as every one does now-a-days, has quito a right to call himself “a mere boy" until sixty.—Punch. [...]
[...] taste and good sense of the wearer. Portland ladies are celebrated for their beauty and refinement, however, more than for any mere display of dress, and the gather ing on Wednesday in this :*: was sufficient to have constituted an aurora. * * One of the º officers, [...]
[...] large loose white shirts. They were padded in the shoulder with large waddings called “mahoitres:” + and were worn of silk, of satin, and of velvet, even by mere boys. The beaux, however, and perhaps the boys, were as capricious as spoilt children in their tastes and fancies; and after coming out one day in the shortest of short jackets, the [...]
[...] o make their noses bleed. This however was providing that they ould keep their seats, for, when once a knight came down it was iterally all up with him. The mere shock of his fall was quite enough n general to knock him out of time ‘º could not anyhow, get p without assistance, his conqueror º choose the best chink [...]
Punch16.02.1856
  • Datum
    Samstag, 16. Februar 1856
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] phical features of the scene, “spoken,” says the Times, “with even more than his customary indistinctness of utterance, so that the explanation could be heard neither by members nor reporters.” . As he was merely talking nonsense, and knew it, this was of no particular consequence, but such people as WooD should not be insolent. [...]
[...] -literary criticism in the Plush is merely ludicrous. The JENKINs of the [...]
[...] understand it. But we do not bandy criticism with a JENKINs. . It is rather the flunkey animus that prompted the Plush's abuse of MR. MACKAY that we would point out; the mere Billingsgate itself is not worth notice. It is only vulgar and stupid; and some of the language is so low, that we should not wonder if notice were taken of it in the [...]
[...] Those garments—trousers, coat, and vest. Those boots—those gloves—how well they fit! But thou art no mere figure drest, No mimic beau of senseless mould, So elegant 1–but oh, so cold! [...]
[...] and the inextricable confusion into which papers are generally thrown by the process. Perhaps, however, the State Papers are not intended for reference, and as most of them are possibly mere waste paper by this time, a female hand may be very useful in cramming them into all sorts of holes and corners, where they will be quite out of everybody’s [...]
[...] in the infallibility of cashiers in general. I am sure of it, there is hardly one of the gifted body who could not tell how much copper was in HIERo's crown, by merely smelling at the rim of the diadem. Well, on the authority of the cashier a policeman is, singularly enough, ob tained, and the astounded young gentlewoman is given into his safe [...]
[...] of a seventh son is popularly esteemed a naturally qualified practitioner, so, not the eldest son, but the seventh son of the seventh son of a peer, might be entitled, on the mere ground of birth, to a seat in the House of Lords; and if this plan were adopted, the hereditary element in that august assembly would, without being abolished, be reduced to that [...]
[...] custom, tootbpicks for sale to every one who leaves the Embassy. It is quite clear that the beggar can only have been planted there from the mere love of sport and practical joking; for upon inquiry we ascertained that, though he has been stationed at his, Wºnmi.” %. every nigh; for the last ºmonths, he has not yet the of single tooth [...]
Punch02.04.1859
  • Datum
    Samstag, 02. April 1859
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] PATERFAMILIAs, who reads his Times daily, knows that the column of marriages continues to be remarkable for its brevity. The decline of matrimony reported by the Registrar-General, was not merely a tem porary thing, then, but is still proceeding. , No other theory has been advanced to account for it but that already proposed by Mr. Punch [...]
[...] The other DENIsoN, the Speaker, sat i Enchaired, and guarding his three-cor - mered hat. Petitions on petitions strewed the floor, One Member brings a dozen, one a [...]
[...] keep its eye upon our Admiralty tinkers. As tinkers pro |. have a knack of º: new kettles, and knocking holes in them merely for the sake of mending them, so our Admiralty tinkers pull new ships to pieces, merely for the sake, it seems, of putting them to º: - [...]
[...] e jºion to do this, f". one will gladly lend a hand to do the putting. “I merely throw this hint out en £º as you say, for when a good thing strikes one I think it is a shame to keep it to oneself. But what I wished to say, Sir, was, that if our meeting had not broken up [...]
[...] Need by no means excite your vain fears and alarms: Dismiss all such disquietudes, pray! All these terrible weapons mere playthings are for, They are warranted never to kill: And altho' you may think I’m Pºins for War, [...]
[...] ice-pail, the only views the world would get from them would thence forth be dissolving ones. There would, of course, be soon an end to all water-colour drawings, if the water were drawn merely for the sake of making ice. No, no!—we can’t hear of it. However pleasant Neapolitan ice may be, we cannot spare our rising CATTERMoLEs and [...]
Punch15.09.1866
  • Datum
    Samstag, 15. September 1866
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] | . The founders of a home for houseless cats would doubtless be inclined to go farther than the infliction of mere exposure on any wretch convicted of trying to turn a cat out-of-doors. They would perhaps even be inclined to doom, if they could, such a barbarous [...]
[...] the necessary officers of a Cats' Home were commissioned to “ com; Fº all vagrom.” cats, and did so, they would deprive many an old ady of a cherished darling abroad on a mere excursion. Their em ployment, by the way, would be hazardous, involving many perilous adventures on the tiles, and particularly the risk of getting mistaken [...]
[...] cooked viands given them tº eat, let a national appeal be made to Englishmen in general no longer to submit to eat their dinners º dressed. ... Not merely health b twealth is wasted by bad cookery, an any Englishman with sense enºugh to take the pledge against it would soon find himself improved bothin his person and his purse. [...]
[...] body will º: keep in apple-pie order, and of covers for two; and I shall admire the pretty filbert-mails while she peels my nuts, and we ſº up our flirtations, mere entremets, and sit down soberly to enjoy that substantial pièce de resistance—Matrimony. Do you like [...]
[...] decisively, to show that I’m a man of business, “Oh, yes, give him a shilling,” and take up my pen again, by way of a hint to BooDELs. “It’s rather too much to give him, eh, for merely looking at a pond * * objects BooDELs. I return, settling to write #ain, “Oh, no!” as if I generally gave double that sum. “What?” says BooDELs.º. (He [...]
[...] Ilay down my pen, “Well,” I explain, mildly, because it’s no use having a row with BooDELs about this confounded pond, “I mean if the man has come to—to—or if he merely—why—that is, if the fellow—” I own I am wandering. BooDELs notices it, and says, with some tinge of annoyance in his tone, “I came to ask your advice; I [...]
[...] must be fing down!) says, “Ya-as—leave him to his writing, ya-a-as,” and laughs. Treeſ as if i will give up writing there and then, and be transported for merely one kick at CAWKER. BooDELS wants CAWKER to come and take a turn before lunch. Happy Thought.—As I haven’t been able to get on with Typical [...]
Suche einschränken
Zeitungsunternehmen
Erscheinungsort