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Punch27.08.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 27. August 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] destroyed, that the drought has been particularly severe in France, that “the amount of hedgerow timber” in England “is rapidly disappearing under our new systems of cultivation” pursued with an odious 9. eye to mere material pro duce, regardless of any defacement of the country's beauty. And just when the French Government, to remedy the deficiency of moisture, “is planting” trees [...]
[...] pation in planting cannon, consider, and weigh even in your own pecuniary scale a most pertinent remark (made by a correspondent of the Times) that, for the mere national gain of a few thousand pounds, which will very soon be poured into the insatiable maw of our great national expenditure— “It is at this moment we propose to destroy the New Forest, one of the best storehouses [...]
[...] What with telegram telegram hotly succeeding, And letter on letter piled thick. --- In fact, we’re all growing mere sieves for loose writing For news craving still, . news-cloyed; .. And 'mong other pernicious effects of this fighting, [...]
[...] their mutual interdependence—these are all inscrutable problems to baffle the wisest philosopher, and dismay the most arrogant thinker. Are they innate eidola, or merely intellectual secretions?. Are they conceived in a flash of instantaneous rapidity, or developed by a slow [...]
[...] If this were inserted merely with a view of terrifying that evil boy— why—let it pass. The suggestion that he is to be made to sing out elsewhere than in the choir is amiable. That he can sing there, and [...]
[...] THIs about completes the picture of the Modern Woman. She only wanted to be an Amazon to make her perfect. Merely to be a Wivan dière no longer satisfies her desires; merely to tend the sick and the wounded seems but a poor outlet for her masculine energies. She feels [...]
Punch07.01.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 07. Januar 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] them consolation in the circumstances, is what I dare not attempt. I think I told you that there was a philosopher over here some years ago who held, or, at least preached, that the soul, was merely glue... I suppose that Pigwiggin's, if he have [one, is more than usually sticky. [...]
[...] How happy, if only healthy, must be that man whose means are so ample that they require his conscience to remit so much as £20 for mere underpayment of Income-tax Of course, that sum is merely a single arrear. So conscientious a person as he must be (she is out of the question) could never have º: on long under [...]
[...] he does not know the “division” of a battle % further aileges, concerning Cassio, that “Mere prattle, without practice, Is all his soldiership.” [...]
[...] Army is so inconsiderable as not to admit the possibility of Generals of Division. The fact appears to be that Governments, whose cal culating powers were exerted in the direction of mere economy, have subjected it to a too extensive process of Reduction. [...]
[...] advertisements of sham sovereigns were only baits to catch birds of º: they probably discharged the advertisers, whose proposed sale of bad money was in reality merely a “sell” which imposed onl upon fools who were knaves as well, and very #. knaves indeed, although less knaves than fools. But it is’c eering to note that [...]
[...] of the Chamberlain's Office. PALGRAVE SIMPson. —If this gentleman could be cured of his love of mere boisterous fun, and a habit of introducing any wild scenes that may occur to him, regardless of the advance of the story, and, if he would aim at grâceful polish in dialogue, and eschew [...]
Punch11.01.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 11. Januar 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] ladies shall wear muffs with a sable or a marten on them, and of course the ladies bow to the imperative behest, and never dream of thinking of the deaths which it occasions. Merely to gratify " a fancy of the moment." sables, ermines, and martens are slaughtered by wholesale, and if the fashion did not change, would speedily be numbered with [...]
[...] Let us call her Biddy. Biddy will have it that we are all a set of hypocrites for saying that the Fenians who murdered Brett were hanged for mere murder. She insists that their punishment was a political execution. Biddy seems never to have asked herself whether, if the accomplices in rescuing [...]
[...] insists that their punishment was a political execution. Biddy seems never to have asked herself whether, if the accomplices in rescuing whom they shot a policeman, had been mere thieves, her Fenian friends would not have been certainly hanged all the same. Because the murder of Brett was committed on behalf of fellow- [...]
[...] would not have been certainly hanged all the same. Because the murder of Brett was committed on behalf of fellow- traitors instead of fellow-thieves, Biddy argues that it was the mere incident of a political act, and not murder at all at all. Killing is no murder when it is treason besides, according to Biddy. Treason makes [...]
[...] Government were to hang the confederates of Wilkes Booth! Then Biddy calls the hanging of the Manchester Fenians a political execution. If it was not a political execution, a merely political exe cution, why, asks Biddy, were soldiers stationed to guard the scaffold P Och, sure, not because it was a political execution, but only because it [...]
[...] And now, when good men, of all parties and creeds, Unite against doers of villanous deeds, How nobly, above the mere demagogue's view, He soars in denouncing that infamous crew! John Bright has a heart, and he is not ashamed [...]
[...] They deny us spirits—otherwise than as the United Kingdom Alliance would deny gin and whiskey to people sufficiently like ourselves to be content with mere water. Yet who knows that it is not our ghosts who rap the tables through which some persons think, with some reason, that they correspond with their deceased relativesP [...]
[...] prove to have been supra grammatical*—only a rather too exalted beneficence. But the enthusiastic recognition, in bad English, of a mere saving of rates, argues a stinginess not above bad grammar—a not too exalted stinginess. However, the gentlemen in question may indignantly deny that they [...]
[...] is it. He is fired with the professional enthusiasm of a British Naval Officer, who wants something to do. Perhaps that would suffice to keep him warm at zero. He can be actuated by nothing else but mere geographical curiosity. Sir, however, 1 respect that. I am no Philis tine, although I confess myself ^ Sybarite [...]
Punch27.12.1856
  • Datum
    Samstag, 27. Dezember 1856
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] BRABANT gave the “humble labourer” a far higher than a sixpenny recompence. ... He returned the pipe a very different thing from what he received it. He received it mere clay, he returned it as good as aluminium—if not gold. “Pipe”-perhaps exclaimed the peasant, paraphrasin; unconsciously a line of SHAKSPEARE, and apostrophising [...]
[...] point to Paris. Dr. Punch has ample grounds for his belief that the persons first affected were the ladies attached to the Imperial Court; and it is a more than mere surmise with him, that symptoms of the mania were primarily betrayed, by the young and lovely EMPREss. Qf its introduction to this kingdom, Dr. Punch can scarcely speak with [...]
[...] colour it is quite chameleon-like in changing, displaying in the daytime the most variegated hues, while at night it more frequently assumes the appearance of a mere white swelling. Like other insane people, the Crinolineomaniac is difficult to approach —indeed it may be said that even her nearest relatives have to stand [...]
[...] A Mere Surmise. [...]
Punch26.12.1857
  • Datum
    Samstag, 26. Dezember 1857
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] host of affidavits; it is worthy, too, of notice, as showing in the strongest light the baleful influence of Comets, that the damage was occasioned not by actual approach, but by mere expectation of the vagrant body. As coming events cast their shadows . so Comets, it would seem, are capable of damaging when merely in expectancy. [...]
[...] Your cabman is the most aspiring of mortals. Whatever rank he may be on, he is always looking for a hire. - - Hope cannot satisfy, it merely appetises. The man who “lives in º is generally hungry. - - - - - - - appy the man who can meet his tailor without flinching, and can [...]
[...] appy the man who can meet his tailor without flinching, and can even be “at home” when the tax-collector visits him. . . . Bashfulness is merely a matter of position. Ladies who object to be *. under the mistletoe show no such reluctance to be kissed under the rose. [...]
Punch06.02.1858
  • Datum
    Samstag, 06. Februar 1858
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] RothschMLD, upon hearing of the marriage of the PRINCEsse DE * * *, whb merely carries to her husband a dowry of 150,000 fr. a:year, was vºisibly affected, and after several sighs, exclaimed: “Poor children! twºo more victims to the folly of “Frugal Marriages!” [...]
[...] of the India Stock Proprietors; #. by a philanthropic concern for the welfare of the natives; but if their entreaties have been prompted y the mere desire of emolument, the success of those supplications may have contributed to the result which we witness in the revolt of the Sepoys. However, that catastrophe can be chargeable only in part [...]
[...] is open, and he proposes to give a whole group of people a certainty of literary immortality. The Editor, who, by the bye, should be ..more dignified, and, not let mere correspondents address him as “deal Editor,” and begin without homage to his valuable and widely-read º: been reading a lecture to all the shining lights of his [...]
[...] sphere. - - have his little jokes. And so, after quoting words far too solemn for more reference to them here than the mere mention that, they form one of HANDEL's choruses, (at which even the worldly stand up), the Editor dashes into peroration:— [...]
[...] THIRD was king, the harlequinade was some thing more than a mere series of tricks and tumbles. There was a [...]
[...] to run smooth. ...To frustrate their designs, and give protection to her favourites, the good fairy then gave Harlequin his magic wand and cap: the latter of which bestowed complete invisibility, while with the former he performed his tricks—not merely to surprise and please the audience, but to astonish and amuse the weak minds of his pursuers, and so gain time for a dance of delight upon escaping from them. [...]
[...] with them. He cuts a caper to remind us of some Cutlery establishment, and takes his leaps to show off the superior elasticity of some gutta percha leggings or new patent spring heeled boots. In short, his tricks degenerate to merely tricks of trade, and all the “comic business” of the good old harlequinade becomes a paid-for and a serious commercial matter. Moreovernow the “Unities” [...]
[...] have not anything to do. How to undersell? That’s the only question in the mind of any cheap and not, ºvernice, competitor. Of course, then, wages are regarded merely “from a business point of view,’ and the more they are cut down the better for the cutters. [...]
Punch02.02.1856
  • Datum
    Samstag, 02. Februar 1856
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] the very whimsical notion of a man or pony “lined with cloth;” and we have a faint glim |mering of an ideasuggestive of “holland covers.” º &larising out of the tendency of an inveterate gin |ºll drinker to cover his inside with Hollands. [...]
[...] been made a Christian, and thence might return to Guinea a missionary. What a shame and a folly that we should have put down the slave trade, when we merely might have im in the rough, to be duly polished by the cow-hide into the future pastor and master of his benighted brother. Imagine the blessed change—an [...]
[...] for the §: of recommending, the House to go to bed? And whether the RIGHT HoN. W. E. GLADstone will talk for rather less than three hours, when he rises merely to offer “a few brief observations f" [...]
[...] a reverend gentleman.|an evil-dºer go, unpunished. They dismiss him | to the capability of with half-punishment, or quasi-punishment; and being a mere Magis- a few, of them presiding on the Judicial Bench trate? Why not ren- would soon introduce a vast iº." on the der him eligible to the administration of Justice as dispensed by Lay [...]
[...] rieimoff Invincibles. Friday, 6th. Passed a quiet afternoon teaching some raw recruits (mere charity-children, that start like rabbits at the crack of a gun) the proper range of the Minié Rifle. [...]
[...] better that such a promise should be cancelled, and one party left to remorse, and the other to grief, than that a mocking union of mere hands should take place. [...]
[...] THEY say we’re to have Peace: I hope it isn't mere imagination; For candles, brushes, string, and soap, has risen up to ruination: . And what we’ve had to pay for bread! of War that gives one some idea, [...]
Punch04.05.1861
  • Datum
    Samstag, 04. Mai 1861
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] attempt too much. They risk their necks as extraordinary acrobats, and turn out to be mere tumblers. [...]
[...] position over the altar of the Jesuits’ oratory, where it stands to be worshipped. Yes; to be actually and absolutely worshipped, not merely venerated as a memorial, but specially adored as an image dis tinct from other images. So official authority itself declares in the following courageous assertion:— [...]
[...] had the misfortune to be bitten by a viper, would have been obliged considerably to augment the strength of his customary potion; would have had to heighten it much above proof. Mere Cognac would never have sufficed him as it did that countryman of his who, being recommended a bottle of brandy for a bad leg, [...]
[...] We’re ready when we’re called on, To take the field—I know: And though mere babes in arms, we’ll try A brush with any foe. But betwixt us and the foemen, [...]
[...] much to be wondered that it threw her in a flutter, and, had there been anything to gain by it, she would no doubt have tried to faint. But I had previously explained that hysterics were prohibited by the Census Act of Parliament; and, as I was merely acting as the proxy for the Government, she must look to them, not me, to give her a new bonnet for telling them the truth. Her occupation. I described as that of “Wife of my Buzzum, and Keeper of [...]
[...] it calls forth. Still I can’t believe the Strand would have ever been blocked up with Colleen cabs as it has been, or that by wish of the Police the doors need have been opened sooner than their wont, merely on account of this one aquatic feat. I am more inclined to think that play-goers have been pleased by the care, and the completeness where [...]
[...] one chosen by Her Majesty should have been pronounced the most elegant and most characteristic of the exquisite taste exhibited by Parisian artists, amongst them all. . We have been informed that the mere adjusting of the dress on the night of the ball occupied the space of three quarters of an hour, as the placing of the bouquets and diamonds on the skirt cannot be accomplished until the dress is on [...]
Punch05.05.1877
  • Datum
    Samstag, 05. Mai 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] delightful odour. Fancy that of the Works! - . A background to the site of the proposed Sewage-Manure Works is formed of mere rows of trees coming out in leaf. Would not DR; Johnson have been right in saying that a grove of chimneys in a place like that was better than any grove of trees? Particularly [...]
[...] § \\,, The EARL of CARNARVoN, most laborious, well-meaning, and clear-headed of - - Colonial Ministers, introduced his skeleton South African Confederation Bill. It is the mere framework of a permissive measure, under whose dead ribs the Colonial Legislatures may, if they will, breathe a soul, by turning the Bill's “mays” into “shalls.”. The problem before the Colonial Office is not an º one-how to combine into a harmonious, well-guarded, and well-governed whole, the motley mixture of Dutch Settlements º olonies, and Native States now dividing [...]
[...] a Palace Green Parliament-House, to the delight of cynics and the shame of intelligent and civilised men. If Home-Rule means merely Local Self-Government, it can be given under that name. If it means Repeal of the Union—as it does mean in the minds of its sincerest supporters—it cannot be [...]
[...] The Newspaper Proprietor. Hor rible! It's merely butchery by thou sands and thousands. [...]
[...] a horse driven without bearing-reins. Their use is a mere matter of senseless fashion. No good coachman uses bearing-reins for a horse from which he desires to get the full amount of work, or which he desires to leave at ease. [...]
[...] fashion. No good coachman uses bearing-reins for a horse from which he desires to get the full amount of work, or which he desires to leave at ease. Their employment is, indeed, merely a senseless fashion, which has abso lutely nothing to recommend it; and in favour of abolition, there are reasons so many and decided that we hope that not many years will pass before they [...]
[...] IL était un Hébreu de Hambourg, CINQ fois veuf, il a cinq belle-mères, [...]
Punch25.01.1862
  • Datum
    Samstag, 25. Januar 1862
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] racter? He gets up in the morning and goes to work. He comes home, and the first thing he usually does is to swear at his wife. Perhaps he beats his children, and then he caresses his dog. His whole life is ed in mere sensual enjoyments —getting drunk is his chief business in life, and when he has got drunk, his next business is to get sober. . Now that is that man's life, and I ask you to compare that [...]
[...] and, other property in the United States. All this property, together sº the stocks, would be seized, amounting to $900,000,000 in all. Will England incur this tremendous loss for a mere abstraction?–New York Herata. [...]
[...] Hotel, Borough, until she can suit herself with a housemaid. By the recent census it appears that the majority of the inhabitants ...We are authorised tº, contradict the rumour, that Mk.GLUGG, of of Poppleby in the Mire, Dºrsetshire, are idiots. There was reason Shoreditch, has met with a serious accident. He merely fell over the for beftºviº, this some years ago when they petitioned Parliament to doºr-mât and dislocated his spectacles. prevent eclipses. > > | The difficulties which arose between M.R. and MRs. CHINASTER, of Pop- A wealthy inhabitant of Kensington has offered a prize of £5 for the [...]
[...] the strength: and instead of singers growing perfect } such practice, they are tempted to get careless, and to sing as though their singing were a mere work of routine. Even Jessy ind could scarcely throw her soul into a song, were she for weeks restrained to singing that and nothing else; and besides the bad effect which the monotony produces, [...]
[...] with the intent to see one's friends, clearly that is nowadays a quite exploded notion. If they are at home the chances are they are em ployed in some more profitable work than merely chatting with chance visitors; and when this is the case your intrusion is a nuisance, as of course you come with nothing particular to say. Your call is a mere [...]
[...] harsh will be done to this attorney. It may be a little irre. gular to take one's client's money, and spend it oneselſ, but this is a mere error in practice, and when handsomely and frankly, admitted, as by this “gent,” anything like severity is uncalled for. What more can the poor man say? If he [...]
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