Punch, Zväzky 60–61

Predný obal
Mark Lemon, Henry Mayhew, Tom Taylor, Shirley Brooks, Francis Cowley Burnand, Owen Seaman
Punch Publications Limited, 1871

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Populárne pasáže

Strana 221 - WHICH I wish to remark, And my language is plain, That for ways that are dark And for tricks that are vain, The heathen Chinee is peculiar, Which the same I would rise to explain.
Strana 3 - That never set a squadron in the field, Nor the division of a battle knows More than a spinster...
Strana 134 - BE you to others kind and true, As you'd have others be to you; And neither do nor say to men Whate'er you would not take again.
Strana 201 - Leader ! the terms we sent were terms of weight, Of hard contents, and full of force urged home ; Such as we might perceive amused them all, And stumbled many: Who receives them right, Had need from head to foot well understand ; Not understood, this gift they have besides, They show us when our foes walk not upright.
Strana 93 - From storms a shelter, and from heat a shade. All crimes shall cease, and ancient fraud shall fail ; Returning Justice lift aloft her scale ; Peace o'er the world her olive wand extend, And white-robed Innocence from heaven descend.
Strana 174 - JK, clerks of said election, were respectively sworn (or affirmed), as the law directs, previous to their entering on the duties of their respective offices.
Strana 94 - Many who hold it would probably assent to the position that, at the present moment, all our philosophy, all our poetry, all our science, and all our art — Plato, Shakespeare, Newton, and Raphael — are potential in the fires of the sun.
Strana 22 - Which it would poure on thee, upon the floore. It is most just to throw that on the ground Which would throw me there, if I keep the round.
Strana 142 - Can any sensible man, can any rational man suppose that at this time of day, in this condition of the world, we are going to disintegrate the great capital institutions of this country for the purpose of making ourselves ridiculous in the sight of all mankind, and crippling any power we possess for bestowing benefits through legislation on the country to which we belong...
Strana 115 - that it is an essential principle of the law of nations that no power can liberate itself from the engagements of a treaty, nor modify the stipulations thereof, unless with the consent of the contracting powers by means of an amicable arrangement.

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