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1854en TIRA MAFALDA, CÓDIGO ORIGINAL 1854, INGLÊS, EDICIONES DE LA FLORDiálogoSusanita: Let go or elso.Boy: I won't! I was here first!Susanita: You may be first, but I'm a woman!Boy: Woaman! So what?Susanita: What d'you mean "so what", degenerate! Are you out-swinging mothers, wives, brides, sisters...
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1757en TIRA MAFALDA, CÓDIGO ORIGINAL 1757, INGLÊS, EDICIONES DE LA FLORDiálogoMan: Hello, what's your name?Mafalda: Mafalda.Man: Oh how nice, and do you go to school?Mafalda: Of course, and do you pay your taxes? He started talking about duties first.
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1688en TIRA MAFALDA, CÓDIGO ORIGINAL 1688, INGLÊS, EDICIONES DE LA FLORDiálogoManolito: The good thing about these first days back al school is the teacher doesn't know each one of us. Just for now she thinks we're all roughly the same, none better or worse. She might even think I could be top of the class. The fool! Me! Me... Top ha ha ha, of the cla ha ha.
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1746en TIRA MAFALDA, CÓDIGO ORIGINAL 1746, INGLÊS, EDICIONES DE LA FLORDiálogoLibertad: Just a thought, the man downstairs used to have a job.Mafalda: So what happened?Libertad: Well, as his wage was not enough to live on, he had to find a second job, but then he ran out of time and was always late at both jobs. And if he got the sack from one, he could not live on one job alone. To keep both jobs he had from the new job he had to find when he had only one job he could not live on. So now he has to live on the wage of the first job, bu, of course, with the car he can arrive on time at both jobs.
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1086en TIRA MAFALDA, CÓDIGO ORIGINAL 1086, INGLÊS, EDICIONES DE LA FLORDiálogoMafalda: How was your teacher this first week, Manolito?Manolito: She's not bad; she spoke a lot about the nature of learning. she said school is a cathedral of knowledge. So we'll see if I get acqainted with the liturgy.
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1155en TIRA MAFALDA, CÓDIGO ORIGINAL 1155, INGLÊS, EDICIONES DE LA FLORDiálogoMafalda: "Written Test, National History - Answer the following questions:Girl: Pssst! Help me with "Who sat on the presidential thone for the first time?". Pssst! Did the others before just stand?
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202-09pt MACANUDO, VOLUME 9, PORTUGUÊS, ZARABATANA BOOKSDiálogoPinguim 1: Like a penguin. Touched for the very first tome. Like a peeeeenguin.Pinguim 2: Pode parar?! Não é que eu queira podar sua liberdade de expressão, mas, se continuar cantando, vou ter que podar sua cabeça. E sou no greepeace, sabia?
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0583en TIRA MAFALDA, CÓDIGO ORIGINAL 0583, INGLÊS, EDICIONES DE LA FLORDiálogoRadio: "We all live in a yellow submarine."Manolito: The Beatles! Why don't you listen to something local, instead of those we can't understand?Radio: ...Our usual programme of native folk music.Manolito: There you are!Radio: And first, firends, a vidala, which is a cry turned to stone! Of deep ancestral roots, matured in the mineral womb of the wood! Quintessential song in which flows it's bull's blood of a thousand years, rising through wine towards the night, rending it's veins to salt...Manolito: So, your father? How are things at the office?
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0500en TIRA MAFALDA, CÓDIGO ORIGINAL 0500, INGLÊS, EDICIONES DE LA FLORDiálogoMafalda: I don't know why I listen to the news!Felipe: Why? What did they say?Mafalda: That a nuclear war threatens all of us! Don't you see? Absolutely everyone!Felipe: Wow! That's the first time they've mentioned me on the radio!
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0319en TIRA MAFALDA, CÓDIGO ORIGINAL 0319, INGLÊS, EDICIONES DE LA FLORDiálogoMafalda: What a mess, Manolito! Where did you get so dirty?Manolito: Here, at school. School is run by the ministry of education, isn't it?Mafalda: Yes.Manolito: Wow! It's the first time I reach ministerial rank dirt.
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0359en TIRA MAFALDA, CÓDIGO ORIGINAL 0359, INGLÊS, EDICIONES DE LA FLORDiálogoMafalda: I don't understand why you and Manolito keep fighting.Susanita: If Giusepe Garibaldi had not kept on fighting, who would have heard of him? Nobody! Absolutely nobody!Mafalda: That's the first time I hear that the founding fathers fought for self promotion.
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202-09sp MACANUDO, VOLUME 9, ESPANHOL, EDICIONES DE LA FLORDiálogoPingüino 1: Like a penguin. Touched for the very first tome. Like a peeeeenguin.Pingüino 2: ¡¿Podés parar? No es que quiera cercenar tu libertad de expresión. Pero si seguís cantando, voy a tener que cercenarte la cabeza. Y soy de greenpeace. ¿Sabés?
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PCL113677 "A first-class workman's ticket to Hayford, please."
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PCL113959 "“Oh, he won’t bother with this lot. He only burns first editions.”" *** Local Caption *** He only burns first editions
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PCL100399 'Watch out for that guy. He'll try to get you to swim upstream on your first date.' *** Local Caption *** Cartoons about Science-Technology-Space from Punch
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PCL106658 (In an office the smoke from a businessman's pipe causes his colleague to collapse and the office junior has to give first aid) *** Local Caption *** Larry (Terence Parkes) Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL114359 "‘The vandals aren’t so dumb. First they destroy everything in sight, then they get big contracts for rebuilding the country!’" *** Local Caption *** "Cartoons about City life, Country life and Society, from Punch"
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PCL112765 "Constable (to motorist who has exceeded the speed limit). ""And I have my doubts about this being your first offence. Your face seems familiar to me.""" *** Local Caption *** His face seems familiar
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PCL109641 "Swedish Drill. First weary ""Special"" to second ditto. ""I say, what's the good of all this? We're not at war with Sweden, are we?""" *** Local Caption *** Arthur Wallis Mills Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL109715 "Staff Officer (inspecting a scratch collection of G.S. men). ""Ah, my man - ribbon, eh? Don't seem to remember the colours. What campaign is that?"" G.S. Man (proudly). ""First prize, ploughin' match at Yeovil, Zur.""" *** Local Caption *** WW1 cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL110695 "Of course, I didn't get it right at the first attempt." *** Local Caption *** Punch cartoons by Banx (Jeremy Banks)
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PCL109174 "The Fight for the Favourite. Mr. Lloyd George. ""Here, I say, this is my mount."" Mr. Winston Churchill. ""No, it isn't. I thought of it first."" (Churchill and Lloyd George struggle to get onto the Anti-Socialism horse first)" *** Local Caption *** InterWar Cartoons from Punch magazine by Raven Hill
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PCL110570 "On Safer Ground. First doctor. ""I ordered him an ice-cold bath every morning."" Second doctor. What, when he had influenza!"" First doctor. ""Yes. It will give him pneumonia, and I made my whole reputation curing that!""" *** Local Caption *** Bernard Partridge Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL101375 The Devil-Fish (With Mr. Punch's best wishes to the First Lord of the Admiralty on his sixty-fifth birthday.) (Churchill as a sailor aboard the boat Britannia cuts the tentacles 'U-Boats' and 'Mines' from the Piracy octopus) *** Local Caption *** WW2 Cartoons from Punch magazine by Bernard Partridge
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PCL114835 "( Man watching televisions placed first, second and third on an Olympic winners' podium)" *** Local Caption *** Matt cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL101751 Sure and you weren't even born when you first came here. *** Local Caption *** David Langdon Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL111173 "Masterpieces of Victorian Art Restored: Her First Audition. After ""King Cophetua and the Beggar Maid"" by Sir Edward Burne-Jones RA"
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PCL104081 Having been convicted of first-degree murder by the state of Hawaii... *** Local Caption *** Nick (Nicholas Hobart) cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL104209 'Funny that. You're not the first one who thought Cheetah would be a chimp' *** Local Caption *** Tony Husband cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL109162 "The First Capital. (Allied soldiers view their target, Rome, on the horizon)" *** Local Caption *** WW2 Cartoons from Punch magazine by Bernard Partridge
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PCL112450 "Everything in its Proper Order. Hun Prisoner. ""Und ven comes der peace of vitch dey vos talk?"" Tommy. ""One thing at a time, Fritz. We've got to finish the war first."" (a British soldier talks to a German prisoner at the end of WW1)" *** Local Caption *** WW1 cartoons from Punch magazine by Leonard Raven Hill
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PCL114708 "(At the Ace Building Society Mortgages and Loans, a teller sits at a window marked ""first obstacle"")" *** Local Caption *** PUNCH magazine cartoons by William Scully
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PCL107923 "We'll talk about raising funds later, Miss Prescott. We must tackle our consciousness first." *** Local Caption *** Punch cartoons by Riana Duncan
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PCL109837 "Sinfonia Socialistica. The Conductor. ""Now remember, please - molto moderato; at any rate for the first movement.""" *** Local Caption *** Bernard Partridge cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL105361 “We’re celebrating. It’s twenty years to the day since Harry first began prostituting his art.” *** Local Caption *** Sally Artz Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL113512 "A Wise Warning. (Founded on the the first part of an old fable, the sequel of which Mr Punch trusts may never apply.)" *** Local Caption *** A Wise Warning
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PCL100022 You're the first patient ever to make sense of that chart. I'd say you're dyslexic. *** Local Caption *** "Cartons about Health, Medicine and Doctors from Punch"
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PCL113667 "A Gloomy Prospect. First Labour leader. ""I say—things are looking precious bad!"" Second Labour leader. ""Bad!! Why, we shan't get our pay next!!!"""
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PCL108926 "The Law's Accelerations. First Pedestrian. ""How did you get laid out!"" Second Pedestrian. ""Speed-hog. And you?"" First Pedestrian. ""Speed-cop."" [To carry out the new traffic act, a thousand mobile police are to be mounted on motor-cycles, with the idea of pursuing and overtaking those who drive to the public danger.]" *** Local Caption *** Cartoons from Punch magazine by Bernard Partridge
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PCL112521 "Elated Second (as much-fancied negro is floored in the first round). ""That's knocked a bit of the choclic off!" *** Local Caption *** Cartoons by Frank Reynolds from Punch magazine
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PCL110516 "Our Gogglers. First girl in grandmotherly spectacles (to second ditto). ""How frightfully out of date that woman is. Fancy - Lorgnettes!""" *** Local Caption *** Punch cartoons by James Henry Dowd
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PCL108603 "The Rush to Salonika. Wilhelm and Franz Joseph. ""Ferdie, the post of honour is yours."" Ferdie. ""You can have it."" (Ferdinand I of Bulgaria refuses to go first into battle as Wilhelm II pushes him while Salonika is heavily defended with barbed wire and a fearful Franz Joseph I of Austria looks on during WW1)" *** Local Caption *** WW1 cartoons from Punch magazine by Leonard Raven Hill
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PCL112332 "First, I'd like to propose that we move a vote of thanks that the whole of the committee escaped the shipwreck." *** Local Caption *** Cartoons about Business and Office life from Punch
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PCL110954 "NCC. First Conscientious Objector. ""I wonder why they've put us on to shifting this infernal manure-heap."" Second ditto. ""I - I did tell the sergeant after drill yesterday that I thought I'd be better employed in cultivating my garden at home."" (two soldiers engaged in hard labour during WW1)" *** Local Caption *** WW1 cartoons from Punch magazine by Leonard Raven Hill
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PCL109175 "The Fenian-Pest. Hibernia. "" O my dear Sister, what ARE we to do with these troublesome people?"" Britannia. ""Try isolation first, my dear, and then - """ *** Local Caption *** Cartoons about Ireland from Punch
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PCL108175 "Trouble Downstairs. ""You go first. It's your nation, you know."" [Mussolini invites the King of Italy to speak to his people.]" *** Local Caption *** WW2 Cartoons from Punch magazine by Bernard Partridge
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PCL108944 "The Lastest Air-Raid. Scene - Luxurious Restaurant of Capacious and Eligible Hotel. First Indispensable. ""I see there's been some talk of commandeering The British Museum for the Air Board."" Second Ditto. ""Well, what about it? They might have taken a place that really matters - like this."" (two footmen at a luxury restaurant in London make an ironic comment about food rationing during WW1)" *** Local Caption *** WW1 cartoons from Punch magazine by Leonard Raven Hill
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PCL112338 "First Territorial. ""Well, what do you think of our manoeuvres, Bill?"" Second Territorial (hitherto unacquainted with field-days). ""Thank 'evin we've got a Nivy!""" *** Local Caption *** WW1 cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL112781 "Committee on National Production. ""And first of all I want to say that we shall do our best to decrease absenteeism during the coming winter.""" *** Local Caption *** EH Shepard Cartoons from Punch Magazine
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PCL110080 "Reckoning without their host. First anarchist. ""Enfin, mon ami!—Ve shall not be interrupt in zis free England!"" Bull A 1 (sotto voce). ""Don't be too sure, Mossoo! You'll find no extenuating circumstances here!!"""
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PCL111386 "King Coal and the Magic Wand. ""Back, Demon Frost. Though you may do your worst, I am his fairy guardian from Jan first.""" *** Local Caption *** EH Shepard Cartoons from Punch Magazine
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PCL109182 "The Fable of the Frogs. [In the fable of the frogs asking for a king, Jupiter first threw them down a log of wood, but they grumbled at so spiritless a king. He then sent them a stork, which devoured them eagerly.]"
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PCL109159 "The First Witness. (Before the Standing Committee on the Larceny Act (1861) Amendment (Use of Firearms) Bill.) Bill Sykes (injured innocent). ""'Cat' be blow'd!"" (Pause.) ""'P-o-on my word!—Do they want to make a brute o' me?"""
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PCL109220 "The Economics of Revolution. First Babu (speaking from left to right). ""This Ghandi making three per centums too low with his shoutings."" Second Babu. ""I am saying this: We have buttered our bun and we must lie on it."" First Babu. ""But I am poor man. How shall I keep the cat from the bag?"" (an InterWar cartoon showing a stereotype of two Indian office workers complaining about their government)" *** Local Caption *** InterWar cartoons from Punch magazine by Leonard Raven Hill
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PCL100381 We are told that if Hitler's invasion were successful one of the first things he would do would be to remove many of the statues from London streets. We don't care. We are still against it. *** Local Caption *** Hitler in London
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PCL105381 “This Rover you used as your getaway car-did you find the gearchange ‘notchy’ from first to second? And was there an irritating squeak from somewhere under the rear seat?” *** Local Caption *** Cartoons from Punch magazine by Holte (Trevor Holder)
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PCL108355 "The Young Master. Chorus of Old Ones (to Mr J S Sargent, RA, at the National Gallery). ""Well done. You're the first master to break the rule and get in here alive.""" *** Local Caption *** Interwar Art Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL112341 "First public man. ""Well, Sir Alfred, what do you suggest?"" Second public man. ""I'll tell y - ; (sotto voce) but wait till your typist is gone. She may be writing one of these confidential memoirs.""" *** Local Caption *** Punch cartoons by James Henry Dowd
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PCL108362 "The World's Worst Worker. Poison-Gas Alchemist. ""I am on the point of perfecting my elixir of death."" Mars. ""That's a pity, because I've got to cut down my staff - and you'll be one of the first to go.""" *** Local Caption *** Cartoons from Punch magazine by Bernard Partridge
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PCL112337 "First Tramp. ""Why don't YOU go in? 'E's all right. Don't YOU see 'Im a-waggin' his Tail?"" Second Tramp. ""Yus; An' don't You see 'Im a-growlin'? I dunno which END to BELIEVE!""" *** Local Caption *** Victorian Era Cartoons from Punch magazine by Leonard Raven Hill
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PCL112354 "First player. ""How ought we to divide? I'm pretty feeble."" Second ditto. ""I expect you're a lot better than I am."" Third ditto. ""I'm hopelessly rotten."" Fourth ditto (ignoring the conventions). ""I'm rather hot stuff. Now let's start over again.""" *** Local Caption *** Punch cartoons by Lewis Baumer
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PCL108258 "Three Jovial Huntsmen. They hunted and they hollo'd, an' the first thing they did find was a tatter't boggart in a field, an' that they kept in mind. One said it was a boggart, an' another he said ""Nay, it's just a German Fuehrer and he's almost had his day.""" *** Local Caption *** EH Shepard Cartoons from Punch Magazine
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PCL110889 "No Doris, the point is that it goes so fast that first of all you hear the bang as it hits the ground, and then you hear the rumble as it flies through the air... ""Ah - and finally, I suppose, you hear the squeak as they fill their fountain-pens and start to invent the nasty thing!""" *** Local Caption *** Punch cartoons by Fougasse (Kenneth Bird)
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PCL109716 "St Valentine's Day at Girton. First young lady (opens Valentine, and reads): - Charming, isn't it? Gussie must have sent it from Oxford?"" Second young lady (overlooking). ""Yes, it's out of the Antigone - The Love-Chorus, you know. How much jollier than those silly English verses fellows used to send!""" *** Local Caption *** George du Maurier Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL110670 "Offices of the Imperial Consolidated Corporation, Sir? Yes, Sir - Take the turning to the left - and the second to the right - then cross at the traffic lights - then turn right at the monument then right again - then straight on - and bear left - then take the first turning to the right - and the second to the left - and keep straight on as far as you can go - turn right - and there you are." *** Local Caption *** Cartoons about Business and Office life from Punch
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PCL110339 "Pleasures of Housekeeping. The Cook says that she thinks there's a slate loose on the roof of the House, for the water comes into the Servants' bed-room. Mr. Briggs replies that the sooner it is put to rights the better before it goes any further - and he will see about it. Mr Briggs having been told by the Builder that a ""little compo"" is all that is wanted, the first step is taken towards making things comfortable." *** Local Caption *** John Leech Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL113468 "Aesthetic Disenchantments. Lucy has posed the little rustic model, and Mary, Maud and Madeline sit, pencil in hand, ready to catch and transfer to paper the child's expression of wonderment and delight as it listens, for the first time in its life, to the murmur of the shell. Lucy. ""Now, darling, put the pretty shell to your ear, and hark to waht it says!"" Rustic model. ""Lor! Is THAT all! Why, a BEER-JUG can do THAT!""" *** Local Caption *** George du Maurier Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL113679 "A few conceptions, picked up from press accounts here and there, of what the ""tanks"" are really like." *** Local Caption *** "Punch Cartoons on WW1, The Great War"
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PCL111666 "I'm Daphne, Cuthbert's ex-wife. Could I just come in and abuse Cuthbert for a few minutes?" *** Local Caption *** Punch cartoons by Bud Handelsman
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PCL104697 Chaplain to the Slackers --- Charlie Chaplin.
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PCL107959 "We arrive at the cinema half-way through the big picture (1) It seems to be one of those news-paper films where they sit on tables with their hats on - And this will be the girl - What was that she said to the editor? - And who on earth is this? - And here's the gang - or are they ""G"" men - And the girl again, or is it another one - And a car. No, this is the first girl - And here's the car again, or isn't it the same one? - And somebody, I've no idea who, telephoning. But it doesn't matter much who it is because he's been shot - And here's that horrible man again -" *** Local Caption *** Punch Cartoons about Film
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PCL105078 All-Round Politicians. No. 2 - Arthur Golfour *** Local Caption *** Victorian Politics Cartoons from Punch Magazine
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PCL111006 "Mrs Green to Mrs Jones (who is gazing at an aeroplane). ""My word! I shouldn't care for one of them flying things to settle on me!""" *** Local Caption *** WW1 Elderly People cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL100984 The Politician who Addressed the Troops. *** Local Caption *** Punch cartoons by HM Bateman
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PCL109275 "The Dead Remembered - the Living Forgotten (Volume Heading Punch, Vol. One Hundred and Sixty)" *** Local Caption *** "Punch Cartoons on WW1, The Great War"
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PCL100981 The Potsdam Variety Troupe *** Local Caption *** Bernard Partridge Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL112103 "Grannie (dragged out of bed at 1.30 AM and being hurriedly dressed as tbe bombs begin tio fall). ""Nancy, these stockings are not a pair.""" *** Local Caption *** WW1 Elderly People cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL109009 "The Incorrigibles. New Arrival at the Front. ""What's the programme?"" Old Hand. ""Well, you lay down in this water, and you get peppered all day and night, and you have the time of you life!"" New Arrival. ""Sounds like a bit of all right. I'm on it!""" *** Local Caption *** FH Townsend cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL114621 "(Punch volume heading, Vol. CXLIX - Kaiser Wilhelm turns to see a cloud of retributuon following him)" *** Local Caption *** "Punch volume heading, Vol. CXLIX Bernard Partridge Cartoons from Punch magazine"
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PCL112702 "Dawn. Europa. ""Thank heaven! That nightmare's over at last."" (Europe wakes up from a bad sleep to the hope of the New Year, 1924)" *** Local Caption *** Dawn Bernard Partridge Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL110679 "Officer at Front (reading a letter from home). ""The other day we went to see the ruins of a house which had been bombed by a Zepplein. You can't imagine what it was like!""" *** Local Caption *** WW1 Total War cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL103435 In Front of the Front. Tirpitz up the Thames.
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PCL113264 "Antique dealer (to grandson who has made a new placard). ""Genius, my child -- genius! Put it in the window at once."""
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PCL114004 "“My God, we’re missing ‘The Great War’!”" *** Local Caption *** "“My God, we’re missing ‘The Great War’!”"
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PCL100257 When the Boys Come Home. Peace days in Piccadilly. *** Local Caption *** WW1 Post War Soldiers Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL102965 Mr Dobbs profits by some expert advice from a friend in the Sappers recently home on leave and protects his allotment from enemy raids. *** Local Caption *** WW1 Home Front Allotments Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL102949 Mr Punch's Army Pages 1916
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PCL108662 "The Promise of Winter. Russia. ""My season, I think."" (the Russian bear prowls in a snow storm near a German soldier's hemet and abandoned artillery gun during WW1)" *** Local Caption *** WW1 cartoons from Punch magazine by Leonard Raven Hill
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PCL113389 "An ""Exit"" Speech. ""The rest, that love me, rise and follow me."" - Richard the Third, Act III., Sc. iv." *** Local Caption *** An 'Exit' Speech
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PCL111246 "Looking Eastward. Mr Punch's portrait of a ""Triphibian""" *** Local Caption *** EH Shepard Cartoons from Punch Magazine
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PCL111525 "Item one on the agenda - holidays: where each of us went, what sort of time we had, et cetera. Will you kick off, Mr. Harcourt, please?" *** Local Caption *** David Langdon Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL112938 "But you aren't tall enough. ""Well, can I go as a drummer-boy?"" ""I'm afraid you're too old for that."" ""Well, then — dash it all! I'll go as a mascot.""" *** Local Caption *** Recruiting: a question of size
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PCL101310 The Finishing Touch. (the large hand of the Allies pushes a timid Germany off the Peace Discussions diving board into the sea after WW1) *** Local Caption *** InterWar Era Cartoons from Punch magazine by Leonard Raven Hill
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PCL113595 "A Plain Duty. Britannia (to Holland). ""My resources and my obligations are greater than yours; Let this service fall upon me."" [The number of Belgian refugees in Holland is probably ten times as great as the number in England.]" *** Local Caption *** A Plain Duty Bernard Partridge Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL113358 "An Unpopular Revival. Fritz. ""This is no good to me now. You want a swelled head for this sort of thing.""" *** Local Caption *** An Unpopular Revival Bernard Partridge Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL113041 "Blighted Prospects. Bernstorff (bitterly). ""Pretty mess you've made of it with your New Frightfulness. I've lost my job!"" Hindenburg (also bitterly). ""Well, you're welcome to mine.""" *** Local Caption *** Blighted Prospects Bernard Partridge Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL112077 "Gretel. ""Have you ever contemplated what would happen to us all should the enemy triumph? Hansel. ""Don't, Gretel - don't! Fancy being forced to play cricket!""" *** Local Caption *** Cartoons by Frank Reynolds from Punch magazine
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PCL112404 "Farmers! Protect your crops by using ""Bink's Patent Futurist Scarecrow."" Specially designed by an eminent Cubist. No bird has ever known to go within three fields of it." *** Local Caption *** "Cartoons about City life, Country life and Society, from Punch"
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PCL109149 "The Forgotten Cause. Man in the Street. ""Well, if the other Allies say so too, there must be something in it. But I always understood the GOVERNMENT was to blame for everything.""" *** Local Caption *** The Forgotten Cause Bernard Partridge Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL109223 "The Easter Offering. Mr. Lloyd George (fresh from Paris). "" I don't say it's a perfect egg; but parts of it, as the saying is, are excellent."" (Lloyd George holds a large Easter Egg of Draft Peace Terms)" *** Local Caption *** WW1 Great War Cartoons from Punch Magazine by Raven Hill
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