| Punch, Or the London Charivari [1st] | Introduction | |
Volume 23
(July to December 1852) | |
Issue 573 (3 July 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 11.
 The Gin Palace, or the Crystal Palace on Sunday? A Prose Canticle Anon Genre: | Essay, Drollery | Subjects: | Architecture, Natural Theology, Design, Education, Religious Authority |
Discussing the idea of opening the Crystal Palace
Crystal Palace
Close
View the register entry >> on Sundays, points out that the building 'will contain wonders of creation' which can help preachers demonstrate 'the benevolence, justice and wisdom, presiding over the universe'. Suggests that some 'heterodox wretch might even propose to have services, in the spirit of the Bridgewater treatises
Chalmers,
Thomas et al. 1833–36. The Bridgewater Treatises on the
Power, Wisdom and Goodness of God as Manifested in the Creation, 12 vols,
London: William Pickering
Close
View the register entry >>' in the building 'amidst objects which would certainly afford the strongest evidences of the principles asserted in those volumes'.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 13.
 Tapping a Beer Barrel for the Truth Anon
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Punch, 23 (1852), 15.
 Something "Looms in the Future;" Anon Genre: | Illustration, Drollery | Relevant illustrations: | wdct. | Subjects: | Instruments, Light, Politics |
Subtitled, 'Or, the Chancellor of the Exchequer Making it Quite Clear to Mr. Bull'. Shows John Bull peering through the crooked eyepiece of a telescope, while Benjamin Disraeli
Disraeli, Benjamin, 1st Earl of Beaconsfield
(1804–81)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >> holds his hat over the other end of the instrument.
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Issue 574 (10 July 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 32.
 A Dismal Look-Out for Protection Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Invention, Light, Instruments, Politics, Agriculture |
Responds to news of a pocket telescope that enables somebody to be seen 'at a distance of a mile and a half'. Regards the invention as useful for scrutinising distant parliamentary candidates and for protectionist voters to recognise remote 'agricultural prospects'.
| See also: | Anon, 'Something "Looms in the Future;"', Punch, 23 (1852), 15 |
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Issue 575 (17 July 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 41.
 Lord Maidstone's Flood of Eloquence Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Zoological Gardens, Vulcanology, Amusement, Government, Agriculture |
Responds to the suggestion of George J Finch-Hatton (Viscount Maidstone)
Finch-Hatton, George James, 11th Earl of
Winchilsea and 6th Earl of Nottingham (formerly styled 'Viscount Maidstone')
(1815–1887)
WBI
Close
View the register entry >> that the downfall of the protectionist ministry of Edward G G S Stanley (14th Earl of Derby)
Stanley, Edward George Geoffrey Smith, 14th
Earl of Derby
(1799–1869)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >> would be followed by a deluge, or that Vesuvius was its 'only possible successor'. Thinks the 'mock lava of the mimic mountain' of the volcano at the Surrey Zoological Gardens
Surrey Literary, Scientific and Zoological Institution—Gardens
Close
View the register entry >> is better than 'the unmeaning palaver of the pseudo-Protectionist ministry'.
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Issue 576 (24 July 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 43.
 Matrimonial Biology Anon Genre: | Essay, Drollery | Subjects: | Mesmerism, Electricity, Gender, Psychology, Biology |
Believes the 'science' of electrobiology, rather than biology, is 'famous', because it 'requires very great skill to practise it', and produces amusing effects. Illustrates this point with an account of 'MR JONES' who, by staring and arguing with his wife, or by applying pressure to her wrist and ankle, makes her succumb to his will. Points out that 'husbands are not so susceptible as wives', but describes the case of 'MR DOVE' who succumbs easily to his wife's 'Biological influence'—an influence consisting 'of a frown first, and a pinch afterwards' that Punch describes with examples drawn from the Doves' behaviour in polite society. Notes the 'entertaining experiments' that can be made when placing a sovereign in the wife's hand.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 45.
 Insensibility to Famine Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Mesmerism, Electricity, Politics, Agriculture |
Claims that Fitzroy Kelly
Kelly, Sir Fitzroy
(1796–1880)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >> has been 'studying electro-biology and trying to impress the susceptible subjects of East Suffolk' and that the repeal of the Corn Laws has not raised 'the food, the comforts and enjoyments of the people'.
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Issue 577 (31 July 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 54.
 The Poor Old Koh-i-Noor Again! Anon Genre: | Illustration, Drollery | Relevant illustrations: | wdct. | Illustrators: | J L, pseud.
[John Leech]
Leech, John
(1817–64)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >>
Spielmann, Marion
Harry Alexander 1895. The History of "Punch", London:
Cassell
Close
View the register entry >> | Subjects: | Crystallography, Steam-power, Engineering, Light, Politics, Race |
Illustrates the attempt to increase the luminosity of the Koh-i-Noor diamond, an object that was the centrepiece of the Great Exhibition
Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations (1851)
Close
View the register entry >> and is here represented by a Turk with a diamond-shaped head. The diamond is surrounded by several 'Eminent Scientific Men', the 'Dook' (i.e. Arthur Wellesley, (1st Duke of Wellington)
Wellesley, Arthur, 1st Duke of Wellington
(1769–1852)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >>), and some 'Dutch' artisans who are seen operating 'requisite machinery' to solve the problem of increasing the diamond's luminosity.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 54–55.
 The Koh-i-Noor Cut and Come Again Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Crystallography, Steam-power, Engineering |
Following on from Anon, 'The Poor Old Koh-i-Noor Again!', Punch, 23 (1852), 54, details the attempt to make the Koh-i-Noor diamond shine. Notes that the chemist James Tennant
Tennant, James
(1808–81)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >> reported on the possibility of cutting the diamond, while two Dutch artisans, 'under the direction of MR. JOSHUA FIELD
Field, Joshua
(1786–1863)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >>, of the firm MAUDSLEY, FIELD AND SON
Maudslay Sons & Field Ltd, firm
Close
View the register entry >>', used a steam-powered machine to perform the cutting operation. (54)
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Issue 579 (14 August 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 77.
 Vegetable Gas Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Light, Invention, Nutrition |
Comments on the possibility of supplying street lamps with gas produced from vegetables. Anticipates 'a tremendous explosion some day among our friends the Vegetarians'.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 83.
 A Peep into the People's Palace Anon Genre: | Poetry, Drollery | Subjects: | Mesmerism, Spiritualism, Magnetism, Psychology, Observation |
Describes Mr Punch's visit to the Crystal Palace
Crystal Palace
Close
View the register entry >> and wonders whether 'the iced champagne / Or Beauty's power magnetic, / Or both, that acting on his brain [...] Gave him a sort of clairvoyance' that enabled him to see 'The Palace of the People'.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 84.
 Alarming Intelligence Anon Genre: | Illustration, Drollery | Relevant illustrations: | wdct. | Subjects: | Telegraphy, Crime |
Depicts a 'Swell Mobsman' reacting to news that police officers are to be connected by electric telegraph.
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Issue 580 (21 August 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 85.
 Protection Against the Electric Telegraph Anon Genre: | Proceedings, Spoof | Subjects: | Telegraphy, Crime, Electricity, Anti-Scientism |
Describes an 'Important Meeting of the Swell Mob' concerning proposals to 'connect all Police Officers with the Electric Telegraph'. Participants agree that the proposal posed a serious threat to their livelihoods. For example, 'MR. MONTGOMERY MORTIMER' complains that 'They were to be nabbed through electricity' and this would prevent him from continuing his 'arduous profession' overseas. The 'REVEREND MR. CAVENDISH BELGRAVE' announces the existence of 'clerical gents' in the Legislature which 'existed to restrict ingenuity and enterprise'. The meeting ends with 'three groans' being given to Charles Wheatstone
Wheatstone, Charles
(1802–75)
DSB
Close
View the register entry >>.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 85.
 Zoological Recreations Anon
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Punch, 23 (1852), 85.
 The Last Kicks of Puffery Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Aeronautics, Progress, Amusement |
Doubts whether science is 'being aided' by Mme Poitevin's
Poitevin, Mme.
(fl. 1850)
http://www.balloonlife.com/publications/balloon_life/9512/history.htm
Close
View the register entry >> foolhardy ballooning exploits.
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Issue 581 (28 August 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 96.
 Economy in Royal Salutes Davy
Davy
Close
View the register entry >> Genre: | Letter, Spoof | Subjects: | Military Technology, Chemistry |
Advises the Lords of the Admiralty to use 'Quadrochloride of Nitrogen [...] one of the most explosive compounds known', to save money on firing salutes. The substance is so potent that the author fails to finish his concluding sentence stating that he would risk his life to prove the truth of his claims.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 102.
 Melpomene, A Star at Last Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Astronomy, Discovery, Amusement |
Responds to news of John R Hind's
Hind, John Russell
(1823–95)
DSB
Close
View the register entry >> discovery of a new planet between Mars and Jupiter, and is pleased with the decision to name the planet Melpomene. Suggests, however, that to settle the 'ticklish' state of affairs between England and America, the planet should be called 'SUSAN CUSHMAN', after the contemporary American star of the London stage.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 103.
 Balloon Ascent (Not Very?) Extraordinary! Anon Genre: | Advertisement, Spoof | Relevant illustrations: | wdct. | Subjects: | Aeronautics, Accidents, Technology, Medical Treatment |
Describes the dangers of participating in the balloon rides offered by the 'Proprietors of the GRAND COCKAIGNE PLEASURE GROUNDS'. Puffs the strong possibility that witnesses to the ascents have a good chance of seeing 'HALF-A-DOZEN PERSONS KILLED AT ONCE!' which will lead to the spectacle of seeing 'Eminent SURGEONS' perform amputations at St Bartholomew's Hospital
St Bartholomew's Hospital
Close
View the register entry >> and 'THE OPERATION OF TREPANNING'. The illustration shows a young man lifted upside down under a ballon on which is displayed an ominous skull and cross-bones.
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Issue 582 (4 September 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 105.
 Security in Railway Travelling Anon Genre: | Advertisement, Spoof | Subjects: | Railways, Accidents, Medical Treatment, Education, Anaesthesia, Transport |
Announces to the 'STAFF OF EXPERIENCED SURGEONS' that the 'BOARD OF DIRECTORS of the KILLBURY and MAIMSWORTH line of RAILWAY' are putting on their trains. Notes that their service will provide ample opportunities for medical students to practise 'AMPUTATIONS, (under Chloroform)'.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 111.
 The Archaeologist's Progress for 1853 Anon Genre: | Proceedings, Spoof | Subjects: | Archaeology, Societies |
Claims that the 'Archaeologist's Progress' is notorious for such absurdities as tracing 'the bees'-wing in a bottle of port at Newark to the bees that swarmed about the mouth of Plato
Plato
(428–348/7 BC)
DSB
Close
View the register entry >>. Notes Professor Pinchy's support for the archaeologists' claim that eating and drinking were 'necessities of human nature'. Reports his proposal that the archaeologists should, the following year, 'sit upon Dorking fowls—a subject hitherto neglected', and consider similarly trivial subjects, such as 'the brawn of Canterbury' and the 'sausages of Epping'.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 113.
 Railway Intelligence Anon Genre: | Proceedings, Spoof | Subjects: | Railways, Technology, Transport, Commerce, Engineering |
Describes a meeting of railway shareholders to discuss a proposed amalgamation of all railway companies—an allusion to the proposal to amalgamate the South Eastern
South Eastern Railway Company
Close
View the register entry >> and London, Brighton & South Coast
London, Brighton, and South Coast Railway Company
Close
View the register entry >> railway companies—as a way of raising fares. During the discussion the chairman stresses the desirability of adopting a universal level and gauge (of the narrowest possible kind) for all railways.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 113.
 Devastation from the Clouds! Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Meteorology, Aeronautics |
Explains that balloons have a worse effect on crops than showers or thunderbolts owing to the fact that they scare animals into trampling fields of crops.
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Issue 583 (11 September 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 115.
 Walking the Railways Anon Genre: | Advertisement, Spoof | Relevant illustrations: | wdct. | Illustrators: | L, pseud.
[John Leech]
Leech, John
(1817–64)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >>
Spielmann, Marion
Harry Alexander 1895. The History of "Punch", London:
Cassell
Close
View the register entry >> | Subjects: | Railways, Medical Treatment, Accidents, Hospitals |
The 'Directors of the Great North Southern and East Western Railway' announce to 'MEDICAL STUDENTS, PARENTS, AND GUARDIANS' their 'SCHOOL of SURGERY', consisting of hospitals in railway stations where frequent victims of railway accidents provide material for instruction. The illustration shows the figure of death as a signalman standing outside a railway tunnel.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 116.
 The 50,000 Cures Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Quackery, Medical Treatment, Statistics |
Notes the fact that quack medicines are always promoted as substances which have caused '50,000' cures, but insists that the constancy of this figure over the past three years indicates the ineffectiveness of the medicine.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 122.
 The Deponent's Assistant Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Medical Treatment, Instruments, Religion, Politics | Institutions mentioned: |
Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland
Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland
Close
View the register entry >>
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Claims that a 'celebrated political Priest' has invented forceps for 'the extraction of any oath which may threaten to choke a witness or juryman'.
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Issue 584 (18 September 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 126.
 Extraordinary Nocturnal Balloon Ascent of the British Association Anon Genre: | Poetry, Drollery | Relevant illustrations: | wdct. | Subjects: | Education, Chemistry, Societies, Mesmerism, Animal Magnetism, Astronomy, Evolution, Aeronautics, Ethnology, Electricity, Physics | People mentioned: |
Edwin Lankester,
Lankester, Edwin
(1814–74)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >>
Robert Hunt,
Hunt, Robert
(1807–87)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >>
Thomas Pettigrew
Pettigrew, Thomas Joseph
(1791–1865)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >>
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Written by Professor Puffy, who explains that he learnt the science of mechanics from his toys and the chemistry of alcoholic drinks from his college gyp. Puffs his contributions to the 'Transactions' of the British Association for the Advancement of Science
British Association for the Advancement of Science
Close
View the register entry >> and his other scientific achievements. This include his correspondence with Karl L Reichenbach
Reichenbach, Karl (or Carl) Ludwig
()1788–1869
DSB
Close
View the register entry >> by 'sympathetic snails', his authorship of the Vestiges
[Chambers,
Robert] 1844. Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation,
London: John Churchill
Close
View the register entry >>, and his priority over Alfred Smee
Smee, Alfred
(1818–77)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >> in identifying man as a 'voltaic battery'. Reports the approbation with which the association received his paper on comets and notes how he accompanied Roderick I Murchison
Murchison, Sir Roderick Impey, 1st Baronet
(1792–1871)
DSBODNB
Close
View the register entry >> and Charles R Weld
Weld, Charles Richard
(1813–69)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >> on a balloon ride to the 'Glimpses of the Moon', armed with a lactometer for Mr Woods
Woods, Mr
(fl. 1852)
PU1/23/13/1
Close
View the register entry >> and Michael Faraday
Faraday, Michael
(1791–1867)
DSB
Close
View the register entry >>. Describes a fantastic voyage and battle 'amongst the planets', in which the planets and constellations are the mythical beings whose names they bear. Notes how Edward Sabine
Sabine, Edward
(1788–1883)
DSB
Close
View the register entry >> 'got us all into a mighty scrape, / By proposing that in MERCURY (I think the man was daft), / With the help of URSA MINOR, we should try to sink a shaft', and how John R Hind
Hind, John Russell
(1823–95)
DSB
Close
View the register entry >> tried to save the travellers from the 'dogstar'. Concluding lines of poem reveal that the voyage has been Puffy's dream. The illustration shows Puffy ascending above crowds with an umbrella.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 126.
 Sleepers Wide-Awake Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Mesmerism, Psychology, Medical Treatment |
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Punch, 23 (1852), 126.
 Irish Craniology Anon
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Punch, 23 (1852), 129.
 Railway Undertaking Anon Genre: | Illustration, Drollery | Relevant illustrations: | wdct. | Subjects: | Railways, Accidents, Transport |
Shows an undertaker asking a railway passenger to accept one of his business cards. In the background is a railway carriage marked 'Surgery'.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 131.
 The Duchess's Own Doctor Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Quackery, Medical Treatment, Gender, Class | People mentioned: |
Thomas Holloway,
Holloway, Thomas
(1800–83)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >>
James Morison
Morison, James
(1770–1840)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >>
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Noting that physicians are forbidden to advertise, responds to an advertisement in The Times
The Times
(1777–1900+)
Waterloo
Directory
Close
View the register entry >> from 'L.C.', putatively Dr Linkumfeedle, a 'fashionable physician' who defends women against charges that they find childrearing 'a great bore'. Linkumfeedle insists that upper and middle-class women have to be persuaded to relinquish this duty to wet nurses but the writer believes 'vulgar medical science' favours nurses in this role. Responding to Linkumfeedle's criticism of high-born mothers who ruin their health through childcare, considers that Linkumfeedle is the physician who attends, makes considerable profit from, and advertises himself to serve the 'highborn and wealthy'.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 132.
 Give Him a Line! Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Phrenology, Crime, Progress, Periodicals |
Observes with some relish that an article in a 'penny-a-liner' used phrenology to judge a criminal, rather than simply narrate his story. Believes this indicates that 'the scientific spirit is gradually prevailing'.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 132.
 Reflections of a Second Class Anon Genre: | Poetry | Subjects: | Railways, Telegraphy, Electricity, Accidents, Transport, Travel |
General reflections on the dangers of railway travel for a second-class passenger. For instance, 'In Tunnels, where 'tis pitchy dark, / He moralises thus:— / "How very soon life's little spark / May be put out for us!" / Electric Telegraphs, of course, / Remind him of a shock'. Agrees that with the railway 'we conquer Time and Space' but balances this with the fatalities it causes.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 134.
 In Vino Veritas Anon Genre: | Essay | Subjects: | Agriculture, Disease, Class |
Urges 'savans' to elucidate the causes of the disease afflicting vegetables—a disease that already affects the lives of 'lower orders of the population' but which, as Punch cynically observes, only gains the attention of the higher orders when it affects their wine.
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Issue 585 (25 September 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 136–7.
 The Fogie Family Papers Anon Genre: | Drama, Drollery | Subjects: | Light, Technology, Domestic Economy, Education, Steam-power, Gender |
Describes the responses of members of the Fogie family to their new lamp. Their exchanges about the lamp reveal their worries about the dangers of the lamp exploding. Contrasts are developed between Mr Fogie, who explains the mechanism of the lamp in terms of a steam engine, to his wife, who finds it difficult to understand the lamp, and the scientific explanation of the lamp mechanism offered by Miss Winterbottom.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 137.
 The Wisdom of Wisacres Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Mathematics, Political Economy, Scientific Practitioners, Progress |
Criticises a correspondent in The Times
The Times
(1777–1900+)
Waterloo
Directory
Close
View the register entry >> for poor mathematical arguments concerning taxation, and attacks mathematicians for having 'progressed so far in their own science' that they have lost sight of their ridiculous postulates.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 138.
 King Cholera to His Liege Friends in England Anon Genre: | Poetry | Subjects: | Disease, Public Health, Sanitation, Medical Practitioners |
Describes the imminent arrival of 'KING CHOLERA' from Northern Europe. Attacks England's 'curs'd Boards of Health, / Its sewers, and drains, and inspectors' who 'keep poking their nose' wherever cholera goes. Believes cholera's friends include the boards of the health and the 'doctors and drainers' who consider self-government to be the solution to the problem of the disease.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 139.
 A Court for King Cholera Anon Genre: | Illustration | Relevant illustrations: | wdct. | Subjects: | Disease, Pollution, Human Development |
Shows a crowded thoroughfare flanked by 'Logins for travellers' on one side, and dominated by a pile of filth on the other. Several children play on and around the pile, while a woman crouches over it, evidently in search of something valuable or useful.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 143.
 Balloon News Anon Genre: | News-Commentary; Reportage, Spoof | Subjects: | Aeronautics, Technology, Accidents |
Anticipates that the air will soon be as full of balloons as the sea is of ships, and accordingly appends a spoof notice of 'Ballooning Intelligence'—a list of balloon accidents in the style of 'Shipping Intelligence'.
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Issue 586 (2 October 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 145.
 Mysterious Disturbances in Downing Street Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Sound, Supernaturalism, Government, Politics |
Reports on strange humming noises, often accompanied by utterances of numbers, emanating from the Chancellor of the Exchequer's office. Argues that these 'acoustical phenomena' are not supernatural in origin but Benjamin Disraeli
Disraeli, Benjamin, 1st Earl of Beaconsfield
(1804–81)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >> calculating his budget aloud.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 145.
 A Great Balloon Case Anon Genre: | Proceedings, Drollery | Subjects: | Aeronautics, Animal Behaviour, Crime, Politics, Agriculture |
Spoof trial of Benjamin Disraeli
Disraeli, Benjamin, 1st Earl of Beaconsfield
(1804–81)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >> (the Chancellor of the Exchequer), charged with harming 'a Protectionist donkey' which the accused and his allies attached to the bottom of a balloon.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 146.
 Some Account of My Travels One of the Old School
One of the Old School
Close
View the register entry >> Genre: | Essay, Spoof, Polemic | Subjects: | Public Health, Sanitation, Disease, Government, Statistics |
Attacks recent legislation on public health, including the Public Health Act of 1848 and the Baths and Wash-Houses Act, as threats to 'the Briton's inestimable privilege of self-government'. Expresses approval that 'Parliament
Houses of Parliament
Close
View the register entry >> is awake to the levelling and dangerous principles of the so-called "Sanitary-Reformers"'. Upholds the fact that in many London districts self-government flourishes and the drainage and other sanitary ideas of the reformers do not work. Rebutts reformers' sanitary ideas concerning the operation of standpipes and the location of water butts and the notions of 'that despotic and un-English body, the Commissioners of Sewers
City of London Commissioners of Sewers
Close
View the register entry >>' concerning ditches. Relishes the victories of the independent landlord over the commissioners and denies the use of sanitary statistics.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 148.
 Inconsistent Humanity Anon
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Punch, 23 (1852), 151.
 A Card.—To Epidemics in Search of a Situation Anon Genre: | Advertisement, Spoof | Subjects: | Disease, Public Health, Sanitation, Manufactories |
Seeks to dispose of a number of 'Plague Walks, doing a great stroke of business', by stressing the proximity of such requisites for the 'successful prosecution of the business' as 'Patent Manure' factories and Thames water.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 154.
 British and Foreign Quacks Anon Genre: | News-Commentary | Subjects: | Astrology, Charlatanry, Quackery |
Ridicules an advertisement from an 'impostor' who offers to 'cast Nativities [...] "in accordance with the purest [...] principles of science"' and who has the impudence to attack 'illiterate pretenders to the Science of Astrology'.
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Issue 587 (9 October 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 155.
 Death in Sport Anon
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Punch, 23 (1852), 157.
 As Unlike as Chalk and Cheese Anon Genre: | Notes, Drollery | Subjects: | Adulteration, Nutrition |
Given the frequent adulteration of milk with chalk, denies the plausibility of the expression 'as different as Chalk is from Cheese'.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 157.
 The Railway Nursery Rhymer Anon Genre: | Essay; Song, Drollery | Subjects: | Railways, Accidents, Transport |
Announcing the certainty of accidents on railways, considers the railway engine to be the new infantine 'hobgoblin' and sets verses about railway accidents to the tune of several nursery rhymes.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 158.
 A Human Orchestra Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Sound, Human Development, Cruelty |
Describes a visit to a performance by practitioners of 'the science of ventriloquism'. So struck by the apparently painful contortions which the ventriloquists showed on their faces that it is suggested that the Animals' Friend Society
Animals' Friend Society
Close
View the register entry >> could have interfered for their protection.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 161.
 Worth any Money Anon Genre: | News-Commentary | Subjects: | Railways, Medical Practitioners, Medical Treatment |
Cynically notes that a medical man has promoted his practice by moving it to the proximity of a railway station.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 164.
 Agricultural Intelligence Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Agriculture, Invention, Government |
Reports on the Chancellor of the Exchequer Benjamin Disraeli's
Disraeli, Benjamin, 1st Earl of Beaconsfield
(1804–81)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >> invention of a 'Reaping Machine' which will help farmers reap the benefit of what he believes to be 'looming in the future'.
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Issue 588 (16 October 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 171.
 Punch on the Playhouse Anon Genre: | Essay, Drollery | Subjects: | Microscopy, Neurology |
Explains how the thought of Christmas pantomimes develops within the minds of London theatre managers. Notes that the thought begins deep within the pia mater of the brain—a region so small that 'when microscopes are brought to perfection' it will be 'shown at so much a head'.
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Issue 589 (23 October 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 176.
 Old Bedlam Back Again! Anon
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Punch, 23 (1852), 177.
 The Morisonian System of Putting out a Fire Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Vulcanology, Technology, Homeopathy |
Suggests that the continuing blaze from Mount Etna be extinguished with Mr Philip's
Philips, Mr
(fl. 1850)
PU1/19/19/4
Close
View the register entry >> 'Fire Annihilator' which should be used to give doses of water in the large quantities found in successful homeopathic treatment. Believes Philips's invention will have its credibility proved by the successful extinction of the fire.
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Issue 591 (6 November 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 196–7.
 The Vision of St. Patrick His Purgatory Brian Borro
Borro, Brian
Close
View the register entry >> Genre: | Poetry | Subjects: | Religious Authority, Anti-Scientism, Scientific Practitioners, Unbelief |
Describes a visit to the 'Hall of Tongues' in 'SAINT PATRICK's Purgatory' where one speaker at a 'Monster Meeting' ridicules Isaac Newton
Newton, Sir Isaac
(1642–1727)
DSB
Close
View the register entry >> as a 'pig-faced, ewe-neck'd brute, on whom no faith should ever take root; on whom no student e'er should pore' and asserts that Galileo Galilei
Galilei, Galileo
(1564–1642)
DSB
Close
View the register entry >>, Francis Bacon (1st Viscount St Alban)
Bacon, Francis, 1st Viscount St Alban
(1561–1626)
DSB
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >>, John Locke
Locke, John
(1632–1704)
DSB
Close
View the register entry >> and William Herschel
Herschel, Sir William
(1738–1822)
DSB
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >> were 'godless'.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 198.
 The Old English Madhouse Anon
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Punch, 23 (1852), 202.
 Agricultural Abstinence Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Animal Behaviour, Agriculture |
Denies that a report of a fasting squirrel is novel, since 'Distressed Agriculturalists' have 'been living on nothing for the last six years'.
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Issue 592 (13 November 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 205.
 Attestation of Beer Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Adulteration, Nutrition, Scientific Practitioners, Expertise |
Ridicules proprietors of bitter ale breweries for puffing their product with the support of numerous 'eminent scientific and medical men of the day', including Justus von Liebig
Liebig, Justus von
(1803–73)
DSB
Close
View the register entry >>, Thomas Graham
Graham, Thomas
(1805–69)
DSB
Close
View the register entry >>, August W von Hofmann
Hofmann, August Wilhelm von
(1818–92)
DSB
Close
View the register entry >>, and James Muspratt
Muspratt, James
(1793–1886)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >>. Argues that Liebig is a poor judge of beer and suggests the proprietors ask instead the opinion of 'eminent agricultural and bucolic men'.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 209.
 Railway "Points" Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Railways, Accidents, Transport |
Baffled by the argument that railway accidents are caused by 'inattention to "Points"', suggests several 'points' which need to be found. These all involve ways of maximising inconvenience and accidents on railways. For example, a '"point" of regulating the traffic entirely by the laws of eccentric motion', and a '"point" of selecting for a "trial trip" that period of the day when the line is fullest'.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 209.
 Justice to Shee Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Chemistry, Heat, Controversy, Politics, Religion, Religious Authority |
Reflecting on two new Irish Catholic members of parliament, notes that 'MR. SERJEANT SHEE
Shee, Sir William
(1804–68)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >> repudiates the doctrine of caloric evidently held by MR. LUCAS
Lucas, Frederick
(1812–55)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >>, and denies the theory of combustion as applied to heretics'.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 209.
 Electricity Perverted Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Subjects: | Telegraphy, Imperialism |
Reports that the submarine telegraph 'was for the first time worked on the 1st instant' but laments the fact that the message sent was to Louis Napoleon
Napoleon III, Emperor of France (originally
Louis Napoléon (Charles Louis Napoléon Bonaparte))
(1808–73)
CBD
Close
View the register entry >>. Notes that the senders of the message, the directors of the Submarine Telegraph Company
Submarine Telegraph Company
Close
View the register entry >>, hoped the telegraph would serve 'under the Empire', and is deeply worried that this implies a British allegiance to the French empire.
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Issue 593 (20 November 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 218.
 A Countryman at Cambridge Anon Genre: | Poetry, Drollery | Subjects: | Adulteration, Chemistry |
Insists that beer at the University of Cambridge
University of Cambridge
Close
View the register entry >> is 'very good physic and bark. / Not to name a French chemist's unguarded remark', and that it abounds with substances that neither a chemist nor druggist can 'compound'.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 223.
 Letters of the Dead to the Living Anon Genre: | Poetry | Subjects: | Alchemy, Government, Politics, Agriculture, Political Economy, Charlatanry | People mentioned: |
Kenelm Digby,
Digby, Sir Kenelm
(1603–65)
DSB
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >>
William Lilly
Lilly, William
(1602–81)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >>
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Subtitled 'Paracelsus
Paracelsus (Theophrastus Philippus Aureolus Bombastus
von Hohenheim)
(1493–1541)
DSB
Close
View the register entry >> the Alchemist to Benjamin Disraeli
Disraeli, Benjamin, 1st Earl of Beaconsfield
(1804–81)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >> the Financier', pursues Punch's ongoing identification of Disraeli, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, as a cunning wizard. Believes Disraeli has inherited his tremendous skill at transmuting 'the base dross of Protection at will / To the Gold of Free Trade' from himself. The author traces his skill in deluding 'half Europe' to a 'long line of sages', but warns Disraeli that he has inherited some of the more dangerous qualities of these sages, including 'too fluent a speech' from Pythagoras of Samos
Pythagoras of Samos
(c. 560–c. 480
BC)
DSB
Close
View the register entry >>. Believes Disraeli has inherited 'All the tact that ever distinguished our race' and gives him much advice about economics, including promising 'vaguely, and wildly, and grandly, but still / Promise on, leaving Fortune our words to fulfil'. Compares Disraeli's financial work to that of alchemists pursuing chimeras. For example, he tells Disraeli that 'when your fine spirit racks / Its wits in preparing a budget or tax, / It recalls [...] The days when it sought the philosopher's stone', and reassures him that the spirit which enabled him to stop the 'Burgher of Lubeck' stealing his principle of making gold, can be used to defend himself against the statesmen Lord John Russell
Russell, Lord John, 1st Earl Russell
(1792–1878)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >> and Joseph Hume
Hume, Joseph
(1777–1855)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >>, who might accuse him of stealing their 'measure'.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 225.
 Small-Pox and Free-Trade Sheep Anon
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Punch, 23 (1852), 225.
 The National Bethlehem and its Chief Anon Genre: | Essay | Subjects: | Mental Illness, Cruelty, Hospitals, Politics, Government, Cultural Geography |
Notes the benefits of the 'non-restraint system of treating lunatics' but allows that Peter Laurie's
Laurie, Sir Peter
(1778–1861)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >> opposition to this method has much truth to it and that 'there are some cases in which the opposite plan alone will answer'. Describes an 'example of this sort', the 'National Bethlehem'—a representation of the French nation as a mental hospital like the Bethlehem Royal Hospital
Bethlehem Royal Hospital
Close
View the register entry >>. Observes that the 'deranged community possesses, in great measure, the extraordinary power of constituting its own Government', and describes the succession of directors the inmates have appointed, down to the time of their present ruler, Lewis Nap (a reference to Louis Napoleon
Napoleon III, Emperor of France (originally
Louis Napoléon (Charles Louis Napoléon Bonaparte))
(1808–73)
CBD
Close
View the register entry >>). Describes how Nap has found his disciplinary regime 'singularly well relished' and how his patients worship him as the 'Supreme Ruler'. Thinks lunatics should be allowed to 'enjoy their own management peaceably, so long as they will only leave us at peace'.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 226.
 The Cabinet and the Fine Arts Anon
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Issue 594 (27 November 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 229.
 Ode to the Great Sea-Serpent on his Wonderful Reappearance Anon Genre: | Poetry | Subjects: | Monstrosities, Zoology, Taxonomy, Time, Geology, Controversy |
Ponders the nature of the 'Sea-Serpent', including the possibility that it might be a 'serpent of the mind', 'a giant adder', or an enormous fish. Discussing the possible age of the serpent, asks, 'What fossil Saurians in thy time have been?' and, 'What geologic periods has thou seen, / Long as the tail thou doubtless canst unfold?'.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 236.
 Pleasures of Vegetarianism Anon Genre: | Illustration, Drollery | Relevant illustrations: | wdct. | Subjects: | Nutrition |
Miss Legume and another woman are dining and the latter, a vegetarian, complains that she has eaten an earwig in her salad.
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Issue 595 (4 December 1852) | Expand
Contract |
Punch, 23 (1852), 237.
 The Earth-Quake Explained Anon Genre: | News-Commentary, Drollery | Relevant illustrations: | wdct. | Illustrators: | J T, pseud.
[John Tenniel]
Tenniel, Sir John
(1820–1914)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >>
Spielmann, Marion
Harry Alexander 1895. The History of "Punch", London:
Cassell
Close
View the register entry >> | Subjects: | Geology, Telegraphy, Vulcanology |
Discusses the Limerick Chronicle's
Limerick Chronicle
(1766–1900+)
North, 1986
Close
View the register entry >> report that 'Scientific men' have linked a recent earthquake to the electric telegraph. Concludes that such a claim threatens the future of 'a system of communication so dangerous to the tranquillity of the earth'. Adds that the discontinuation of telegraph lines will please vendors of railway tickets. The illustration shows 'some tottering Trotty Veck [an allusion to the impoverished messenger in Charles Dickens's
Dickens, Charles
(1837–96)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >> The Chimes
Dickens, Charles John
Huffan 1845 [1844]. The Chimes: A Goblin Story of Some Bells that
Rang an Old Year Out and a New Year In, London: Chapman & Hall
Close
View the register entry >>] contemplating' telegraph lines.
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Punch, 23 (1852), 246.
 The Great Tom (Fools) of Lincoln Anon Genre: | News-Commentary | Subjects: | Astrology, Charlatanry |
Ridicules a Lincoln 'Professor' and 'Mathematical Projector of Zodiacal Planispheres' who makes money as a consultant addressing people's emotional, medical, and financial problems.
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Issue 596 (11 December 1852) | Expand
Contract | Punch, 23 (1852), 255.
 Professor Puffy at the Christmas Cattle-Show Anon Genre: | Poetry, Drollery | Subjects: | Mesmerism, Animal Magnetism, Nutrition, Belief, Magnetism, Animal Behaviour, Comparative Philology |
Speculates on the possibility that animals 'can indulge in polite conversation' and recalls a meeting with a mesmerist 'whose OD force [...] Makes you see your stomach instead of your eyes' and who is capable of making people believe that their crude items of food are in fact of high quality. Explains how the mesmerist took him to the Baker Street cattle show where he immobilised a 'two-year-old-boar' with a glance and caused a pig to speak. The pig points out that St Anthony cured animals by 'sprinkling and stroking' and relates other myths concerning the ability of animals to speak. Adds that electro-biology is now 'spread through the land' and that the stomach has 'quite lost its relish for eating and drinking' owing to its 'new task of thinking'.
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