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1645en TIRA MAFALDA, CÓDIGO ORIGINAL 1645, INGLÊS, EDICIONES DE LA FLORDiálogoLibertad: My father says we should be more understanding and have a foreign president.Mafalda: Fore? Did you tell your father he's mad?Libertad: Yes, I did. But the thinks it is cruel to give somebody born here a job in which he can't protest against the government.
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0943en TIRA MAFALDA, CÓDIGO ORIGINAL 0943, INGLÊS, EDICIONES DE LA FLORDiálogoMafalda: Maybe the protest songs are useless. Manolito thinks bobody gets anywhere by telling with a gutar and he may be right. Maybe the guitar is not essential.
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0942en TIRA MAFALDA, CÓDIGO ORIGINAL 0942, INGLÊS, EDICIONES DE LA FLORDiálogoMafalda: Say, Manolito, do you think protest songs will make a change in the world?Manolito: Of course, a woman came to my father's store yesterday and let him have a convincing protest ballad: "the beans are very expensive!". My father was moved and cut the price of beans and of all the other goods. Remarkable how this girl picks up subtlety.
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0941en TIRA MAFALDA, CÓDIGO ORIGINAL 0941, INGLÊS, EDICIONES DE LA FLORDiálogoMafalda: "We love the people, that's why we think it's wrong to pump them full of bullets or gry them with bombs. We don't know who's to blame, but so much violence is getting on our nerves". That was the protest song: "The good guys are getting tired".
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0464en TIRA MAFALDA, CÓDIGO ORIGINAL 0464, INGLÊS, EDICIONES DE LA FLORDiálogoMafalda: Ok! I'm going, but under protest! They're talking about children and they send me away! Now it seems that children can't hear about having children. They send us away! It's like talking about medicine and sending away ben casey!
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PCL106547 (Man wearing animal fur and boy protesting about teddy bear slaughter) *** Local Caption *** The anti-fur protest
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PCL114403 "‘It’s my protest against the plight of the homeless and destitute. A limited, signed edition of cardboard boxes, hand cast in bronze and available at £5,000 each’" *** Local Caption *** Punch cartoons about Art
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PCL114648 "(Man wearing animal fur and boy protesting about teddy bear slaughter with placard stating: ""Save the Teddy Bear. Stop this Senseless Slaughter)" *** Local Caption *** Punch cartoons by Quentin Blake
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PCL111497 "'It's my protest against the plight of the homeless and destitute. A limited, signed edition of cardboard boxes, hand cast in bronze and available at £5,000 each'" *** Local Caption *** Ray Lowry Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL107980 "Wanted - An Open-Air Minister. Speculative Builder (to London). ""It's your lungs I want!"" [Public protests are being made against the rumoured intention of converting the beautiful estate of the Foundling Hospital into a new Covent Garden Market or otherwise building over the fine open space and its adjacent squares.]" *** Local Caption *** Bernard Partridge cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL114748 "(A protest march with a man carrying a sign reading 'Ban the Bomb' is followed by a mouse, a fish, a fox, a rabbit, a pheasant, a lion, a little boy, a hedgehog, a cat and a dog, all carrying signs banning their pet hates)" *** Local Caption *** Punch cartoons by Michael Heath
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PCL101399 The Coming of Spring. Study for a protest against modern materialism. *** Local Caption *** "Cartoons about City life, Country life and Society, from Punch"
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PCL104928 As near as I can make out 65 per cent of the population is against violence except to Catholics and 35 per cent is against violence except to Protestants. *** Local Caption *** Kenneth Mahood cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL105255 A Doll for Adolf. (Hitler as ventiloquist with Marshal Petain as his puppet who declares 'I protest against this action by Great Britain') *** Local Caption *** WW2 Cartoons from Punch magazine by Bernard Partridge
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PCL113931 "“Only just home, and he’s already moanin’ about his dinner!”" *** Local Caption *** Albert (Albert Rusling) Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL111935 "Hold it right there, Barney." *** Local Caption *** Punch cartoons by Bud Handelsman
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PCL107768 "What's the disturbance in the market-place? ""It's a mass meeting of the women who've changed their minds since the morning and want to alter their voting-papers.""" *** Local Caption *** Cartoons from Punch about the Suffragettes and votes for women
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PCL112465 "Even the illiterates are forming revolutionary groups, now..." *** Local Caption *** "Cartoons about City life, Country life and Society, from Punch"
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PCL108558 "The Shrieking Sister. The Sensible Woman. ""You help our cause? Why you're its worst enemy!""" *** Local Caption *** Bernard Partridge Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL107946 "We shall very soon have to do something to cope with the changes brought about by the advent of the horseless carriage. ""I absolutely concur - we certainly shall.""" *** Local Caption *** Punch Cartoons about the Vintage Lifestyle
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PCL106025 ‘Now that is scary.’ *** Local Caption *** "Cartoons about City life, Country life and Society, from Punch"
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PCL106244 (Workers working on the construction of a bypass road through the countryside have dug around a square of earth on which a middle-aged woman protestor lying down carrying a sign reading: 'Stop the By-Pass') *** Local Caption *** Larry (Terence Parkes) Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL111816 "I don't think that is quite the right note for us, ladies." *** Local Caption *** Punch cartoons by Michael ffolkes (Brian Davis)
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PCL107516 "You men have run things long enough, Pete, but us sisters don't feel inferior anymore! We want fulfilment!"
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PCL112306 "For God's sake, Colonel! Cut out the 'Dance, dance' bit - here's the Anti-blood Sports League." *** Local Caption *** Punch Sport and Leisure Cartoons
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PCL113675 "A Frankenstein of the East. Gandhi. ""Remember - No violence; just disobedience."" Genie. ""And what if I disobey YOU?"" (a monster wears a turban of Civil Disobedience)" *** Local Caption *** InterWar Cartoons from Punch magazine by Raven Hill
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PCL110405 "Peel's Cheap Bread Shop. Opened January 22, 1846."
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PCL114000 "“No dear, students are only seasonal I think hippies are all year round.”" *** Local Caption *** Mike Williams cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL111714 "If God wanted us t'be equal, He would've created us equal!"
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PCL100268 What's it to-day? H-bombs or Eleven-plus? *** Local Caption *** David Langdon Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL105800 “He’s asked for political asylum.” *** Local Caption *** “He’s asked for political asylum.”
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PCL113585 "A Quiet Sunday in London; Or, the Day of Rest. (a Victorian cartoon showing a rainy London street scene with protestors, brawling dogs and beggars while people hold banners We Have Got No Work To Do, Skeleton Army and Blood And Fire)" *** Local Caption *** Victorian Street Scene Cartoons by Harry Furniss from Punch magazine
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PCL114235 "“Don’t push it, comrade. If it wasn’t for you I’d be home watching ‘The Forsythe Saga.’”" *** Local Caption *** Mike Williams cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL102842 Nice to have Covent Garden in sympathy. *** Local Caption *** David Langdon Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL106248 (Women throw molotov cocktails made from champagne into a YMCA)
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PCL106716 (Feminists on a pro-abortion rally. One of the marchers carries a placard saying 'Rape on Demand') *** Local Caption *** Punch cartoons by Michael Heath
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PCL107187 (A man carrying a tailor's dummy is chased by extremely large-breasted axe wielding women)
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PCL107086 (A policeman arrests a man who has been painting graffiti on the wall of a factory enclosure reading 'Law not War') *** Local Caption *** David Langdon Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL111624 "Imagine, I was talking to a group of them just now and most of them don't even know how to make an old English syllabub." *** Local Caption *** Punch cartoons by Riana Duncan
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PCL105489 “She’s gone all frivolous - anti-nuclear and the like.” *** Local Caption *** PUNCH magazine cartoons by William Scully
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PCL113841 "“Three-and-a-half years in the sculpture school, Jennifer, and you can’t even make a decent effigy.”" *** Local Caption *** "Art, Students cartoons from Punch magazine by George Sprod"
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PCL105538 “Nice to have Covent Garden in sympathy.”
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PCL101263 The Grand Old Georgie Porgie. Georgie-Porgie grand but sly kissed the girls to raise a cry; when the girls came out to play Georgie-Porgie ran away! *** Local Caption *** Edward Linley Sambourne Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL111172 "Master of the Situation. Constable (to agitator). ""We've nothing against the genuine article, but we've had enough of YOU."" [With Mr Punch's compliments to the police on their behaviour in the recent disturbances.] (an Interwar cartoon shows a procession of UNEMPLOYED while a political agitator is arrested)" *** Local Caption *** InterWar cartoons from Punch magazine by Leonard Raven Hill
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PCL109967 "Safest and cheapest travelling in London. New method of transit invented by our hysterical friends the suffragettes; cheaper, quicker and more reliable than tubes or motor-buses. (an Edwardian cartoon shows a policeman man-handling and carrying away a Suffragette as she shouts ""Justice!! Justice!!- COWARD to carry a DEFENCELESS WOMAN!!""" *** Local Caption *** Edwardian cartoons from Punch magazine by E T Reed
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PCL106486 (Parishioners streaming into a church hall that is holding an event called 'Anti-Beatle Drive') *** Local Caption *** Larry (Terence Parkes) Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL108501 "The Suspected Sex. Girl (suddenly noticing policeman). ""I fahnd it like that. I never done it, mister; Straight I never!""" *** Local Caption *** Suffragette and Votes For Women cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL108563 "The sensational victory of Miss Leitch over Mr H Hilton (ex-golf-champion) in the recent inter-sex ""Test"" Handicap has given a fresh stimulus to woman's claim to be recognised as the equal of man." *** Local Caption *** FH Townsend cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL102413 Persea and Andromedus. *** Local Caption *** Bernard Partridge Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL113146 "Athlete Wrestling with a Python. Sir John Simon in a ""living statuary"" group, after Lord Leighton. [There are signs that the boycott of the Simon Commission is being mitigated.]" *** Local Caption *** Cartoons by Frank Reynolds from Punch magazine
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PCL109317 "The Coming Perilette. A sky-sign of the times. [A scientist announces the threatened impact of a comet which is to reduce the earth to ashes. Other scientists assert that the earth will easily survive its advent. For the moment the topic has been ""talked out.""]" *** Local Caption *** Bernard Partridge Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL111946 "History in the Making. The unchivalrous Sir Almroth denying his identity to fair caller at fire proof retreat, where he is resting after nervous strain of writing the unexpurgated case against female suffrage." *** Local Caption *** Suffragette and Votes For Women cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL100272 What would you like to do? - You can either come with me and Nanny to the South of France or you can go and stay with your mother at Greenham Common. (a father gives his children a choice) *** Local Caption *** Social Cartoons from Punch magazine by Ken Pyne
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PCL106772 (Demonstrators with a sign reading 'Stop the...' wait for a bill poster to finish posting his sign that reads 'Site of New...') *** Local Caption *** Nick (Nicholas Hobart) cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL110961 "My Old Friend Homer. (""Every day must begin for me with my old friend Homer—the friend of my youth, the friend of my middle age and of my old age—from whom I hope never to be parted so long as I have any faculties, or any breath in my body.""—Mr Gladstone, Dec 3, 1872.) Ghost (rises). ""But if a clamorous vile plebeian rose, him with reproof he checked, or tamed with blows, 'be silent, wretch, and think not here allowed that worst of TYRANTS, a USURPING CROWD.'—That is Mr Pope's translation of a passage of mine, sir. What do YOU make of it?""" *** Local Caption *** Victorian Era Trade Unions cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL112457 "Essence of Parliament. Extracted from the diary of Toby, MP. One Man One Suffragette. A suggestion to the house of commons' police. Why not supply dummy suffragettes (artificial P-nkh-rsts, stuffed B-ll-ngt-ns) with which each constable might rehearse in his spare time, and so keep himself in training for the peculiar form of Jiu-Jitsu required to meet the periodic incursions of the real thing? (an Edwardian cartoon shows policemen in training with doll Suffragettes)" *** Local Caption *** Edwardian cartoons from Punch magazine by E T Reed
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PCL111437 "Jack and the Dragon. British Tar (to China). ""Look here, my friend, if you persist in treating me as a 'foreign devil,' there'll soon be the 'foreign devil' to pay.""" *** Local Caption *** Bernard Partridge Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL108677 "The Popular Guy. Crowd (singing). ""I see no reason why government treason should ever be forgot!"" Neglected Guys (to one another). ""Bit of luck - They seem to have forgotten us.""" *** Local Caption *** The Popular Guy Bernard Partridge Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL110430 "Pavement artist (who has not yet recovered the nerve which he lost on hearing of the attack upon the Velasquez Venus). ""Pass along them covers, George - the suffragettes is coming.""" *** Local Caption *** Suffragette and Votes For Women cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL111986 "Her First Jump. [At the recent by-election at Huddersfield, the defeated labour candidate was backed by the suffragettes. It is understood that they propose to take the field against the liberal candidate in all future contests.]" *** Local Caption *** Bernard Partridge Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL113590 "A Pleasure Deferred. Suffragist. ""You've cut my dance!"" Mr. Asquith. ""Yes, I know. The fact is the M.C. objected to the pattern of my waistcoat, and I had to go home and change it. But I'll tell you what! Let me put you down for an extra at our private subscription next season!""" *** Local Caption *** Bernard Partridge Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL109884 "Sermons in Stones. John Bull (to non-militant suffragist). ""I could listen more attentively, madam, to your pleas, were it not for these concrete arguments which I find rather distracting.""" *** Local Caption *** Bernard Partridge Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL111573 "Inspector (to arrested woman). ""What's your name?"" Woman. ""Jest run froo the nimes o' the cabinick minstrels, will yer, ole dear? I've forgot for the minnit oo's my 'usbing!"" [According to the press it is understood that it is an agreed suffragette plan for women who are arrested to give the names of cabinet ministers' wives. The idea may spread to other types that come into collision with the police.]" *** Local Caption *** Suffragette and Votes For Women cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL105189 A Physical Force Chartist Arming for the Fight. *** Local Caption *** John Leech Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL105332 “What’s it to-day? H-bombs or Eleven-plus?” *** Local Caption *** “What’s it to-day? H-bombs or Eleven-plus?”
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PCL114759 "(A militant Suffragette wearing a horse costume attacks Wiiliam Gladstone, and fellow politicians, with a spear)." *** Local Caption *** Suffragette and Votes For Women cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL108447 "The Two Voices. One of the real ""unemployed.""—""How am I to make my voice heard in this blackguard row!!"""
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PCL112459 "Essence of Parliament. (Extracted from the diary of Toby, MP.) Another Injustice to Women. Indignant chorus. ""We'll soon alter that!""" *** Local Caption *** FH Townsend cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL110100 "Race-Course of the Near Future, Suffragette-Proof."
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PCL102433 Pastimes of the Great. Suffragette privately hardening herself against gastronomic temptation with an eye to probably hunger-strikes in the near future. *** Local Caption *** Suffragette and Votes For Women cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL110734 "Number One Top-Side. China. ""Down with all foreign devils - and down with the English devils first!"" Uncle Sam. ""I'm not sure that I can afford to see England treated as the most favoured nation."" [According to the correspondent of The Times at Washington the British Memorandum on China is regarded in some quarters as ""an attempt to steal the American thunder."" and the USA government's reply is expected to aim, incidentally, at recovery of the ""moral leadership.""]" *** Local Caption *** Bernard Partridge cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL107976 "War Incidents. (Oxford Street zone.) Over-zealous PC (suspicious of concealed hammer). ""Now then, none of that. Move on, there!"" Perfectly innocent young lady. ""Then perhaps you will kindly blow my nose for me.""" *** Local Caption *** FH Townsend cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL111330 "Leap-Year; or, the Irrepressible Ski." *** Local Caption *** Edward Linley Sambourne Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL106773 (demonstrators from the National Union of Hosiery Workers carrying a banner made from a large sock) *** Local Caption *** Larry (Terence Parkes) Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL103862 How to Treat the Female Chartists. *** Local Caption *** Suffragette and Votes For Women cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL111131 "Militant. ""Now, isn't that provoking? Here's a lovely big house to let and I've forgotten my matches!!""" *** Local Caption *** Suffragette and Votes For Women cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL108948 "The Ladies' Pageant. Mr Asquith. ""This is no place for me!"" (Prime Minister Asquith runs across the track before the Anti-Sufrage and Suffrage horses collide with their jousting poles)" *** Local Caption *** Edwardian Era Cartoons from Punch magazine by Leonard Raven Hill
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PCL110957 "My Lord Bountiful. Benevolent old gentleman (who has just given a penny to Miss A, of Park Lane, who is selling ""Votes for Women""). ""No, no, keep the paper, my good woman, keep the paper!""" *** Local Caption *** FH Townsend cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL108863 "The Militant Sex. Mr Haldane (thinking territorially). ""Ah! If only I could get the men to come forward like that!""" *** Local Caption *** Edward Linley Sambourne Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL105278 1909. Study of an eminent MP taking a constitutional. *** Local Caption *** Punch cartoons by Lewis Baumer
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PCL101362 The Die-Hard. (Featuring Lord Banbury). An item omitted from the Royal Tournament (by request). (cartoon showing Lord Banbury defending the House of Lords trench with an umbrella against the oncoming rush of the Equal Franchise Bill carried by the new flapper suffragettes on a race course during the InterWar era) *** Local Caption *** InterWar cartoons from Punch magazine by Leonard Raven Hill
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PCL111202 "Man of the World (lighting up). ""We'll 'ave to give it 'em, I expect, Chorlie!""" *** Local Caption *** Suffragette and Votes For Women cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL109341 "The Child is Daughter of the Woman. Suffragette (just home after a strenuous day and expecting important correspondence). ""Have any letters come for me?"" Daughter. ""Yes, mother, but I tore them up for a dolls' paper-chase."" Suffragette. ""Tore them up! I never heard of such behaviour! Haven't I often told you that letters are sacred things?""" *** Local Caption *** Suffragette and Votes For Women cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL111601 "In The Cause of our Working Sisters. (see suffragette manifestos.) Flower woman. ""I wish them sufferajettes would move along. They've ruined my business to-day!""" *** Local Caption *** Suffragette and Votes For Women cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL110879 "No Rough-ian-ism. Working-man. ""Look here, you vagabond! Right or wrong, we won't have your help!"""
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PCL109177 "The Fifth of November. ""Coming to our bonfire?"" ""Ra-ther. Whose house are you burning?""" *** Local Caption *** Suffragette and Votes For Women cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL100906 The Roth Reports — 1 *** Local Caption *** The Roth Reports — 1
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PCL105263 A Cabinet Minister's Day. *** Local Caption *** Arthur Wallis Mills Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL111127 "Militant suffragist (after long and futile efforts to light a fire for her tea-kettle). ""And to think that only yesterday I burnt two pavilions and a church!"""
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PCL103338 It was very cheap to put on. Half the cast paid to be in it. *** Local Caption *** Punch cartoons by Michael Heath
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PCL113618 "A Nation of Fire-eaters. Peaceful Teuton. ""Himmel! They have all those armies! And the Fatherland has only one!""" *** Local Caption *** Bernard Partridge Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL100793 The Tug of Peace. (a tug boat renamed Barnum from Oscar II is laden with pacifists captained by Henry Ford and aesthetes playing the harp while an American ship is sunk and a German u-boat captain welcomes their boat during WW1) *** Local Caption *** WW1 cartoons from Punch magazine by Leonard Raven Hill
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PCL100491 Turning A Blind Eye *** Local Caption *** Margaret Thatcher Cartoons Punch
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PCL114730 "(a Victorian cartoon shows a militant Suffragette wearing a Female Suffrage horse costume attacking Wiiliam Gladstone, and fellow politicians with a spear as they defend with bayonets)." *** Local Caption *** Victorian cartoons from Punch magazine by E T Reed
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PCL101103 The Militant Scandal. II.?The skied artist comes into his own. *** Local Caption *** Suffragette and Votes For Women cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL113147 "At the Reparations Circus. (The Hague: August 6.) British Lion. ""Please, sir could you stop them monkeying with my ration?"" Mr Snowden. ""I shall certainly lodge a protest."" [a thin British Lion pleads to have a better deal at the Hague Conference for reparations, as a note reads Come and See The Lion Underfed]" *** Local Caption *** Bernard Partridge cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL101125 The Majesty of the Law. (Justice is blindfolded and her sword is wrapped in a 'Hunger Strike' cloth as buildings burn in the background) *** Local Caption *** Bernard Partridge Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL110392 "Peril! Liberty (to the Czar). ""Give him his head. It's your only chance - and mine!""" *** Local Caption *** Edward Linley Sambourne Cartoons from Punch magazine
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PCL111206 "Mamma. ""Dear, dear! Have I come home to a naughty little girl?"" Nurse. ""Really, madam, I don't know what to do with Miss Mabel. She's been very troublesome all the afternoon, and now she says if she can't have cake before her bread-and-butter she'll go on hunger-strike!""" *** Local Caption *** Punch cartoons by Lewis Baumer
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PCL111383 "King Cophetua and the Beggar-maid. The King (Mr Asquith). ""'This beggar-maid shall be my queen' - that is, if there's a general feeling in the country to that effect.""" *** Local Caption *** Bernard Partridge Cartoons from Punch magazine
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Total de Resultados: 185

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