2 Bradbury, Agnew, & Co.'s Publications. 



fllusiraitfr 



of 0wr 0toit Citw, 



p u N c H. 



PUNCH ' is a historian of the time in which he lives. Future genera- 

 tions may look to these volumes and tell to a nicety what the men 

 and women of the present day are like, can recover the evanescent 

 fashions, can learn the fashionable foibles, can tell how the great men of 

 their time appeared to their humorous contemporaries, can hit to a cer- 

 tainty the leading characteristics as well of things as of men ; for the suc- 



cess of the ' Pimch pictures ' 

 half due to the circumstance 

 an element, large or small, 

 outrageous of them. This 

 caricature, with pen as 

 has always distinguished 

 volumes testify. Of course 

 that was to be 

 people gene- 

 vast treasure 

 those who place 

 ries are storing 

 would buy 

 It cannot be 

 very much of 

 time ; for 

 some, there are 

 sions which an 

 fail to under- 

 dite of them 

 every volume 

 key. To go 



and paragraphs is 

 that there is always 

 of truth in the most 

 peculiar faculty of 

 well as with pencil, 

 ' Punch/ as these 

 they have sold well ; 

 expected. But if 

 rally knew what a 

 of wit and humour 

 them in their libra- 



away for future days, they 

 them with even more avidity, 

 said that ' Punch ' has lost 

 its interest with the passing 

 though there are, of course, 

 very few of his jokes and allu- 

 ordinary well-read man need 

 stand ; and to the more recon- 

 the explanation given with 

 of the re-issue supplies the 

 through the volumes categori- 

 cally would be equal to a review of the political, social, fashionable, and 

 literary history of the time through which ' Punch ' has lived. For 

 such a task we have neither space nor inclination. Every reader must 

 make his review for himself, and in going through these volumes he 

 will find that they are pregnant with matter which cannot fail to 

 suggest to the thoughtful much that is worth remembering, and that is 

 going nigh to be forgotten, of the events of the last twenty years. The 

 price at which the re-issue is made is low enough to enable any mode- 

 rately well-to-do reader to place them on a handy shelf in his collection 

 of books." Standard. 



IN SETS FOR LIBRARIES. 

 In Quadruple Volumes, strongly and elegantly half hound, *. d. 



gilt edges, 1841 to 1882 (21 Volumes) .... price 21 16 

 In Double Volumes, elegantly bound in blue cloth, gilt edges, 



1841 to 1883 (43 Volumes) price 24 12 6 



