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The Tatler

EVE at GOLF: There and Here

... means so fine and free a stylist as at Stoke, and after twelve good holes she fell away sadly, did a little bird-nesting and blackberry- ing amongst the bushes, with the result that instead of sweeping the board, as she looked like doing, she left that pleasing ...

Published: Wednesday 01 October 1930
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1058 | Page: 50 | Tags: Illustrations 

Staning By..

... suddenly at girl novelists. You ask how horses ever got into the literary racket. It 's an old story, dating from the time of Blackberry, Wordsworth's temperamental dumb chum, who wrote several of the Sonnets but sometimes refused to co operate, as the poet ...

Published: Wednesday 22 November 1950
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1028 | Page: 33 | Tags: Illustrations 

OKAY FOR BIRDS IN AMERICA

... shoulder blades, or merely ca se a small infection round the neck. The mutations caused by mink poisoning range from pastel to blackberry, and the side effects can include small gentlemen with bald beads, tall weeds with baseball shoul- flers, or mother-on ...

Published: Wednesday 04 September 1963
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1096 | Page: 25 | Tags: Illustrations 

Standing By

... since the Battle of the Baltic (1801). Judging by the Press boys' apathy, you 'd think victories were plentiful nowadays as blackberries. We 'd personally have seized the clangorous lyre of Thos. Boy Thunder bolt Campbell, relating how to battle, fresh as ...

Published: Wednesday 05 January 1949
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1194 | Page: 23 | Tags: Illustrations 

The Highway of Fashion: Hip Draperies and Modified Bustles Usurp the Place of Long Lines

... character was carried out in leghorn decorated with a broad ribbon carried over the crown, caught with small bunches of blackberries, with a large bow of ribbon resting on the cache- peigne. Endowed with a special charm of its own was a tete de negre tulle ...

Published: Wednesday 25 March 1914
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1969 | Page: 56 | Tags: Illustrations 

Standing By...: One Thins and Another

... the office member of the G.A.J, (we know one) telling them about cows named Blossom or Dam son, or a dear old horse named Blackberry, or a pet goose named Spitfire. Rapt, the boys listen, firing quick, searching, intelligent questions. What 's a cow look ...

Published: Wednesday 05 July 1944
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1651 | Page: 16 | Tags: Illustrations 

LAVEROCK'S A True Story

... trees were all gaunt and dead, the smaller ones gone altogether. The desolation was relieved somewhat by a white carpet of blackberry blossom and the magenta red of the tall fire weed. The silence was intense, save for an occasional boom, boom, boom, boom ...

Published: Wednesday 08 October 1924
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1994 | Page: 35 | Tags: Illustrations 

A BUTCHA'S FIRST TIGER

... art, and cursed by all who come in contact with you, especially forest officers. The nearest home equivalent to it is the blackberry bramble, if that may be imagined with its thorns reduced to small rasping prickles multiplied ten times, robbed of its delicious ...

Published: Wednesday 07 October 1925
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1977 | Page: 35 | Tags: Illustrations 

MY LADY'S MIRROR

... for June, mauve for July, cream or beige for August, green for September, grey for October, orange for November, while a blackberry or a black pearl stands for December. There are certain superstitions which are quite objectionable in their way and likely ...

Published: Wednesday 29 June 1904
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2379 | Page: 40 | Tags: Illustrations 

The Letters of Eve

... thereabouts, high and dry for workers. And now (hit the harvest's fairly gathered in and the village children can pick more blackberries in an hour than you in a week wipes the ground from under the feet of even our patriotic excuses, don't it A nd there's ...

Published: Wednesday 04 September 1918
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 3047 | Page: 6 | Tags: Illustrations