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Pall Mall Gazette

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London, London, England

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Pall Mall Gazette

IN THE PICTURE GALLERIES

... They are what is called blobby in methcd, but are very rich and decorative in treatment. Mr. Matthew Hale's Gathering Blackberries is good, and Mr. Napier Fleemy's work should be seen, as also should a very good study of a dark hillside, by Mr. C. ...

ART NOTES

... The Reaper and the Flowers; Mr. Orchardson's Hamlet and the King, Mr. Hook's Friends in Rough Weather, Mason's Blackberry-gathering (that was etched by M. Regamey six years ago), Fred. Walker's Right of Way (his last work), together with ...

NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS

... observation, but it renders a confirmed habit more and more easy of performance. Plots of a sort are to be found thick as blackberries in the odd or terrible incidents of the life that surrounds ,us. Now that a certain methodical fluency has been attained ...

REVIEWS

... And so on and so on. Ghastly and comic stories of people, European and Asiatic, whom Mr. Montagu has met, are thick as blackberries, and give a very realistic idea of the many sides of war. And for veracious romance it would be hard to beat the stories ...

NEW LOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS

... observation, but it renders a confirmed habit more and more easy of performance. Plots of a sort are to be found thick as blackberries in the odd or terrible incidents of the life that surrounds us. Now that a certain methodical fluency has been attained ...

THE CANARY ISLANDS

... 200 feet, sweet-scented violets. Mrs. Stone speaks of Devonshire and Surrey lanes, which lead up to pines and heather and blackberries that remind us of England. The road by which the heights were reached was not always of the Devonshire and Surrey sort ...

RECENT FRENCH CRITICISM

... his view, the most vigorous and most obnoxious emanation, lately complained that, although ideas are now as abundant as blackberries, the noble art of criticism is nearly clean gone, hinting that with M. Sainte Beuve's departure fromn the ,scene the whole ...

WOMAN'S WRONG

... trees, &c., until she is as healthy and brown and active as any mother might desire. Their last exploit included a day's blackberry bunting, an expedition to a neighbouring fair, and a misadventure after- wards in consequence of assisting themselves on ...

PAROCHIAL ANNALS.*

... outside Tours. The weakest part of the book is the remnants of Cornisl. in tl: present speech of the people. Jfo.i'-an blackberries, mezirriaoi ants, ;1l l root, quale faded and dry, and many more words Mr. ?? nau have heard in the district where the ...

MUSIC-HALL NOTES

... Miss Loftus was uncommonly successtll with Eugene Stratton. Therefore, imitations of this imitation are nowV as common as blackberries were a few weeks ago. Miss Collie Conway lilerseiL has fallen into the snare, after setting it herself. Unless we are wlith ...

LONDON IN THE JACOBITE TIME.*

... that the author of Robinson Crusoe was one of the most pitiful scoundrels of a time when spies and traitors were like blackberries. The present strike of the London masons, however much to be deplored, is not, at any rate, so unjustifiable as that of ...

LONDON IN THE THE JACOBITE TIMES

... that the author of Robinson Crusoe was one of the most pitiful scoundrels of a time when spies and traitors were like blackberries. The present strike of the London masons, however much to be deplored, is not, at any rate, so unjustifiable as that of ...