Refine Search

100 =~ 1 — M-r \-lerr\'i l.h-né;!:;:é (lakeh)

... pine; M¢lntosh, boxwood ; Mackay, bullrush; MKenzie, deer grass; M‘Kinnon, St John's wort ; M:Lachlan, wountain ash; MiLean, blackberry heathi ; M*Leod, red wortle berries; M*Nab, rose back berries 3 M*Neil, seaware ; M¢Pherson, van cgated boxwood 3 M*Quurrie ...

THE GIPSY,

... agipsy And Lived upon the meors ; Her bed it was the brown heath turf, And s Gome was out of doors. Her apples were swart blackberries, Her casrants pods o* broom; iore wine was dew of the wild white rose, iler book & churehya d tomh Her brothers were the ...

JOHN CLARE, THE POET

... true ge. nius is prov'd, Look at the every.day scribblers, I mean those nonsense ginglings call’d poems, ¢ as lrlenmm a 8 blackberries,’ published every now and then by sub. scription, and you shall flnd?o lis: belarded as thickly with “‘;I Lord This and ...

UEOFOBD CUABITV

... they were told that dell Wrmtely voted against the Interest* of the inhabitants of Bedford, falsehoods were n* plentiful blackberries. The that he drew proponed Brereton should have year and Mr Le Mcsurier 0. snd it was because they did not want to meddle ...

Published: Saturday 04 August 1849
Newspaper: Bedfordshire Mercury
County: Bedfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 4484 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

'mhl'mn, asn lfi'im&i ing of these podr' en Her Majesty. lfpx‘ye_l addresses were. hy the Mavor,and Cao

... becoming an annual subseriber of £5. He (the Chairman) thought he had now given those present, reasons as plentiful as blackberries, why hie might be permitted to enlarge upon the toast as set down, and propose to them with all the honours, *‘ the health ...

RAGGED SCHOOL HOLIDAY

... tree, longing to pluek them, and were much surprised when informed of their poisonous nature. Some inquired eagerly atter blackberries, saying their mothers had told them they would see them in the hedges. A large party was taken to the dairy, and expressed ...

BUCKINGHAMSHIRE RAILWAY

... choleran that island. The disease has been making terrible ravages in the potaioe heaps in Lincolnshire, A fruit called a white blackberry, of excellent quality, has been met within a wild waste in the United States, Such was the force of the wind at Sudbury ...

]

... home—pimpernel, flawering rushe and bundreds of others of the brighiest hue s in antumn to glean the fruits of the hedges, the blackberry, the sloe, and the searlet hips and hows; and when old Winter had stouped down from his honse of fog and shaken his honry ...

- § f MORRIBLE MURDER AT SHEFFIELD. (From 7he Times of Monday.) On Friday evening about half-past 7 two children,

... MORRIBLE MURDER AT SHEFFIELD. (From 7he Times of Monday.) On Friday evening about half-past 7 two children, who were gathering blackberries in a hedge-bottom at Eastbank, about a mile and a-half to the southeast of Sheflield, discovered the dead body of aman ...

Bon-Mtnmissioned officer ot Light Infantry lb ordered l« tried by court martial, for writing an Bimoyaaena ..

... exclusively used. The of rr.ordered man, supposed to Mr A. Rohi.tsoo, travelling draper, was louud, soma children •gathering blackberries, a hedge bottom at Bastbauk, Two trains, one loaded with materials, the other empty s. ran into each other in the Lormeot ...

Published: Saturday 18 September 1852
Newspaper: Bedfordshire Mercury
County: Bedfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1605 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

RURAL ASPECT OF OCTOBER

... the red of the wild rose, the brilliant scarlet and green berries of the night shade, and the dark purple of tbo luxuriant blackberry. Thee* are now most bund .nt, and we often meet lots of lads and lasses busy reducing their number*. Thun wo have the wintry ...

Published: Saturday 16 October 1852
Newspaper: Bedfordshire Mercury
County: Bedfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 382 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

AND OTHERS,

... smaller quadrupeds, yet bis food is principally derived from the vegetable and insect worlds. Chesnuts, roots of all kinds, blackberries, heechmats, and all manner of beetles, with the larvie of wasps and wild bees, furnish is ordinary supplies; while even ...