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GRAND STEEPLE CHASES

... the Selling Stakes, for which seven horses started. and were placed as follows:- Air. Symonds's Baronet I Captain Barlow's Blackberry 2 Mr. Tollit's Diana . . . 3 The following also started:-Mr. Baker's Champagne, Mr. Archer-s Outcast, Mr. Mulligan's British ...

Published: Saturday 31 March 1849
Newspaper: Oxford Journal
County: Oxfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 580 | Page: 3 | Tags: Sports and Games 

A WEEK WASTED

... confidence, but to givt> vou any reasons why the Ministers have this want you cannot induce them. reasons were plentiful as blackberries, I would not you one upon compulsion quoth Sir Robert Peel. He, and many of his party buve made very long speeches during ...

Published: Monday 23 August 1841
Newspaper: Sussex Advertiser
County: Sussex, England
Type: Article | Words: 744 | Page: 9 | Tags: none

OXFORD ClRCUlT— Glouckstes, April 7. Extraordinary Cose Doris v. Illnck. —The plaintiff* is carpenter, living ..

... To this letter, Mr. Black, the of April, wrote the following reply :—” Reasons, dear Sir, as FalstafT says, ‘are plenty blackberries; but I will give no man a reason compulsion.’ I refer you to Canon 101—* No licence shall lie granted but to such persons ...

TUB K MA N. By j. P.BAO'iiAWC WALKta. The sun had seen him all day along, With the sweat upon

... costly pampering wines ; His lips are kiss’d by fragrant air. the rude rock where he dines. That child, besmeared o'er W Uh blackberries ripe, hath come, With his frugal meal across the moor, Prom a lowly cottage home. Again seeks the ponderous rock, And strikes ...

Published: Thursday 16 September 1847
Newspaper: Banbury Guardian
County: Oxfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 516 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

OXFORD CIRCUIT—GLOUCESTER, APRIL 7

... this letter Mr. Black, on the 21st . April, wrote the following reply :— Reasons, my dear Falstatf says, are plenty as blackberries; but will ?' no man a reason on compulsion.' refer you to canon No license shall granted but to such persons as be j good ...

Published: Saturday 18 April 1840
Newspaper: Reading Mercury
County: Berkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 725 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

?Utcraturr

... it is too serious an affair derive pleasure from : but, if only fancy bred,” it very like one of many, as plentiful as blackberries. Ihe air is worth hearing, without the words. 'lhe Mariners' Dirye. Good. ...

Published: Saturday 08 June 1833
Newspaper: Bucks Gazette
County: Buckinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 703 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE METROPOLIS

... exports, in return, must have consisted of a considerable proportion of the foreign gents who were lately as plentiful as blackberries in these promenades and purlieus.—Literary Gazette. JOSLPH ADY.—At Bow-street, on Saturday, Mr. Peacock, solicitor to the ...

Published: Saturday 25 March 1848
Newspaper: Hampshire Independent
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 720 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

CHINA

... It is known, that during the last half century projects for the improvement of Naval architecture have been plenty as blackberries ; length and breadth, full and sharp lines, have each had their say. Ships have been designed to turn to windward without ...

THE HAMPSHIRE AND SOUTHAMPTON COUNTY PAPER. AND GENERAL ADVERTISER

... middle of the pionlh ; and the end. the hedges in the neighbourhood were atill green. New buds leaves are to be seen upon the blackberry bushes, while the c!d dark green leaves and the withered berries appear on the same branches. Wallflowers, gdhflowers, ...

Published: Saturday 07 February 1846
Newspaper: Hampshire Chronicle
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 659 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

UariettEgi

... child of the wilderness and bleak moor, and mark well his contrast. That child will make his meal of a raw turnip or a few blackberries and laugh and work as they digest, and become good blood. No food is lost to him ; it is all appropriated—and well, too—to ...

_foreign filisallann

... .511 degrees. Another agreeable evidence was furnished of the temperate nature of the climate here by the abundance of blackberries and other wild fruits. The inhabi• tants of this region are Arecuna Indians, a collateral tribe of the Macousi, the language ...

City and County Inte

... Fish Street, Banbury, aged 79. April 7, Phillis, widow of W. Butler, (better known as Rosy* Butler) aged 47. April 9, at Blackberry Hall, Neithrop, Banbury, Mr. W. Hughes, medical herb cultivator, aged 47. April 9, in St. Juhn-street, Neithrop, Banbury ...