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TO FLORINE

... Illecrowi, thee With flowerslike aquees! v Oh, baste!,fur the shepherd H1th wakened his pipe, And led ourt-bis'laribs Where the blackberry's ripe: The bright sum ia tasting.' The dew on the thyme; The gay maiden's liiing An old bridal-rhymie ' There is joy in ...

REASONS FOR RISIBILITY.[ill]

... morning mist and evening hase-- Unlike this cold grey rhne- Seemed woven waves of golden air, When I was in my prime. And blackberries-so mawkish now- Were finely flovoured then; And hazel nuts ! such clusters thick I ne'er shall pull again ;- or strawberries ...

Original Poetry

... al' black as the wing o' the raven The tresses that twined roun' caressin' her neek As dark wvere lier Een as the jet ripe blackberry, Whan glist'niit' in dew, shed frae nature's full eye, Throughl which her soul beam'd, like thte bright star o' e'enin ...

THE FASHIONABLE WORLD

... the King-street Wednesdays, proved vastly refresbing. High- nesses. royal and serene, have, in fact, been as plenty as blackberries; and 'the quadrilles of Almack's have benefitted materially by the foreign vivacity of their pas de basqees. Count Sandor ...

LITERATURE

... A CHRISrAIAS STORY, .By Mns. GoldE. (London: Fisher and Co., Angel-street.) I Christmas stories are becoming plenty as black-berries, and, if well told, are the mostacceptable gifts of the season. There are many things to be said in their favour. When ...

FASHIONS AND VARIETIES

... Burghley. The Car ,e first fox, found in Salt Spring Wood, threaded Knipton ef Plantation, skirted Spinney., and was killed at Blackberry effe in I-Jill, where the ladies had fortunately taken up a pesition ,it after the first hurst. The 'Duke of Cambridge received ...