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art opinion at variance with that of the majority, cr posed majority, of the people ;_that it is a moral

... appoint their friends to the House of Peers to act as puppets of the Administration. until peers would be es plenty us blackberries, and the distinctive character of an independent gentleman would be a commoner. If the House of Peers is a fungus excrescence ...

Published: Saturday 15 June 1833
Newspaper: Fifeshire Journal
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1687 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

Opinions of toe press. THE ARCTIC EXPEDITION& (From the Athememea ) The extreme interest which has been felt by the

... this island Either hi, faith in bastions and bayonets is very weak, or his reasons' for fear touch leas plentiful than blackberries. Some of the pliant and unfortunate defenders of Rome, with the avenger behind them, appeal the hospitality of a British ...

Published: Thursday 25 October 1849
Newspaper: Christian News
County: Lanarkshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1417 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

truly astonish civilised world—to bring , of Liverpool, whi, , now requires s voyage Of months each way, ..

... wicked uncle the trustee for the babes ki the wood. Jost But I preferred an appeal to the Lords of the 'Treasury to eating blackberries and so I take my leave, for the present, of Sir James Weir Hogg and Mr. %Bile. I remain, C. J. Nerieu, Lieutenant-General ...

Published: Tuesday 31 October 1848
Newspaper: Glasgow Courier
County: Lanarkshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1597 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

SCOTLAND

... also into lisrespect. The consequence was plain. There are preserves where the game well preserved that they are is thick blackberries on the plain. The poor tradesman, who is, perhaps, out of work at the time, and has a starving family—lnstead of encouraging ...

Published: Thursday 19 April 1849
Newspaper: Perthshire Advertiser
County: Perthshire, Scotland
Type: | Words: 1857 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

Donteottr Entelit(lelter. ENGLAND

... is no fence of any description, and on Sept. 4th, the complainant thought it no harm to enter the plantation to gather blackberries. She had ascended some distance upon the incline, when the defendant made his appearance and ordered her to start from ...

Published: Wednesday 30 September 1846
Newspaper: Glasgow Chronicle
County: Lanarkshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1808 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

VICISSITUDES OF ROYALTY

... solitude; there man has no share, his footsteps never tread. The ground around these dead sticks is covered with rasp and black-berry bushes, and there the solitary bear makes merry, and lives at his ease, for this is his garden, and who shall disturb him ...

Published: Thursday 02 November 1843
Newspaper: Perthshire Courier
County: Perthshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1654 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

SPIRIT OF THE PRESS. A GREAT CRY ABOUT LITTLE WOOL

... they do great damage by picking out the centre or heart. Pheasants do the same, eating in addition berries, especially blackberries ; but in the spring months they are amazingly destructive to enrlfi-dibbled beans and peas, and will fre. quently destroy ...

Published: Friday 25 July 1845
Newspaper: Montrose Review
County: Angus, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1758 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

FRANCE

... Olfiorsof State and the Household were there, of fours#. Dukes, Marquesas, Karls, Viscounts, Bishops, and Barons, were plenty blackberries.'* Thursday, the Queen had to undergo the fatigue of her first Drawing-room. Here the Indus figured all their finery. There ...

Published: Thursday 27 July 1837
Newspaper: Perthshire Advertiser
County: Perthshire, Scotland
Type: | Words: 1606 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

THE CHOLERA

... the committee was required to make a return of the fighting men' in his district. Bullets were as plenty among them as blackberries, and committee-men showed one another their pocketsfull of ball-cartridges. Ginger-beer bottles, blacking-bottles, and ...

Published: Saturday 14 October 1848
Newspaper: Arbroath Guide
County: Angus, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1776 | Page: 9 | Tags: none

MISCELLANEA

... than to be impoverished by one whose vanity rythiug, hut whom pride will cheapen nothing. —Fallacies are plentiful as blackberries. tem men's paasions are engaged. The question. Instance, is not how many reasons ma be urged, them can stand the test of ...

Published: Friday 03 January 1845
Newspaper: Glasgow Chronicle
County: Lanarkshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1583 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

LATEST COMMERCIAL

... be no reason for calling the meeting. The complaints arise out of the multitude of specific charges, and they are, like blackberries in autumn, plentiful. There may be some doubt as to the meaning, in Mr. Muir's vocabulary, of specific charges. In one ...

Published: Monday 11 October 1847
Newspaper: North British Daily Mail
County: Lanarkshire, Scotland
Type: | Words: 1772 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

Things in _Strange Colours . —We _have all _either seen or read of that . anomalous creature aw / ii

... red , and all thistoo , wjthout _staring . A native _of- Paddyland asked _; a-neighbour _' : if he had • ever seen _a red _blackberry ? To be • • me I have , _'said Pat , all blackberriea _are-red when they _are _green i'l PRESBYTERY OF . EDINBURGH ...

Published: Saturday 03 December 1836
Newspaper: The Scotsman
County: Midlothian, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2942 | Page: 4 | Tags: none