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Oxford University and City Herald

August 12th, 1815

... Power; Grandpapa has been Duke for a great many years. Uncle Frank and Papa have been lately made Peers, And Lords, thick as blackberries, grow on our stock.— Dj come then and vote for Chip of the Block. ...

CHARADES

... best underground, and worst in the pocket. My !>, 10. I, J, 12. welcome May, not coveted harvest. My 9, 10, 6, 11. plenty blackberries in brewer's yard ; and whole like nobody else. No. 2.—1 am a word of fourteen letters. It, fi. 9. the name b* dy once placed ...

CLERGYMEN DECEASED. Kcllia'P, near Newark, the Rev. Fred. Manners Sutton. Cheltenham, the Rev. John Slingsby, ..

... intoxicated, and was seen by more than one person ; alle.' which tidings were heard of him until a boy who was gathering blackberries discovered him. There were no marks of violence upon the body, nor any disarrangement of the clothes. His pockets contained ...

The most prompt and efficient measures for circulating Hie new and withdrawing the old Irish coin have been ..

... Thursday morning se'nnight some children, who were rambling through the fields near Kingston-upon- Thames, in search o( blackberries, discovered in hedge, a considerable distance from the main-road, a young woman, almost perfectly insensible, and nearly ...

BaMUM'!'

... middle December. Her Royal Highness received the most marked attention from all ranks. have had Baronets in great plenty as blackberries in September. Of Knights of the Bath we may DOW also boast plentiful growth. A Supplement to tbe Gazctte, describes extension ...

4(1. to 4s. The former being the duty on Thursday, and latter Friday. The increased duty made of course ..

... desiring him to call meeting for that purpose on early day, was drawn up, approved, and signed by every gentleman present. Blackberry Syrup.—The present being not only a seasonable time to prepare this valuable medicine, but to recommend its usefulness, ...

REVIEWS

... names these are sufficient guarantee for the excel- Icnce of the work. The illustrations, which are interspersed “plenty as blackberries through the work, are not a whit behind the very best productions of the day, and every way worthy the inimitable author ...

IRISH FAIRY I.SGEND

... purse and pay me like a gentleman.’ I pay you ?’ said Billy: could 1 not just take you up and put you pocket as easily as blackberry ?’ Billy Mac Daniel,’ said the little man, getting very angry, you shall be my servant for seven years and a day, and that ...

Manure—Thorough Draining

... country will escape fw® this incubus. What is wanted at present is an excuse, not a reason—for reasons are as plentiful as blackberries: and until the chapter of accidents turns one up, sliding scale must be endured —Livrrpooi Jims. League paper.] Avoid arguments ...

A COUNTRY COTERIE. Oh! the delights of snug little scandalum, Where all the haut-fnn of the village unite; The tea

... Sneerwell assures me, that vixen Miss Jane Was walking last even, between six and seven, With that simpering Split-lig in Blackberry-lane. dearest Miss Starchem, soft whispers Dame Marchem, ’Tis said, that young Love-bottle’s such a wild youth : Miss Chronicle ...

Emprrial iiarliamrut

... occasion of his fall.— Dublin Patriot. Dorsetshire. Lamentable Superstition. A species of blight or grub has rested on the blackberry leaves, gnawing them in a serpentine manner, so that the dead fibres show through the remaining green. It will hardly credited ...

EXDLTAGTOKj OXON

... snow which visited the scene of their operations. Indian honours would now, however, seem to be as plentiful m English blackberries; and if ♦hey are be bestowed acclamation on men whose policy has unhinged the whole system of our eastern empire, and thrown ...