Blackberry beat Leda
... ...
... ...
... BLACKBERRY. EMPLOYMENT OF CONVICTS IN GAOLS. At the Dorset Qoarter Sessions, which commenced at Dorchester on Tnesday last, the following important letter from the Home-office was read ‘•Whitehall, Dec. 31, \H46, “Gentlemen.—l am directed Secretary Sir ...
... Blackberry Strop.—The following recipe for making the famous blackberry syrup, remedy fur bn»e_ complaints—To parts of blackberry juice, add half an ounce each of powdered and al.- spice, and a quarter ounce of elo.e.i.— Boil these together to get the ...
... should call these berries blackberries when even on his own showing they are not blackberries, but whiteberries; but it is clear the Editor of the Augusta Courier does not know everything. The truth is there is a species of blackberry which is always red when ...
... supply ‘reasons plentiful as blackberries,” if it were disposed as much to candor as it is to malice. Tt may be that by discouraging and the riot, whieh was about to take place, Mr. Heap defeated of the Anti-Coru-Law League in Carlisle, where its organ ...
... this is tin- season for blackberries, » carrespuodent wishes us inform the public, that the juice of that fruit (j)x>iit .1 quarter ofa pint, ti*r irtr four successive mornings) has. in several instances, cured invetcrate dropsies. Its efficacy iu coses ...
... And feast on hips and blackberries wid, As truant gay; Or eager plunge in cool pe lucid stream, Heedless, that Summer’s sultry day is fled ; . Ox muse, as breathes the flute, the rural theme, Such theme as fancy’s song may yet bestead ; Ir stretch’d at ...
... only tattooed round the ancles and lips, giving the appearance of their having eaten blackberries. lam happy say that all the missionary youths have left off tattooing. Lauded one of the coves with Colonel Wakefield and his nephew, with our walking sticks ...
... wood, the glen, with its blackberries, where the fairie danced in the moonlight—the barn in which the good people” thrashed the corn, when all the labouring inmates of the farm were asleep,—these deeply-cherished recollections and affect ons—call them ...
... which but a few weeks since were as plentiful as the blackberries of Fairrof, are now become exceedingly rare, so that when one does come in mar way we are enabled to give more of our attention to the subject, than we could when dozens of festivals, ...
... CHANGES—RUMOURS AND FACTS. Tt being perfectly obvious that Ministers cannot hold their ground, rumours are as plenty as blackberries at Michvetmas—and perhaps as unfounded as dreams in the Morning—of the movements about to take place on the political board ...
... TRH BLACKBERRY BOY. Pluck, pluck and eat, sweet Child! or. The image of my youth in thee. Less bath the painter done his part Than bas, thou living art. For Oedema as the bees which sop On honey. when the son is op. Was I ; and pore as rose in June, Or ...