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... Warwick, examined the ¢l There. no external marks of violence from gefjeral fatigue and exhaustion. F contained nothing but blackberries.—FEgan, tl being re-called,said his child left home in perfi The prisoner (a dull, heavy-looking young ma years of §ge) ...

Published: Monday 03 April 1826
Newspaper: Coventry Standard
County: Warwickshire, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1203 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

'mhl'mn, asn lfi'im&i ing of these podr' en Her Majesty. lfpx‘ye_l addresses were. hy the Mavor,and Cao

... becoming an annual subseriber of £5. He (the Chairman) thought he had now given those present, reasons as plentiful as blackberries, why hie might be permitted to enlarge upon the toast as set down, and propose to them with all the honours, *‘ the health ...

SPORTING INTELLIGENCE

... very food of corn, as all farmers know to their cost; but they can subsist without it, on the wild berries, especially black-berries, whea ripe, and neorus. The female lays rom tem 1o filteen eggs, in & nest on the grouml, composed of & few dry vegzetables ...

Published: Saturday 07 January 1843
Newspaper: Northampton Herald
County: Northamptonshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1669 | 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

JOHN CLARE, THE POET

... true ge. nius is prov'd, Look at the every.day scribblers, I mean those nonsense ginglings call’d poems, ¢ as lrlenmm a 8 blackberries,’ published every now and then by sub. scription, and you shall flnd?o lis: belarded as thickly with “‘;I Lord This and ...

100 =~ 1 — M-r \-lerr\'i l.h-né;!:;:é (lakeh)

... pine; M¢lntosh, boxwood ; Mackay, bullrush; MKenzie, deer grass; M‘Kinnon, St John's wort ; M:Lachlan, wountain ash; MiLean, blackberry heathi ; M*Leod, red wortle berries; M*Nab, rose back berries 3 M*Neil, seaware ; M¢Pherson, van cgated boxwood 3 M*Quurrie ...

THE GIPSY,

... agipsy And Lived upon the meors ; Her bed it was the brown heath turf, And s Gome was out of doors. Her apples were swart blackberries, Her casrants pods o* broom; iore wine was dew of the wild white rose, iler book & churehya d tomh Her brothers were the ...