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FATHER PADDY AT PADDINGTON

... by veterans over their centenary, Sans eyes, sans teeth, sans TASTE, sans every thing, abundant enough, and thick as blackberries, to play at pledges with, without the novelty of bringing infants in their bibs and tuckers to share in the profane performauce ...

Published: Sunday 20 August 1843
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1833 | Page: 5 | Tags: News 

THE LATE CITY ELECTION OF MAYOR AND ALDERMAN

... proved against him. They tell us that he is an obstiniate, self-willed, pig-headed person, who, if proofs were at plenty as blackberries, will not show himself an honest man upon compulsion; a gentleman who, though excessively honest, takes a morbid delight ...

Published: Sunday 06 October 1844
Newspaper: Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1805 | Page: 1 | Tags: News 

THE MORNING CHRONICLE

... ideas of' s coining Yorkshire over them would disappear. It was held out that com- mercial treaties were to come to us as blackberries; IiIt that Spain ivould lay open her eommerce, Portugal is abandon ancient jealousy, that the Alps would eimu- :4ry late ...

Published: Tuesday 26 November 1844
Newspaper: Morning Chronicle
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 8454 | Page: 2 | Tags: News 

LICENSED VICTUALLERS OF LIVERPOOL

... judicate upon were made by your own party during the Reform monomania. Ale-house licenses were distributed as plentiful as blackberries; nearly 300 were granted in four years; your party studded the town with public houses; you admit the evil, but let the ...

Published: Sunday 25 May 1845
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1894 | Page: 8 | Tags: News 

THE POLITICAL EXAMINER

... pensation for the nothing to do taken from them. As for our Pottingers, by Sir Robert Peel's ac- count, they are plentiful as blackberries (though Chinese empires to open to us are not); and not a week passes without the denial of just claims to reward for lasting ...

Published: Saturday 07 June 1845
Newspaper: The Examiner
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 7140 | Page: 3 | Tags: News 

SERIOUS RAILWAYS ACCIDENT

... with Pne leg escaped by a miracleloslng that one, and as it ,d, is mnucl hart; a lady is much cut, and bruises are lske blackberries. As soon as I saw sufficient people attending the wounded, I sent an old gentleman, with a terriblv crushed hat, one 'ay ...

Published: Wednesday 22 October 1845
Newspaper: Morning Chronicle
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1633 | Page: 7 | Tags: News 

LONDON, MONDAY, MARCH 16, 1846. Upon the third reading of the Curfew Bill, Lord Campbell drew attention to a clause

... gentleman, apropos of anchovy sauce, remarked that he had seen the anchovy growing wild, as thick and almost as large as blackberries ; upon the suggestion that the anchovy was not of the vegetable kingdom, he fired up, and asked whether his word were doubted ...

Published: Monday 16 March 1846
Newspaper: Daily News (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1235 | Page: 4 | Tags: News 

Wonders of the Times.—ln our own times, you can send letter a thousand miles for a penny, and bur week's

... send letter a thousand miles for a penny, and bur week's reading for twopence. We publish books faster than brambles bear blackberries, and produce plays as fast as the French write them. We can feed paupers on ninepenee halfpenny a day, and make artificial ...

Published: Monday 30 March 1846
Newspaper: Daily News (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1336 | Page: 3 | Tags: News 

SOCIETY FOR THE PREVENTION OF CRUELTY TO ANIMALS

... before magistrate, who directed thereupon to convict the before-named penalty. Objections to this law hong thick as blackberries, and are so palpable, that I doubt not your readers can anticipate me in making them, after reading thus far. In the first ...

Published: Thursday 11 June 1846
Newspaper: Daily News (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 4239 | Page: 3 | Tags: News 

THE MORNING CHRONICLE

... tile grcater victories of' -America ngainst a biar'der race than that of' Mexico a 9werc won 'withi tile prolusion of' blackberries. Wo -plead as our excuse tile magnitude of the American r ,tei'ito'y. It is hiad to study topographically, I The spii'it ...

Published: Thursday 25 June 1846
Newspaper: Morning Chronicle
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 7335 | Page: 4 | Tags: News 

THE ARMY

... fession. Discovnny OF A DEAD BODY NEAR PINfDLEL TON.- On Friday last a man named Charles Stott, who had been gtlthering blackberries in a field belonging to Thomas Willinms, Esq., Agecroft-htall, near Pendleton, was returning baek throufli a pltutation ...

Published: Friday 28 August 1846
Newspaper: Morning Chronicle
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3317 | Page: 3 | Tags: News 

GREAT MEETING in CORK in REFERENCE to the GENERAL DISTRESS

... his observation that morninw. O his wany to the uteeling hie Saw, when arriving, or Rithtbor- maic' a poor mien picking blackberries fromt a biail-h1o con-I cludedl fromt his ermaciated counote~nance that ir was not for tle 1)0rpos. of inere idle grat ...

Published: Monday 14 September 1846
Newspaper: Morning Chronicle
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 10024 | Page: 6 | Tags: News