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POETRY

... morning mist and evening haze (Unilke this cold grey rime) Seemed woven wvarns of golden air- When I was In my prime. And blackberries-so mawkish now- Were finely flavoured then; And uuts-such reddening clusters ripe I ne'er shall pull again. Nor strawberrles ...

SELECTED

... is ?? IrI *b Il ,riul tiie ox-lill shout ?? the loser etemc- r; ?? .sil,,irh with the hlrvthorn tree 'I h -lly tiel tbo blackberry; All , 'zit'i ittl'l ilr ever Lreud .el tire thrusilh and lirirret's song, ri !lter of a scrwl hlired ?? thle' the btranclhes ...

POETRY

... morning mist and evening haze (Unlike this cold gray rime) Seemed woven warm of golden air- when I was in my prime. And blackberries-so mawkish now- Were finely fiavoubd then; And nuts-such reddening clusters ripe I ne'er shall pull again. Nor strawberries ...

DRURY-LANE THEATRE

... aro such as fsaicy princes usuallv meet with-itcluding sll insuner of bedevilries, ilying tragons, fairies as thick a8 blackberries, and demons as sable, magic rings and mysterious trap. doors-disc whole winuding up with a trip to the kingdom of fishes ...

Original Poetry

... al' black as the wing o' the raven The tresses that twined roun' caressin' her neek As dark wvere lier Een as the jet ripe blackberry, Whan glist'niit' in dew, shed frae nature's full eye, Throughl which her soul beam'd, like thte bright star o' e'enin ...

SELECTED

... Green clusters of the wilding grape, t Climber of Oaks! hang hi gh in air, ai And seedy fruit, of oblong shape, The rough blackberry bushes bear; The rauk cohosh wears snowy plumes, The peppermuint obscurely blooms In hollows dark aiid wet; Red beads the ...

POETRY

... you'll only do this- Give us but a fair field for our labour. MOrMes. We no charity ask, &c. Douglas Jerrold's Newspaper. BLACKBERRY. ...

SONG OF THE GERMAN WEAVER

... of the most touchung and beautiful of the German popular stories:- FOItM THE MOUNTAINS OF SILESIA. Green grow the budding blackberry hedges; What oyl a violet meets my quest! The blacbird seeks the last year's sedges, The chaffinch also builds her nest ...

OCTOBER

... abundant berries,-the wild rose with the hip, the hawthorn with the haw, the blackthorn with the sloe, the bramble with the blackberry; and the briony, privet, honey-suckle, elder, holly, and woody night-shade, with their other winter feasts for the birds ...

Literary Notices

... from the sofa. Guide-booesh, and hanel-books, and notes, and glances, and loiterings, nnd peiscillingo, are ptentiful as blackberries, auid travellers so ilvariably and industriously keep their diaries, that it is to be feared, that writers are the majority ...

NOTABILIA

... and fishes; sometimes many colours at once, like the peacock; or changeable like the chameleon; or successive, like the blackberries, which are first green, and then red, and then purple ? Surely there be objects for ornament, as well as things for use-or ...

How to Reach tiie North Pole.—Sir J. Ross has written to the Astronomical Society, informing that bodythat he ..

... bullrush; M'Kenzie, deer grass; M'Kinnon, Saint John's wort; M'Lachlan, mountain ash; M'Lean, blackberry heath; M'Leod, red wortle berries; M'Nab, rose blackberries; M'Neil, seaware; M'Pherson, variegated boxwood; M'Kae, fir club moss; M'Quarrie, black tliorn; ...