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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 ...

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 ...

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 ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... belongs to us all. Whether the Germans mean now to run upon Burns, and produce translation on translation of him, thick as blackberries,-thick as English Fausts -we cannot say. Four in one summer do seem to be enoughi! But the Germans themselves can look ...

THE STAGE

... J. hi. PlGnI sabl have an answer next week. ?? M.'s ' Friendship' is declined, for the followving reasons (plentiful as blackberries) - as lhe is particular about reasons - 1st. His lines are not grammatical. Tni. 'hey are nbt rhythmical. Xrd. 'ihey are ...

LITERATURE

... albeit nothing of bis dislikefor Seotchmen. In short, be evidently deals in facts, and the sportsman will find them thick as blackberries, in I Highland Sports and Highland Quarters,. A VoICE F WO~i WINDSOR. No. I. By VERITAs. Strange, Paternoster-row. 'hit ...

Published: Sunday 31 October 1847
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2190 | Page: 10 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE SHAKSPERIAN GALLERY

... inlt. Wby hein g sonto tof le, art thou so poi ited at t SIiall the blessed sun ofl' heaven prove a niicelte r aid eat !blackberries 't a question lot to be asked. Shall the sol ont Eligland prove a thief, anid tahe purses' a question to he asked. There ...

THEATRICALS, &c

... short one, particularly as at this period, and generally I during the next two months. play-goers are almost as numerous as blackberries are in the height of the season. George Barnwdli was the play; and seffi- aient is it to say, that George Barnzoell was ...

LITERATURE

... CrtuI SSANK'S OuNiBus. (Conductors, Tilt and Bogue.)-To use a common expression, periodicals are becoin. ing as plenty as blackberries. Every month we have some new one in the field courting our criticism with the editor's compliments. It is true that very ...

Published: Sunday 13 June 1841
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3116 | Page: 6 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

FINE ARTS

... artists who make no allowance lor the difference of the two suns. Of P. F. Poole, we prefer his least ambitious work, The Blackberry Gatherers. The headof the woman, and the way in which the hair is distributed, is of that classical turn, which is sometimes ...

PROVINCIAL THEATRICALS

... Lady in Qaestion, in which Mir Stanley shone most con- spicuously, and met with unbounded applause, Bilberry, Mr Stoyle; Blackberry, Mr Wellsted; the Lady, Mrs Nunn; and Mrs Bilberry, Miss Gordon, were played in avery delightful, fascinating, and pleasing ...

Published: Sunday 30 September 1849
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3320 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LITERATURE

... recommended from his end of the festive board some black pudding or polony in mourning. The dessert in- cluded black grapes and blackberries ; the rules of the club were printed in black-letter; the toasts of the day> were written in black and hite; the pictures ...

Published: Sunday 04 July 1841
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 4403 | Page: 6 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture