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GKAVKSEND

... and deputy mayor chosen not from the bench, shall have the good round number of ten magistrates. They are now plentiful blackberries, and we hope discretion will attend them, or we shall have them considered cheap. The Finance Committee sat for the first ...

Published: Tuesday 01 February 1842
Newspaper: South Eastern Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 360 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

LEWES RACES. In the year Eighteen Hundred, or there about, Our Races were good, without quibble or doubt; For then

... race-course the boast of this sporting land ; And Princes and Peers, In by-gone years, Were as plenty as cherries, Or hops, or blackberries; And carriages ran with such speed on the clover. 'Twas a hundred to one that you were not run over. And how my young readers ...

Published: Tuesday 16 August 1842
Newspaper: Sussex Advertiser
County: Sussex, England
Type: Miscellaneous | Words: 343 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

HISTORY OF THE MONTHS, &c.—OCTOBER

... particularly distinguished the hip, the fruit of the wild rose; the haw, ofthe hawthorn; the sloe, of the black-thorn; the black-berry, of the bramble; and berries of the alder, holly, and woody night-shade, and of the spindle-tree, the last of a most beautiful ...

Published: Saturday 01 October 1842
Newspaper: Bucks Herald
County: Buckinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 989 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

POSTSCRIPT

... BnIrOjriTo, M.tncu 31.-The local occurrences connected with the ftilure of the bank of Messrs. Wigney are as plenty as blackberries, and furnish almost the only themefor conversation among the inhabitants. in ?? Tities of to-day appeared a report of ...

Published: Saturday 02 April 1842
Newspaper: Oxford Journal
County: Oxfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1067 | Page: 3 | Tags: News 

MISCELLANEOUS

... street down and drag out. Bloody noses, ragged coats, pantaloons, smashed bonnets, torn frocks, and black were plentiful blackberries; and yesterday *** complaints*, cross-actions, and hard words, all in Dutch*) at the Upper Police, as suits were commenced ...

Published: Saturday 15 October 1842
Newspaper: Bucks Herald
County: Buckinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2179 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

I -QP E-1,

... clerk gave his opinion that it was unnecessary to du so.—Mr. Wilkins presented a plan, or rather model, for a cemetery at blackberry Mount, which he recommended at some length.—Mr. Laishley then replied, and the amendment was put by the chairman and carried ...

Published: Saturday 19 February 1842
Newspaper: Hampshire Independent
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2144 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

THE PRISONERS

... were the order of tin day, mixed with speculations whether he would •‘ die game.” Women of lire lowest grade were “plenty blackberries,” who were by no means choice their 1 or behaviour, and one particular, having assumed man’s attire*, tually commenced ...

! PROPOSED ENCLOSURE OP THE MARSH AND.FORMATION OF A CEMETERY

... have anything to do with it. Mr. Wilkins approved of the proposal for a cemetery, but preferred another site for it, near Blackberry Mount (a por- tion of land extending from near Northam Farm to the Portswood Road), and produced a model of the groand. ...

Published: Saturday 19 February 1842
Newspaper: Hampshire Advertiser
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2591 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

EXDLTAGTOKj OXON

... snow which visited the scene of their operations. Indian honours would now, however, seem to be as plentiful m English blackberries; and if ♦hey are be bestowed acclamation on men whose policy has unhinged the whole system of our eastern empire, and thrown ...

EAST BERKS AGRICULTURAL MEETING

... for livelihood though the one might be an idler, lying on his sofa, while the other was turned out to plough and eating blackberries. v Cheers and laughter.) He was only sorry his ability for speaking was not equal to his ideas, or he would have made the ...

Published: Saturday 23 April 1842
Newspaper: Berkshire Chronicle
County: Berkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 4431 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

MISCELLANEOUS

... same storm passed to the eastward, and proved awfully fatal. On East Criimi-t Moors, several children who were gathering blackberries, took refuge from its violence in a building erected for but the lightning passed down the chimney, and'killed two them ...

Published: Saturday 10 September 1842
Newspaper: Reading Mercury
County: Berkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 4968 | Page: 4 | Tags: none