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December 28 POET'S CORNER. THE LEPRECHAUN. Oh ! the lonely, quiet glen, Where the hazel trees are green, And among

... among the bashes hiding The bumble stream is gliding. Murmuring as in reverie. The long, long day to tranquilly. Where the blackberries droop low, Where glistens the round black sloe, And the nuts sre clustering brown, On thick branches drooping down, And ...

Published: Saturday 28 December 1844
Newspaper: Dublin Weekly Nation
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 258 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS

... no doubt, Shaksperian, ought to know that, like Sir John, we never give reasons on compulsion, if they were plenty as blackberries ; but his pathetic long was sung in the very society he hints at, and sent the company home with their pocket-handkerchiefs ...

Published: Saturday 16 March 1844
Newspaper: Dublin Weekly Nation
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 337 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

tl>e muteiiel for the cuunuratio i; the National Guard artilhry, 1,567 mort.iri), 1.562 JO howitzers, »ud I. lO ..

... to a utle. * Sir, if i 8 y ling the door, • Ned ; better to have heapens everything, •bed one whose pride will cheapen blackberries, The how many reason# :au sluud the test h to be happy for a it invited to if tor ball a ear, marry ; but it you would ...

Published: Saturday 14 December 1844
Newspaper: Dublin Weekly Register
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 505 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

THE WEATHER,

... Wild strawberries, quite ripe, have been on Stoke Hill, and other places in the neighbourhood of Exeter. On Christmas-day blackberries in fine blossom, also some just set, green, perfectly ripe, were gathered on Stoke Hill by Mr. W. Grant and Mr. Jobn Searle ...

Published: Wednesday 03 January 1844
Newspaper: Dublin Evening Mail
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 629 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

ROYAL SPORTS OF OLD TIME

... deepest gloom. Leaves ordinarily pea-green assumed quart-bottle complexion—shadows hitherto purple like sloes, became as blackberries—the mighty Shannon itself rolled black as Acheron—a sort of speechless horror crept over the most resolute breasts. Reader ...

Published: Friday 11 October 1844
Newspaper: Dublin Monitor
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1344 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

438 COMMISSION OF OYER ANU TEKMINKK. FRIDAY. j *fl Trial John Toolb.—Tbn m»«j kitting . f the court this dijr

... Cross-examination continued—l know what jam is, and I don t think that stain is caused by it ; never saw a coat ttained with blackberries ; don’t recollect having seen blood stain on claret coloured coat before. Judge Ball—Then how could you say that this is ...

Published: Saturday 20 April 1844
Newspaper: Dublin Weekly Nation
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1517 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE ROBBERY OF PLATE AT COVE

... in the woods and copses which deck that most picturesque of all the southern counties of England. A plentiful supply of blackberries, 'with which the hedgerows abounded, de- lighted the palates, of the strollers; and present appetite having been allayed ...

THE LATE RIOT AT CARTOWN

... ramble in the woods and copses which deck that most picturesque all the southern counties England. A plentiful supply of blackberries, with which the hedgerows abounded, delighted the palates of the strollers ; and present appetite having been allayed, ...

BRITISH AKCILELOGK AL SOCIETY

... ramble in the woo ls and copses which deck that most picture.,pie all the southern counties of England. A plentiful supply blackberries, with the hedgerows abounded, delighted the palates of the alrelhnw; and present apiietile having been allayed, if not ...

Published: Thursday 19 September 1844
Newspaper: Dublin Evening Post
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1826 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

PEACK- UXIVKHSAL—PEH PET UAL

... were to turned out at all hazards. Places for the Tory Rar—the grand object of the confederacy—were to be as plenty as blackberries ; and a bait for the vulgar herd—the riff-raff of the Lodges—the National Education Board was abolished and Mayoooth deprived ...

Published: Thursday 26 September 1844
Newspaper: Dublin Evening Post
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 2314 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

BALMON PIBBERIBB—IRELAND

... March, April, sod part of Msy. The peal then come in plenty, and continue till Hie harvest fish (called the poor fishermen Blackberry fish, bat are early breeding fish,) supply (heir seas. The spent salmon returning, the spring fish and peal, which went ...

Published: Saturday 14 December 1844
Newspaper: Saunders's News-Letter
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 2106 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

L VUDLIN BV ENING [ saw ; to go into the coal-hole for coal, but he said, “ 1 dk

... Cross-examination continued—I know what jam i ; 1 observed don’t think that stain is caused by it ; never saw a coa with blackberries ; don’t recollect having seen a blood | his appear- a claret-coloured coat before. ore ; je was what { ever can you say ...

Published: Saturday 13 April 1844
Newspaper: Dublin Evening Post
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 2565 | Page: 4 | Tags: none