Refine Search

WINTER

... may seem instrument convenient nonet) when inserted into a saucer or syrup, applied to the broken •urf ice of an over-ripe blackberry, but often see our sipper of swe -I# quite bnsy on solid lump of sugar, which shall find on cluS3 inspection growing small ...

DISTRICT NEWS

... He did not charge me with running oilier men. Spiller then came in over the hedge, and told him she had been picking blackberries. He said, dare say you have come for the purpose of listening. young man named Thomas Holmes lived in the house. I never ...

Published: Saturday 28 September 1850
Newspaper: Exeter and Plymouth Gazette
County: Devon, England
Type: Article | Words: 10624 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

LITERATURE

... around them, like well-drilled rows of charity cbildren out for a holiday walk; sud the grapes too, meorb plentiful than blackberries, hawked ia tbe streets and. old by the cwt. at a less' price than soap or sugar; not to mention peaches plucked for the ...

POSTSCRIPT

... to be followed in the course of next week. Addresses to the Queen and to the Bishop of the Diocese are as plentiful as blackberries in autumn. Every church porch has its table, and the people crowd around before the commencement and at the end of each ...

Published: Saturday 16 November 1850
Newspaper: Exeter and Plymouth Gazette
County: Devon, England
Type: Article | Words: 1144 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

SONNETS. TEIONMOUTH, SOUTH DEVON, Lovely is Teigmnoutli, with its sea-washed coast, Receding line of cliffs, ..

... their wild spells on thee ? Teignmoulh is lovely ; o’er the inland hills Are lany walks, midst whose exuberant hedges Ripe blackberries now hang out their luscious pie g Of Nature’s bounty. There the schoolboy nils His cap with wholesome fruit; and there ...