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... found; Our southern fruit is fair; And seek all round, Nor Bud such fruit grow there. « I better love the bramble blacK ; The blackberry is ”. . . For these are fruit? of Scottish braes, And they grow in our gay green wood. Will ye not sleep in golden bed ...

Published: Saturday 06 August 1853
Newspaper: Derbyshire Courier
County: Derbyshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 165 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

POETRY

... school, in their leafy retreat, The wild birds sit listening the drops round them beat; And the boy crouches close to the blackberry wall. The swallows alone take the storm on their wing, And, taunting the treo-sheltered labourers, sing, Like pebbles the ...

POETRY

... school, in their leafy retreat, The wild birds sit listening the drops round them beat; And the boy crouches close to the blackberry wall. The swallows alone take the storm on their wing, And, taunting the tree-sheltered labourers, sing. Like pebbles the ...

Ashby=be=la=Zouch

... the property of Mr. Isaac Swift, on the 11th instant. appeared from the evidence of keeper that defendant was getting blackberries, and never saw him do anything else.—The Bench strongly censur ed the prosecutor for taking such advantage of defendant ...

Published: Saturday 24 September 1859
Newspaper: Leicestershire Mercury
County: Leicestershire, England
Type: Article | Words: 229 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

POISONING BY_BELLADONNA BERRIES, AT LEEDS

... before Mr. Blackburn, borough coroner. John Wm. Wells, brother of the deceased, said :-1 and George Remington went gathering blackberries bud Sunday morning, at Newthorpe, on the Leeds and Selby road. In a quarry in Newthorpe we saw some of the berries of the ...

Published: Saturday 18 September 1858
Newspaper: Sleaford Gazette
County: Lincolnshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 277 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

POETRY

... trembles as tbe wind comes whistling up, And slips with gentle force from out its perfect moulded cup. The hedge is thick with blackberries, and little children know The lanes where they are plentiful and where the finest grow ■. They cull the sweet and simple ...

Published: Saturday 04 November 1854
Newspaper: Leicester Chronicle
County: Leicestershire, England
Type: Article | Words: 265 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

ONCE UPON A TIME

... morning mist and evaing lo the (Unlike this cold grey rime), Seem'd woven warm of .olden are When I was in my priinte bar And blackberries-, nosslekii noWv-Of W ere finely flavoir -, then; dr. . And nuti-such reddening clusters ripe he. I necer shall poll again ...

THE ELECTRIC INDICATOR

... make our word)—tho miracles of art and invention and discovery have become so very plentiful, even to exceed Falstaff's blackberry crop of reasons, that we no longer feel or express any astonishment at the impossibilities and improbabilities yesterday ...

Published: Saturday 28 December 1850
Newspaper: Leicestershire Mercury
County: Leicestershire, England
Type: Article | Words: 374 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

4aturalists' Column

... have gooseberry and strawberry blossom, and even fruit the latter has been gathered lately ; in the bodges the fruit of the blackberry is not unfrequently seen, and close beside it may be found that most welcome of all our wild dowers—the primrose. I may ...

Published: Saturday 15 January 1859
Newspaper: Leicester Guardian
County: Leicestershire, England
Type: Article | Words: 371 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

The Miseriks o. bbino a Hero.— You de not know the miseries of being a hero. Penny-a-liners arrest your ser-

... hero of, and those that made a»e so should at once repent. Much better may easily be had. The er op is as plen- tiful as blackberries, Crimeans are .verytbing now and everywhere and though wild looking and hirsute animas ar easily ca_->ht, Uo not at all ...

Published: Saturday 18 October 1856
Newspaper: Leicester Chronicle
County: Leicestershire, England
Type: | Words: 424 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

CAUTION.—IMPOSTOR To the Editor of the Northampton Mercury. Sir,— Last week I found boy of about 17 lying by the

... board for not selling so many herrings as they did, he hod left, and was walking home to Tarmouth. had eaten nothing but blackberries, and slept in hovels. His father was in the Fisherman's Hospital at Yarmouth. He had been in the Priory School for some ...

Published: Saturday 23 October 1858
Newspaper: Northampton Mercury
County: Northamptonshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 405 | Page: 4 | Tags: none