Family Notices

... who once h-id wings.' V. is he: and yvbeuce ? Is be a suiface or a sntjstanci. is i;e smoM.h and warm Is lie glo*>y like a blackberry? or has he ou him 'the raven down of darkness' iii-i'- au uaii- lged c.'iick o: nigh, i An if we smoothed h:m, w n..u ; ...

YAMMER!

... excellence amongst all classes, for genius selects no clime nor oolcur, if educated, we shall recognise there plentiful as blackberries, in our hack-authors, whose only blowing is, that their Pegasus requires little corn, bat is used to work on an empty stoma; ...

Published: Saturday 25 August 1855
Newspaper: Star of Gwent
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1041 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

NEWS FROM THE CAMP

... till the principal races were over. The divisional generals, brigadiers, colonels, and staffofficers, were plentiful as blackberries, and though the only representative of the fair sex was Mrs. Seacole, who presided over a sorely invested tent full of ...

Published: Saturday 22 December 1855
Newspaper: Monmouthshire Beacon
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1370 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

POETRY.I

... pathetic ballad over which we then wept as we thought of the children in the wood. Their little bands and pretty lips With blackberries were dyed, And when they saw the darksome night They sate them down and cried. And, as if to remind us the more forcibly ...

WEEKLY CALENDAR AND MEMORANDA

... sprang from the event celebrated, is of modern origin, and peculiar to the church of England. lO, Saturday. —The pear and blackberry come into leaf. This is the seventh day of the Feast of the Passover with the Jews. ll, Easter Sunday. —Morning:—Proper ...

Published: Saturday 10 April 1852
Newspaper: Silurian
County: Brecknockshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1003 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

111 CORRESP.NW:STS

... Speechifyings, motions, notices, amendments, divisions, counting. outs, and adjourned debates, have been as plentiful as blackberries, but eri base? The result Ins similar to the childreu'e bubble-blowing, or the infantine game of strd building, amusing ...

Published: Friday 23 August 1850
Newspaper: Carmarthen Journal
County: Carmarthenshire, Wales
Type: | Words: 1569 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

OUR GRAMMAR SCHOOL

... Health, one of those twelve apostles ! would persuade us that holes and dungheaps in the streets of Uak aro os thick os blackberries on bramble bushes in September. I think it would become the critic who hunts for blemishes to bo little more distrustful ...

Published: Saturday 12 February 1859
Newspaper: Monmouthshire Beacon
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1439 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE SPANISH MAID. I love, when the summer sun hath set O'er the dark blue bills of Spain, To list

... fire-place, and, while the yule- log blazed bright and cheerily, told Christmas stories in which ghosts were as plentiful blackberries. In one tale that was then told, the hero belonged to a family in which insanity was hereditary (and as is commonly the ...

Published: Saturday 31 January 1852
Newspaper: Monmouthshire Beacon
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1342 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

THE MONMOUTHSHIRE BEACON

... too, you’ll be after a while. K stands also for King. Never forget the raal ould Kings of Ireland, that wor as plinty as blackberries wid us. What matters the new kings to us all ? And now you’ll see how nath’ral the K leads to this L. L. Remember, now ...

Published: Saturday 25 May 1850
Newspaper: Monmouthshire Beacon
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1369 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

IkINL N SSSSSSSSS NT 011_1111PI•COPIL PATROXIOII

... bee hie warrant for a0 sutopey Strroseo MCRDER ar Saerripep—On Pridey CTeming, beif-past 7. two children, who were guther blackberries ina bedge bottom at Bastbenk, « end be sath cast of 4 scovered z body of & man almost concealed the that had overgrown ...

Published: Friday 10 September 1852
Newspaper: Carmarthen Journal
County: Carmarthenshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1601 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

TUB CARDIFF & MERTHYR GUARDIAN --.....-......,.'-'''''''''''''''''''''''''''-/...,.....,..,,,...,.../'OV'V'

... them, whether as town councillors, aldermen, magistrates, or mayors. The candidates certainly are not like Shakspeare's blackberries; the annual or biennial iippcal for some, the constant badgering for others, render the task disagreeable, and so we get ...

>ber 9, 1858. retxil, with ttw wptur. of til their gun,, telligence to the ?3rd. For the take >. •lull

... tha loot quarter of an hour for a poll at Jhn Moepby’t and there, it��a ahot out of hit BLACKBsanr Wtnt—There ia no wine to blackberry wine when properly made, either flifoor tent medicinal porpoefte, and all pereons. who can oonrenieetlj it mannfactnre enough ...

Published: Saturday 09 October 1858
Newspaper: Monmouthshire Beacon
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1271 | Page: 2 | Tags: none