THE THEATRES

... Tom, like a black fever, will no doubt attack all the playhouses, and little Topsys'-of any size and weight-be thick as blackberries. DEATH OF MRS. MACREADY.-It is with great re- gret, we announce the demise of this amiable lady, on the 18th inst. She ...

THEATRICALS, ETC

... far uper ior to any of its predecessor The piece commences at the period when Mloses is despatched to sell the old mare Blackberry, and returns the dupe f ?? and o possessor of a gross of green spectanles in sha- green cases. The duties of Sir Williva ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... be as drunk as a lord-expressed the popular notion of human felicity; but, since uncrowned kings have become commnon as blackberries, and attempts at assassi- nation have ceased to be a nine days' ionder, street boys and girls; of all ages, have adopted ...

FOURTH EXHIBITION OF The Suffolk Fine Arts' Association

... T4e Loiterers, by Bouvier- A favourite speci. men of this artist's peculiar manner, reprerentingapes. sant girl gathering blackberries for a little child who accompanies her. There is much glowing colour and delicacy of handling in this attractive picture ...

LOCAL LITERATURE IN THE LAST CENTURY

... The Farmesr. . The Lark' eshrill niote. e, 6. Platos advice. 7. Old Boreas. ?? When the rosy b morn appearing. 9. Betty Blackberry.l Onsomeofithe ,y title pages there appears, after the impriot, l Preston5. printed by B. Sergent, in the Market plaoe; ...

NOTES OF THE CHRISTMAS NOVELTIES

... the Cruel Uscte, a subject by no means new to the sphere of Pantomime, but here treated after a novel manner. The scene of Blackberry Grove, where the wood nymphs appear, and where the wild mani shuts up tile fairy of the forest in the trunk ol a large oak ...

Published: Sunday 21 December 1856
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3830 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LITERATURE

... is one whose bite is mortal), gambling, drinking, ague, fever, starvation, nrid' a thousand other liabilities thick as blackberries there- when you calculate the hardship of incessant toil and wet beds, with bad fare-whenyouaddtothesedangers and miseries ...

Published: Sunday 12 October 1851
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3789 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE SCHOOLBOY's STORY

... he bad helter run away until he found a forest, where he might change clothes with a woodcutter and stain his face with blackberries; but the ma0jority believed that if he stood his 1. ground, his father-belonging as he did to the West Indies, and Bbeing ...

LITERATURE

... often mingling with a small purple cranesbill, and a bright yellow oxalis; our bush bramble is own cousin to the British blackberry, and the native potentilla and willow-herb closely re- semble those of the Old World; whilst the genera clematis, veronica ...

THE DRAMA, MUSIC, ETC

... thoughtitbest~to ~lavethe children..behi'nd m h in tbe wood, wbich 'he did, where theya Ideiredup -andd down, living only on blackberries,, until they died of fatigue and 'hunger, under a tree and in each other's areas.; upon. which a di'ght Of robins, that ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... Hills. In the auturmn of 1856, a woman living near 51assachusetts went out with her baby, a boy about a year oldi to pick blackberries in a field near her house, and set her charge on the grass, while sbe gathered the rrnit. As long as the little fellow ...

THE CHRISTMAS PANTOMIMES

... best of to leave tics children behind him in the wood, welich lie dlid, whcere they wandered up and down, living only ott blackberries, until they died of fatigue and hcunger, unuder a tree, and in each other's arms, espois wtlich a flight of fo robites ...