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- - On Tuesday a l a dy h a d her pocket picked of £3B, while in the bazaar

... service in St. Martin's Church, Liverpool, yesterday evening week. a A few days ago a boy, named James Wood, in scrambling blackberries, at Olive Mount, fell down a precipice, se venty feet deep, on to a line of railway, and broke his arm. At the usual meeting ...

Published: Monday 20 September 1852
Newspaper: Liverpool Albion
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 9249 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE AUTUMN ROBIN

... flocking birds to slay: Yet shohld'st thou ?? the danger run, He turns the tube away. Tihe gipey boy, who seeks in glee Blackberries for a dainty meal, Laughs loud m~l first beholding thea, When called, so near his precunce steal. ?? surely thinks thou ...

BRAZILIAN AFFAIRS

... would take several shiploads of tlniversity phenomena to make half a Disraeli. Gladstones have always been as plentiful as blackberries in England; and so they will continue to be, till Mr. Macaulay's phot ographic New Zealander daguerreotypes what may be ...

Published: Monday 20 December 1852
Newspaper: Liverpool Albion
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2164 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

METROPOLITAN GOSSIP

... grapes are never sour; cherries ripe at Christmas, are only regarded as an old song; peaches in January are plentiful as blackberries in September; mushrooms are the pleasantest of fungi while only toadstools everywhere else; lamb is passed over long before ...

Published: Monday 17 January 1853
Newspaper: Liverpool Albion
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 4712 | Page: 24 | Tags: none

THE NEW REFORM BILL

... grapes are never sour; cherries ripe at Christmas, are only regarded as an old song; peaches in January are plentiful as blackberries in September; mushrooms are the pleasantest of fungi while only toadstools everywhere else; lamb is passed over long before ...

Published: Monday 17 January 1853
Newspaper: Liverpool Albion
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 6033 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

MET.ROPOLI TAN GOSSIP

... grapes are never sour; cherries ripe at Christmas, are only regarded as an old song; peaches in January are plentiful as blackberries in September; mushrooms are the pleasantest of fungi while only toadstools everywhere else; lamb is passed over long before ...

Published: Monday 17 January 1853
Newspaper: Liverpool Albion
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 4656 | Page: 16 | Tags: none

THE LIVERPOOL STANDARD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1

... struggle to come out here, and so they ought too, because there is room enough for all. Man ! money here is as plentiful as blackberries on the barrick hills in harvest time. No grinding of soul and body for a scanty subsistence ! Let artisans of all classes ...