THE weekly FREF-MAVS -mrHN

... serve material for a second letter to Bishop of Durham and the mob; and will enable you to adopt legal proceedings plenty blackberries” for putting immediate stop to Papal aggression. 1 shall |tsas over tbe reign of Elizabeth, I cannot suppose you would ...

Published: Saturday 25 January 1851
Newspaper: Weekly Freeman's Journal
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1991 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

TO THE EIGHT HON. LORD JOHN RUSSELL

... material for a second letter to the Bishop of Durham and the mob ; and will enable you adopt legal proceedings” as “plenty as blackberries” for putting an immediate stop to Papal aggression. I shall pass over the reign of Elizabeth, as I cannot suppose you would ...

Published: Friday 31 January 1851
Newspaper: Waterford News
County: Waterford, Republic of Ireland
Type: | Words: 1199 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

in wl.icli it is'tated that throush thi> increMfJ 1 , ~ tv.om-n and the victories the, won? Have vo« while

... adopt legal proceedings creeds, and dynasties which had stronger case every thing so much belter than we can—from “plenty blackberries” for putting an immediate * ms t her than the Putney heroes. nursing the baby down to poking the fire. That they stop Papal ...

pocToR CAHILL—LORD JOHN RUSSELL. 30 THE RIGHT HON. LORD JOHN RUSSELL. Upper Dublin. ‘y shall take the liberty ..

... fects to the Serve as material for a second letter Bishop of Durkam and the mob; and “ ad. ee legal proceedings” pleaty as blackberries, for patting an stop to Papal aggression. shall pass over the reign of b, as I his you woud resolve to in teiga and take ...

Published: Saturday 01 February 1851
Newspaper: Sligo Champion
County: Sligo, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 944 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

TO THE RIGHT HON. I .HID .1. RI’S«F,I.L. I'} per r sticet. Dublin DOCTOR CAHILL—LOUD J. RUSSELL. \Hll.lj’S MUST TO

... material for a second letter the Bishop of Durham and the mob ; and will enable you adopt legal proceed, ings* us plenty as blackberries’fur putting an immediate stop to the Papa! aggression. I shall passover the reign of Elizabeth, as I cannot suppos® your ...

DOCTOR CAHILL—LOUD JOHN RUSSELL

... may serve material for ■ second letter to the Bishop Durham end the mob; and trill enable yon to adopt legal plenty as blackberries” for patting an immediate to Papal aggression. I shall pern oeer the reign of Elisabeth, I cannot suppose yon would resolve ...

Published: Saturday 01 February 1851
Newspaper: Limerick and Clare Examiner
County: Limerick, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1816 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

SPIRIT OF THE PRESS. EMENDATION OF THE GAME LAWS

... when the owl shall hoot from the deserted mill, the fox sleep on what was once a hearth stone, the moor fowl run thick as blackberries through what were fields, and the philosophic crane nod on the slimy margin of the mill-pool ! The imagination runs riot ...

Published: Thursday 06 March 1851
Newspaper: Leitrim Journal
County: Leitrim, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 399 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

A WORI.n AT PEACE

... a letter a thousand miles for a penny, and buy a week's reading for twopence. publish bo*.ks faster than brambles bear blackberries, and produce plays as fast as the French write them. can feed paupers on ninepi-nce half-penny a-day, and make artificial ...

Published: Monday 17 March 1851
Newspaper: Armagh Guardian
County: Armagh, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 9051 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE ‘HIGHER LA W.’

... honett kindness’ to serve their friends, they plot and undermine lo effect their ruin. And such Aones/raen are plentiful blackberries, in every age and country ; but it was not for such oa« that Diogenes made search. lie looked for the honesty of purpose ...

THE NATION

... and Coleridge, too, for he complains bitterly in one of his letters, of “this ‘periodical’ writing for bread” —“picking blackberries for chance customers;” and when his soul is full of great thoughts for fame and the world, being condemned to scribble ...

Published: Saturday 19 April 1851
Newspaper: Dublin Weekly Nation
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 2203 | Page: 10 | Tags: none

the men now engaged in it. The friends tenant right were unanimous in the movement in Donegal, and the landlords

... blossomed whins, lang yellow broom,” somewhat literally interspersed with specimens of the real Irish vine, vulgarly called blackberry bushes, extending around almost every arable field, varying in breadth, according to the taste of the owner, from one yard ...

Published: Thursday 08 May 1851
Newspaper: Londonderry Standard
County: Londonderry, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 2518 | Page: 4 | Tags: none