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PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... sensibly may this be done, inasmuch as Irish otors ho can dowithont themappear to be becoming as plentiful as the seasonable blackberry. Of Mr. Dion DUrciCrault's excellencies we have recently spoken. This week we have to record the remarkable suoress of the ...

AN OLD-FASHIONED FIRST

... faithful, venerable, red-eyed spaniel, cannot stand our loitering any longer; he sees no beauty in the hedgerows heavy with blackberries, beautiful with clematis, and scarlet and yellow foliage, with hip and haw, and the bedeguar of the rose; he has no curiosity ...

IN THE PICTURE GALLERIES

... They are what is called blobby in methcd, but are very rich and decorative in treatment. Mr. Matthew Hale's Gathering Blackberries is good, and Mr. Napier Fleemy's work should be seen, as also should a very good study of a dark hillside, by Mr. C. ...

ART NOTES

... The Reaper and the Flowers; Mr. Orchardson's Hamlet and the King, Mr. Hook's Friends in Rough Weather, Mason's Blackberry-gathering (that was etched by M. Regamey six years ago), Fred. Walker's Right of Way (his last work), together with ...

CLIFTON DRAWING SOCIETY

... work in the texture of the coats, and the work I te took first prize in its class, The trailing vine in Mrs ?? panel, Blackberries (139), is very free and I hr natural, and better than the clusters of berries them- in selves. In architectural subjects ...

THE WOMEN'S INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION AT BRISTOL

... Associatiou from Qtleen's County send some novel designs in embroiuery, toilet worked in grape pattern, sacs de ntca in blackberry ard other designs, mats, &c. The Tea-room is entirely devoted to portraits of eminent women, including those of Elizabeth ...

FASHIONS

... brims are much worn. A very pretty trimming for them consists of a black velvet bow and ends to fasten a wreath of ivy, blackberry blossom, and fruit. Wild flowers and fruit are much used for trimming straw hats and bonnets. The cavalier- shape hat in ...

New Novels

... that make at any rate the more tender-hearted class of readers inclined to feel sympathetically pitiful are as common as blackberries ought soon to be ; but a tale which makes us laugh, not at it, but with it, is a veritable treasure. He, or she, who can ...

Published: Saturday 01 September 1883
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 1649 | Page: 22 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

HINTS TO HOUSEWIVES

... remind any readers that it is very whlolesome, and in cases of dysentery L is most valuable. When you have procured enough blackberries for present table use make syrup, jelly, and jam for the rest. Encourage children in the country to pick them, for in doing ...

LANCASHIRE BIRDS

... domestication, and it is alosw. this condition that we must look at it now. few days prior to the advent of October, the blackberries hang lascious on the bra:j and the brown nuts drop from the cluastere, the lea, goes, as is his'wont, to the coppice of ...

NOAH'S ARK AT THE ROYALTY

... School for Scandal at the STRAND, Sophic at the VAUIDEVILLE, The Shoto nasteess at the COURT, Wild Oats at the CIiTEUIO5, Blackberries and Teurned Up at the ROYALTY, B0ayelqri at TOOLE'S, La Bearnaise at the PRINCE Or WaLtSM, and The ~ikado at the SAVOY ...

Published: Saturday 30 October 1886
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1443 | Page: 14 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS

... observation, but it renders a confirmed habit more and more easy of performance. Plots of a sort are to be found thick as blackberries in the odd or terrible incidents of the life that surrounds ,us. Now that a certain methodical fluency has been attained ...