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THE CHILDREN'S HOUR

... parcel is from Mrs. Searle and Viollette, and contains blackberry jelly I Plesan eperene i te psthad enabled me to ~-uascoretly ad ad m fiedshave muchen loye th deicius cnfetio. Hw the blackberries weregatere an muc moe areebleinformation 5 wil beglenedfrm ...

A YOUNG TRAVELLER'S AMERICAN TOUR

... roses, teeming with insects of every size and colour. We hardly moved a step without being caught by the broken branches of blackberry or raspberry-bushes, which hung or lay across the path, loaded with their delicious fruit. I am sure the lakes of red juice ...

PERIODICALS FOR JANUARY

... guaranteed gosts, and novelists devoting heir best powers to the revival, we may lope soon to have bests as plentiful as blackberries. The clever story, The Baby's Grandmother, will he better reading for the njority. A long criticism on ' The Ajax and ...

CHRISTMAS BOOKS

... mundane interest. The nmovement is rapid, and the style lively and animated. Adventures, nerils, daring deeds are plenty as blackberries. and through all there lives a love-story, which ends happ)ily, as a love-story should. PAus AND RANTSOwS : A Story of ...

AGRICULTURAL SHOWS

... which onehasneverbeen celebrated can lay little claim to prestige or renown. They have become plentiful as the proverbial blackberry, and, strangest thing of all, nobody seems to grow tired of them. Let the weather be but propitious, and there is alwvays ...

Published: Saturday 06 November 1880
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2064 | Page: 31 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

Fine Arts

... remarkable for, the v truth of gray open-air effect. Mr. F. Walker is more a I favourably seen in his drawing (88), Blackberrying t ) (Mr. X'Clean's), than usual; the colouring is agreeable in E .the prevalence of the grey tone over the piesure; the ...

CONSISTENCY IN COSTUME

... will be free from these :e iny paraphrases of some of Nature's sweetest ale e eubodied in fruit and flower. Would ..t blackberries, ivy - berries, or black turrants bs equally gr.sf-expressing, and t liftie amore consistent ? AL beautifualE aied novel ...

COUNTRY LIFE

... endless cloud studies and felt supremely bl]essed. drank from the Hermit's Well, and our nooole repast consisted of a leaf of blackberries. Snrey this was pastoral happiness. We were many, mua miles from anywhere. We had, however, to get us back to the practi ...

LYCEUM THEATRE

... Maude Millett, Miss Tilbury, Mr. Lytton Sothern, I 'r end Mr. Morton Selten. Mr. Melford's piece is pre- wve ceded by I Blackberries, in which Miss A&lice Atherton adrepeats her clever and always acqeptable impersonation I of %Charlie1 Cott, the show ...

THE READER

... declines to explain till he hears that ,.II his brother nurserymen have made their fortunes. We are glad he has a good word for blackberry jam; with cream he pronounces it quite an exotic dish -the ne plu hs ultra, we suppose, of praise from a nurseryman. ...

Published: Saturday 25 February 1882
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1972 | Page: 17 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

A LETTER FOR LADIES

... fringed ,.itl, tall poplar-trees, .which give a certain air of ,Itiilfllss to the place. Outside are the country Iis with the blackberries bi-ginning to ripen in the Ireriges, arid the white convolvulus turning hcr fair ?? Ie p to the light. To the left is the ...

The Theatres

... TWT'O NEW COMEDIES New ideas for the leading matinees of new plays are not, in Falstaff's phrase, quite ' as plenty as blackberries, but fortunately for dramatists they do not appear to be indispensable to dramatic Success. Aryway, play after play comes ...

Published: Saturday 19 February 1898
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2115 | Page: 13 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture