ROYAL BIRMINGHAM SOCIETY OF ARTISTS

... Having come so far, we may as well go fairly round the toom to the Th.nin doorway-noting, on the way, Mr. BirketFoster'sm Blackberry Gatherers (171), animnportasit work of the rtist's usual kind; a line Louis Haghe (171), the Church of St. Jacques, Antwerp; ...

LOCAL SCHOOLS OF SCIENCE AND ART

... Cecilia ,uxnm enassrce panel; Caroling Gillman, Sepia;twvo reliefs e by iodion,; EmesaLong, Sepia,' fromn the 'cast of blackberries, also some capital elementa~ry desiuns in cslour; Mlartin hu'rlant,: antique figutre dancing fawvn, in chl3k, also outtline ...

IRVINE CATTLE SHOW

... Irrose; 3d, Thomas Markwortb, dil- po wiDning. Smooth-haired terriers-bit, BanId Steveneon, w le Irvine Mains; 3d, William Blackberry, Eglintun; Sd, Jsmes ?? h Binning. Townend; 4th. Mrs Logan, Wateride. Dog of any elf otber breed-Iset. l'rovest Paterson; ...

Literature

... But, dazzled by the glory there revealed, of ithe He aimed too high, and disappointed, died, on X the Another poem, When Blackberries Scent the Air, we Ju ,new have reserved for our poet's corner on a future occasion aI gratci ,n, to Temple Bar. No ...

Poetry

... 4VtrQ. WH1EN BLACKiBEtRRIES SCENT TIHE AIR. We gathered the blackberries long ago, My sweet little Katie and I, In the woods all bathed in the autumn glow, 'Neath the blue of a cloudless sky v That ever seemed fair; but now I know, b As the shadows all ...

FOR PASTIME

... Europe. The mood to go was on him now-he had no patience with waiting-sa for gowns and things, they were plenty there as blackberries in New Hampshire. Miss Sturgis was a theosgh-bred. self-contained woman of the world * but she was neither without heart ...

LITERATURE

... With a few blackberries in it to convince him it was what he did not care for. On the contrary he did care, and ate up every one, and then whined end looked in my face very hard, and enforecd it with a stamp of the paw, wanting more blackberries, askifng ...

PICTURE SALE

... Boy (173), ladens with nets. There is a.pretty littlo rustic group of a boy and girl reclining on a bank, entitled the Blackberry Gatherers (131), by LO Jeune,; and s larger study of A Scribe, attribute'1 to the same artist. The Child's Lament (182) ...

LITERATUR

... 'Home in Secretaries, iand Chancellors of the Exchequer are abundant, and members of Farliament are at as nuraerons as blackberries. The chatnm of the' Y. book -lies in the thorough -acquaintance with s what may, we suppose, be taken to be a kind of. ...

LITERATURE

... ,-It is noc'dli'so8 to say that first-class joissrnahsits, in wbatever patty we look for them, are not as plentiful as blackberries. If we (consider TI what such a man ought to bi, -we shadl be overwhslmoicd t2 with the multiplicity of his requirements ...

ART, LITERATURE, AND SCIENCE

... was supplied by the B&ck-the little trout stream besides which the. discharged forges had supped on self-denial aln ?? on blackberries and water during Joh Joyee'h reign. 0f ?? Wood, Mlorde Copse, and Fox Wood, no- thing need be paid at all. It is more ...

LITERATURE

... I our fate's the same If he sball e'er Bnd me or you siok. Compliments to the fair sex are,, of course, as plentiful as blackberries in a Devonehire lane:- The world must now two Venuses adore Ten are the Muses, and the Graces hour. Such Dora's wit, so ...