LITERATURE

... we 'wound slowly arid a painfully Up the green shady roaid, thanskful that it was A E elnshdy, that there were luts of blackberries, and one - flower, a sort of eamupion, quite nowv to me-which is ) saying a good deal for its rarity-wa rouse upon a priasi- ...

RECENT FRENCH CRITICISM

... his view, the most vigorous and most obnoxious emanation, lately complained that, although ideas are now as abundant as blackberries, the noble art of criticism is nearly clean gone, hinting that with M. Sainte Beuve's departure fromn the ,scene the whole ...

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 ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... n of greenhouse plants in winter, and on t - the art of preserving fruit. It has also articles on the I t raspberry and blackberry, and on the villa kitchen garden, 0 a list of new plants, and a garden guide fbr the current '7 month. The notices to c ...

LITERATURE

... porpeet, gelnillte st'utte. 'I'iitis 1, hiewrreC, ?? muds virtue in cii ?? Imperfect copies an,~ itcma ly as plciurty us blackberries, hot we tie icot believe ti'tt tlutre. are abhove a dozen iabsolutoly perfect omies known to Ttua Tijunr WINiDS.-Wc re ...

GUSTAVE III. ET LA COUR DE FRANCE

... is a member of the paragraph on the intensity of the alliance between France and Sweden, blunders lie almost as thick as blackberries-uno avulso, non deficit aller. Between i631 and 1648 some half-dozen treaties relating to the German war were indeed made ...

LITERARY EXTRACTS

... consequently, could never cultivate their hedge-sides properly, and were forced to be content is with soles, and hips, and blackberries, and anything else that came handy and by the grace of nature ; never able re to raise a bushel of grain for harvest-time ...

NATIONAL EXHIBITION OF WORKS OF ART IN LEEDS

... you don't believe in all that senltimental nocnscnae about the picture having e ouble meaningr, look at the mutton and blackberries painted by the great modern religions artist. From such thorny entanglements destructive to the snowy fleeces and sharp ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... no lemons, cherries, or currants raised at Fuhchau, and no berries of any kind, as strawberry, gooseberry, whortleberry, blackberry, raspberry, &c. The pine-apple, plantain, cocoa-nut, mango, and a fine variety of pumelo, are brought from Formosa or Amoy ...

FINE ARTS INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION AT IPSWICH

... Smvthe's picture Mr. Wnr. Cuthbert, for three paintings, ¢Old Stokse Church, PlFayed Rabbit,'and Honeysucklec and Blackberry; Mfr. T. Smith, sketch Of, Soothwcld Breakwater; Mrs. Noy, groups of-flowers, n' 4Por~trait of B. DisraelIg °and ...

THE BIRMINGHAM SCHOOL OF ART

... may give an illustration of this remark. There is among the chalk-shaded drawings a marvel of painstaking skill-a study of blackberry leaves-by a student about fifteen yearsof age: time occu- pied in its production, sixteen months of the school attend- ance ...

WIT AND HUMOUR

... MNIMPORTE.- Host That's right ; help yourself: Guest: Thankee, I haven't tasted such a glass of port since the great blackberry season of 1824. Tu QVoQUE.-Town Belle: The ball was awfully slow last night, the men could think of nothing but their ...