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SOCIETY OF FEMALE ARTISTS, Egyptian Hall, Piccadilly

... rurallife, nearly faultlese. The second best picture in the room is a little unpretending beauty (numbered 340), Gathering Blackberries, Eliza Adams. This is a bi'jou, a perfect gem, and must become a favourite of every visitor to the gallery. There are souse ...

Published: Sunday 04 April 1858
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 990 | Page: 5 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE THEATRICAL AND MUSICAL EXAMINER

... care is taken not to lose the beauty of the story in burlesquing it. The stcenery by Mr Callcott is exceedingly good; the Blackberry Brake is quite equal in beauty to MIr Bever- ley's Mistletoo Home, and the Transformation scene, in which is shown ...

OUIDA ON THE PLAGUE OF BOOKS

... autobio- graphy in detail from the cut of their pinafores to the items of their menus, from their early recollections of blackberries to their present affection for white- bait or oysters. MUSHROOM AND TOADSTOOL LITERATURE, There must be a public which ...

MR. ARTHUR TOOTH'S FINE ART GALLERY

... of Mr. Mason is very apparent, especially in the odd, effective, but not true use of filmy white, in Mr. W. S. Coleman's Blackberry Gatherers. Mr. J. F. Skill's works are very careful and nice, especially Exterior of a Mill, Brittany (No. 53). Mr. W. S ...

Published: Sunday 17 April 1870
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 961 | Page: 5 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... Mr. Stephens' Blackberry Picking, well carved as it is, may be qnoted as another example of what is to deprecated. What does it mean? Here is a pretty, but absurd young lady, enzisha. bile, supposed to have been picking blackberries! The truth is, the ...

Published: Saturday 24 June 1871
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2431 | Page: 7 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THEATRES

... really droll and original piece of the elaborately far-ical kind-has been transferred to the ROYALTY, in association with Blackberries, in which latter piece Miss Alice Atherton pla3s very cleverly. It is unfortunate, though we believe ?? hle, that in 7itrized ...

Published: Saturday 18 September 1886
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1226 | Page: 16 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

COMIN' THRO' THE RYE

... remembered (in one of the lucid intervals) that the month which is not too late for nightingales is a trifle early for ripe blackberries. While nature does these things, man and woman become creatures of clinging lips, gleamiling ripe shoulders, and veils ...

THEATRES, &c

... excitement, and most exacting in their demand for novelty. The most sanguinary and retributive Drama, though loaded thick as blackberries with crime, horror, and stern but poetic justice, seldom lasts for longer than a week or ten days, when the natural consequence ...

Published: Sunday 17 March 1861
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 5664 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... if we may believe the last accounts, was already the heroine of the day. Son- nets and serenades were as plentiful as blackberries. The celebrated Spontini, the author of La Vestale and Fernand Cortez, has lately died, at Jesi, his native place ...

LAST NIGHT'S THEATRICALS

... hinsself. COMEDY THEATRE. In spite of the success of his programme at this house, Mr. Willie Edouin has been forced to take Blackberries' and ''Turned Up to the Royalty Theatre, Miss Lingard having made arrangements for the production hers of the provin ...

THE LONDON THEATRES

... for ,Scandal at the STRAND, Sophia at the VAUDEVILLE, OUsr Diva at the OPERA CosiQUS, The Seheotmvistr-esc at the CouRT, Blackberries and Turned Up at the ROYALTY, The Mikacdo at the SAVOT, and La Bc'arnaise at the PRINCE OF WALES'S. THE SURREY. On Saturday ...

Published: Saturday 04 December 1886
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 4421 | Page: 16 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE READER

... warning to the careless swimmer we may mention Medusa and her Locks, a story of the poisonous Cyanea, capillata, and a Blackberry Bush in Autumn, as a pleasant sketch of one of these common objects of the hedgerow, from which so much may be learnt had ...

Published: Saturday 14 November 1874
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1373 | Page: 14 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture