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Bath Chronicle and Weekly Gazette

BLACKBERRIES

... BLACKBERRIES. Many hedgerow and wayside thicket is now aglow with the ruddy fruits the bramble and as the eye rests upon the clusters that, to quote from Co*per, emboss the long flexible branches, we Magazine-) are reminded that the taste which ha. ...

It is expected that there will be the largest crop o blackberries, nuts, and elderberries this season in the south

... It is expected that there will be the largest crop o blackberries, nuts, and elderberries this season in the south of England that has been known for several years paBt. At the Gloucester Assizes on Monday, Thomas William Glass, chemist, was tried for ...

A anion of English hotel and restaurant servants has been formed in London. The new municipal buildings Glasgow ..

... romewhat tuddenly, eating a quantity of blackberries. He vomited violently after eating them, and the medical evidence went to show that death was due to convulsions consequent upon diarrhoea caused by eating the blackberries. ...

Agriculture, &c

... it well known that blackberries will grow in almost any soils, and that they are seldom affected by frosts or diseasr. '1 hey flourish in the hedgerows the heavy clay districts where the land is going oat of cultivation. Blackberries only require two or ...

QUESTION. Love wilt thou love still when wintry streak Wilt when this fond arm that here twine And earner thy

... while beauty dwindles and decays. Still'warm thee the embers AN ANSWER. The russet hip that was the pink-white rose; The blackberry that was the bramble born; Nor pearls, that now are corals, the thorn. Will linger in your life, and I shall cling Closely ...

Published: Thursday 09 September 1897
Newspaper: Bath Chronicle and Weekly Gazette
County: Somerset, England
Type: Miscellaneous | Words: 87 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

WHERE THE LITTLE BRIDGE CROSSES THE WYE. Where the little bridge crosses the Wye In the valley where daffodil ..

... and daisy-clad mead, Where comes the sweet smell of the hay Where the beams of the cheering bright sun Opes the bud of the blackberry bush Where conies and leverts run, And hops 'midst the nettles the thrush. There, there would I sit 'mid the beauties I ...

the meeting of the Gloucester Board Guardians tf who gShe name of Davis applied for relief. He that lie was

... y bedstra w, perforated John's wort, field speedwell, inuskmallow, creeping potentilla, wood strawberry wi d white rose, blackberry blossom ivypurple clover, black medick, wild basil, self-heal, betony, purple dead nettle, red hemp nettle, buttercnp and ...

COUNTY POLICE

... the firm of Wansbrough and Robinson, Bristol), defended.- —Henry a young man, deposed that he and others wanted to go blackberrying, and a-ked permission of a keeper nam a d Francis. He said he wo aid give it if they would stand half gallon. He gave them ...

A LOCAL LADY ARTIST

... their decorative purpose ; whilst among the fruit garlands are comprised oranges, figs, grapes, cherries, ariples, medlars, blackberries, pomegranates, and others, some of which are as minutely and delicately studied miniatures, and yet have very remarkable ...

PLEA FOR Lo\'E. The summer brook flows in tha bed The winter torrent tore asunder ; The sky-lark's gentle wings

... school in their leafy retreat, The wild birds sit listening, the drops round them beat; And the boy crouches close to the blackberry wall. The swallows alone take the storm their wing, And, taunting the tree-sheltered labourers sing. Like pebbles the rain ...

License Transfers.—At the Guildhall on Tuesday the following transfers of licenses were granted :—Seven Stars, ..

... morning at Swainswick. It appears that a farmer, whose name we could not ascertain, is tbe habit of allowing people to pick blackberries on his land till about two in the afternoon. Monday the man Davis and his wife were picking the berries, and Davis's wife ...

COUNTRY LIFE. Not what we would, but what we muat, Makes up the sum of living Heaven is both more

... forget The least of thy sweet trifles ? The window vines, which clamber yet, Whose blooms the bee still rifles The roadside blackberries, growing ripe, And in the woods the Indian-pipe Happy the man who tills the field, Content with rustic labour ; Earth does ...

Published: Thursday 15 December 1881
Newspaper: Bath Chronicle and Weekly Gazette
County: Somerset, England
Type: Miscellaneous | Words: 297 | Page: 6 | Tags: none