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Warwickshire, England

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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 ...

GRAND THEATRE

... mounting of the play is: rather pretty,' owing to the scene being laid among the upper reaches of the Thames. A short farce, Blackberries, by the same author precedes Turned Up, but something R little more substantial is required to ?? op the evening, and ...

NEW BOOKS

... intellect in our country. In such a is life as his, great men, or at' all events great nota- s bilities, wvere plenty as blackberries. He has a a healthy appetite for a, good story, and has stored e up very many, which ho tells with much gusto and 7 ap ...

CHRISTMAS BOOKS

... good old times is the phrase that is some- timnes used to designate the happy times when high- v;,vmen were plenty as blackberries. One may 'e:uur to the epithet good, but it cannot be douiod that they were picturesque, and frequently romantic. The ...

NEW BOOKS

... picturesi Topsy or the Parish D ctor, or describes a Mop or Statty, when be leads us to the hayfield or to the blackberry harvest, introduces us to the village barber or to the public-house dog. The sketches were well worth collecting and re ...

THE ROYAL ACADEMY

... rawness about the colour which repels. Two girls-young ladies of rather Jano-esque forms-and a little boy are among the blackberries : one lady is raising an exquisitely-1 moulded naked arm to gather a berry; the other is daintily endeavouring to liberate ...

FLOWER SHOW AT ALTON TOWERS

... for a million or so, especially on heavy settling days, would seem to be a matter of course, if not quite as plentiful as blackberries. A few years ago the Manchester Ship Canal Company, when buying out the Bridgewater Trustees, drew One cheque for- a million ...

THE QUAKER POET IN AMERICA

... touches has he drawn for us- d the schoolhouse by the road A ragged beggar sunning; Around it still the sunoachs grow -d And blackberry vines are running. s- The face where pride and shame were mingled, . fancy pictures as the poet's own. We may not - know ...

ROYAL SOCIETY OF ARTISTS

... greens of his picture are monotonous if t' not crude, having been studied apparently in the g early spring, and not when the blackberries are ripe, and the foliage becomes gorgeous as a h ]Lug's raiment. The motive of Mr. Gotch's p The Thief ' (553) is poor ...

PERIODICALS FOR JULY

... of last month. hb The Nationa Reviest has a generally perfunctory of aspect, as though good:subjects were-not plenty as blackberries and the best had been made of second- PE rate themes. Mr. Benson is, naturally enough, rather enthusiastic about his school ...

THE NATIONAL DOG SHOW

... -Hatton Garden, Lond.on. , BLACK PrGs--DogS and bitches: I1st, Possy Black, :'Miss H.- ortival, Takeley, Essex; 2-ad, Blackberry, , Miss Mor tivals.. , ΒΆ A. ?,sTw TRAxsLA&Tio OF THE Bram F.-It is stated by the Jeuish Ch-ronicle that several Jew ish ...

ROYAL SOCIETY OF ARTISTS

... tbemn skir. If the landscape has been depicted from an artistic. standpoint it has first been felt as a poet feels it. 4'Blackberrying by the Seae (411), by Arthur Hopkins, -.W.S.-the picture selected for the first prize of heh Art Union in connection with ...