POETRY

... flocking birds to slay, Yet should'st thou in the danger ran, He turns the tube away. The Gipey boy, who seeks in glee, Blackberries for a dainty meal, Laughs loud oa first belholdieg thee, When called, so near his presence steal. He surely thinks thou ...

FINE ARTS

... appreciated in the summer, as a dessert at the Academy teast; and in the same class W. Hunt has some marvellously tempting blackberries and plums. T. Uwins astonishes with twoor three little pieces-specimen bricks of the edifice he raised else- where; and ...

BOOKS ON OUR TABLE

... in a periodical called sh to The Truth Seeker. ev( !S. of to Almanacks for the coming year are as plentiful as NV, le blackberries; among those before us are the Bolton hi, id Almanack, ' The Protestant Dissenters' Almanackl' CO 'e The Illustrated ...

THE SCRAP-BOOK COLUMN

... murmnre~e oo, in their leafy retreat, The wild birds sib listening the drops round them beat And the boy crouhes dlos to the blackberry wall. The swa~ows alone take the torm en their wag And, tsuntlng the trsobeltredi labonrers, sinkg. Like pebbles the yam ...

ONCE UPON A TIME

... morning mist and evaing lo the (Unlike this cold grey rime), Seem'd woven warm of .olden are When I was in my priinte bar And blackberries-, nosslekii ?? W ere finely flavoir -, then; dr. . And nuti-such reddening clusters ripe he. I necer shall poll again. ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... arrive in the very nick of time; hut the besrieo taper tir a enoetloers at tbe close of the year. The plain and heatthful blackberry is sitscceedetd by the whottleberry, the Voroort of fruits. pet, in the meantime. the larger kinds come In le .adapt teeamselvoc ...

FOURTH EXHIBITION OF The Suffolk Fine Arts' Association

... T4e Loiterers, by Bouvier- A favourite speci. men of this artist's peculiar manner, reprerentingapes. sant girl gathering blackberries for a little child who accompanies her. There is much glowing colour and delicacy of handling in this attractive picture ...

THE DRAMATIC SCHOOL

... answered Mr. Howe's letter agreeably to the conse- cstive matter it contains, butreally it is such a jumble of philosophy, blackberries, briars, blindness, deafness, and (sad anti- climax) toothacheI that IFhardly know how to deal with it, and more ...

Published: Sunday 20 November 1853
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 6463 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE SCHOOLBOY's STORY

... he bad helter run away until he found a forest, where he might change clothes with a woodcutter and stain his face with blackberries; but the ma0jority believed that if he stood his 1. ground, his father-belonging as he did to the West Indies, and Bbeing ...

ROYAL ACADEMY OF ARTS

... In No. 70, Mr. G. Smith has produced an agree- c able picture of three rustic children busily occu- pied, in gathering blackberries from a hedge of ad brambles by a road-side; on the road stands a very do rudely-constructed little cart, in which an infant ...

LITERATURE

... the Immaculate Conception. Accord- ing to Cardinal Wiseman's own showing, immacu- late persons were as plentiful as blackberries in the later times of Pagan Rome. But to make up for the superhuman excellences of his Christians we have their persecutors ...