Refine Search

it immediate preference over its predecessors, if only for that genial fluency which passes at intervals with ..

... grandmothers woreired-heeled shoes, and beauty-spots, and pearl powder, and when they were carried in sedan chairs between the blackberry hedges in Oxford-street to a dram in one of the high -squares (meaning cir c l es ) to be lighted home by links after whiling ...

Published: Monday 02 August 1852
Newspaper: Sun (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1768 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

it immediate preference over its predecessors, if only of a romancist, he would have portrayed the agonies for ..

... London . c . 0.. 6L pr cent. and 6 i 1 . . peeerr cant. cent. 0 0 20 10 0 0 0 33 played i sedan chairs between the blackberry hedges in Ox- per cant. 0 25 0 0 14 83 feveurit ford-street to a drum in one of the high-squsres Ditt n e c:a N l e o m ...

Published: Monday 02 August 1852
Newspaper: Sun (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 7736 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

LITERATURE BLEAK HOUSE. No. Tl. By Charles Dickens. Accordi ng t o our op i nion, the happiest instalment of

... with startling reflections, and every chapter with astounding incidents, facts (so called) being therein as plentiful as blackberries. Dr. Esdaile, formerly Presidency surgeon at Calcutta, has already appeared as a writer upon this enthralling subject—his ...

Published: Wednesday 04 August 1852
Newspaper: Sun (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1937 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

LITERATURE BLEAK HOUSE. Aro. VI. By Charles

... with startling reflections, and every chapter with astounding incidents, facts (so called) being therein as plentiful as blackberries. Dr. Esdaile, formerly Presidency surgeon at Calcutta, hag already appeared as a writer u p on thi s enthralling subject—his ...

Published: Wednesday 04 August 1852
Newspaper: Sun (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 5463 | Page: 15 | Tags: none

Fr

... with startling reflections, and every chapter with astounding incidents, facts (so called) being therein as plentiful as blackberries. Dr. Esdaile, formerly Presidency surgeon at Calcutta, has already appeared 3 a writer upon this enthralling sub- ject—his ...

Published: Wednesday 04 August 1852
Newspaper: Sun (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3981 | Page: 11 | Tags: none

LITER UTIE BLEAK ROL/6'E. .No VI. By Charles Dicier to our h ins'atrient of Bleak House ~ er. eul)!Is!ael ii

... with startling reflections, and every chapter with astounding incidents, facts (so called) being therein as plentiful as blackberries. Dr. sdaile, formerly Presidency surgeon at Cdlcutte,bas already appeared as a writer upon this enthralling sub- JP'ct—his ...

Published: Wednesday 04 August 1852
Newspaper: Sun (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1860 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

Crown judge, thousands

... these, good plain, devotional music for the choir is one of the greatest. Organists abound, singers there are, plenty as blackberries, but really good music that inspires devotion, that is strictly ecclesiastical in its character, is rarely indeed to be ...

LORD DERBY AND HIS OPPONENTS

... when a new lease of power was required, and the same course pursued till the like event happened again. Promises thick blackberries in October, but performances tis scarce as the most corrupt bubble speculation has proved of modern times, have been paraded ...

Published: Saturday 14 August 1852
Newspaper: West Kent Guardian
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1602 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

LITERATURE

... each other by the receptacle, the expansion of which forms the the fleshy part of the fruit; while in the raspberry and the blackberry the receptacle is the white fleshy stalk which occupies the centre of the fruit ; and the pulpy por- tion consists of the ...

Published: Monday 16 August 1852
Newspaper: Morning Post
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 6472 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

THE TEMPLEMOYLE AGRICULTURAL TRAINING SCHOOL

... each other by the receptacle, the expansion of which forms the fleshy part of the fruit ; while in the raspberry and the blackberry the receptacle is the white fleshy stalk which occupies the centre of the fruit; and the pulpy portion consists of the carpels ...

Published: Wednesday 18 August 1852
Newspaper: Evening Times (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 4485 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

A YOUNG TRAVELLER'S AMERICAN TOUR

... roses, teeming with insects of every size and colour. We hardly moved a step without being caught by the broken branches of blackberry or raspberry-bushes, which hung or lay across the path, loaded with their delicious fruit. I am sure the lakes of red juice ...