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YORK.-Dec, 21

... , that, on Friday, the ->rd of September last, as two lilt! boys, named Geo. lienton and George Dixon, were gathering blackberries, about o'clock at night, a field called Applevard'sfields, they found man laid partly his face the hedge-bottom, apparently ...

Published: Saturday 01 January 1853
Newspaper: Kendal Mercury
County: Westmorland, England
Type: Article | Words: 3746 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

METROPOLITAN GOSSIP

... grapes are never sour; cherries ripe at Christmas, are only regarded as an old song; peaches in January are plentiful as blackberries in September; mushrooms are the pleasantest of fungi while only toadstools everywhere else; lamb is passed over long before ...

Published: Monday 17 January 1853
Newspaper: Liverpool Albion
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 4712 | Page: 24 | Tags: none

THE NEW REFORM BILL

... grapes are never sour; cherries ripe at Christmas, are only regarded as an old song; peaches in January are plentiful as blackberries in September; mushrooms are the pleasantest of fungi while only toadstools everywhere else; lamb is passed over long before ...

Published: Monday 17 January 1853
Newspaper: Liverpool Albion
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 6033 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

MET.ROPOLI TAN GOSSIP

... grapes are never sour; cherries ripe at Christmas, are only regarded as an old song; peaches in January are plentiful as blackberries in September; mushrooms are the pleasantest of fungi while only toadstools everywhere else; lamb is passed over long before ...

Published: Monday 17 January 1853
Newspaper: Liverpool Albion
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 4656 | Page: 16 | Tags: none

THE LIVERPOOL STANDARD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1

... struggle to come out here, and so they ought too, because there is room enough for all. Man ! money here is as plentiful as blackberries on the barrick hills in harvest time. No grinding of soul and body for a scanty subsistence ! Let artisans of all classes ...

STOREKEEPING AT BENDIGO DIGGINGS

... struggle to come out here; and so they ought, too, because there is room enough for all. Man money here is as plentiful as blackberries on the barrack hills in harvest time. No grinding soul and body for a scanty subsistence ! Let artisans of all classes ...

Published: Saturday 05 February 1853
Newspaper: Westmorland Gazette
County: Westmorland, England
Type: Article | Words: 566 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

ixailiDai) tntelliaeiUE

... struggle to come out here; and so they ought, too, because there is room enough for all. Man! money here is aa plentiful as blackberries on the barrack hill- in harvest time. No grinding of soul and body for m scanty subsistence ! Let artisans of all classes ...

Published: Wednesday 09 February 1853
Newspaper: Blackburn Standard
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1395 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

- i ♦* 1 v '

... feet, nbamrmurless school, in their leafy retreat, bird* ait listening the drops ronnd them beat; crouches close to the blackberry wall. 11l iwtl'ows slone take the storm their wing, the tree-kheltered lsbourers, sing, pebbles the breaks the face of the ...

Published: Saturday 19 March 1853
Newspaper: Kendal Mercury
County: Westmorland, England
Type: Miscellaneous | Words: 343 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

jfoxciQn ano Colonial

... frequency that it is met. with. All the sons of a Graf are Grafen from the day of their birth, Barons are as plentiful as blackberries, so that the diminution of tbe ma- terial and conventional influence of nobility goes on in a sort of geometrical r>rorre ...

Published: Saturday 26 March 1853
Newspaper: Lancaster Gazette
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2344 | Page: 2 | Tags: none