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HORNINGSHAM

... go out close to our and gather two busbed ina half-hour. We have the hazel nut and a nut not uslike English wallnut, and blackberries three times as larse as yo & them—they make first-rate preserves. Father planted cucuni® mmmxnumy.mmnmmcmm;nnoun; eight ...

Published: Tuesday 18 January 1853
Newspaper: Wiltshire County Mirror
County: Wiltshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 854 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

STOREKEEPING AT BENDIGO DIGGINGS

... struggle to come out here; and they ought, too, because there is room enouuh for all. Man! money here is as plentiful as blackberries on the barrack hills in harvest time. grinding of soul and body for scanty subsistence ! Let artisans of all classes come ...

Published: Thursday 03 February 1853
Newspaper: Cheltenham Chronicle
County: Gloucestershire, England
Type: Article | Words: 548 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

STOREKEEPING AT BEMDIGO DIGGINGS

... st: t that every to ta the country w we and so they ought too, because there is room Man! money here is as plentiful as blackberries enough for Sa thos barrack Kills in harvest time. No grinding of soul and for a subsistence ; t artisans of all classes ...

Published: Saturday 05 February 1853
Newspaper: Gloucester Journal
County: Gloucestershire, England
Type: Article | Words: 441 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

Importance of Town Drainage.—lt is impossible to over-estimate the importance to community of baring the soil ..

... 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,of soul and body for a 6canty subsistence. Let artisans of all classes ...

Published: Saturday 05 February 1853
Newspaper: Salisbury and Winchester Journal
County: Wiltshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2095 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

wet deep. out of which he . gold! I know some' claims wards of 100 lb. weight in a fewdayi.mid

... struggle to come out here; and . so they oug4t, too, because there is room enough for all. M in! money here is as plentiful as blackberries on the barrack bills in harvest time. No grinding of soul and body for a scanty subsistence! Lot artisans of all classes ...

THRIFT AND MANAGEMENT FOR THE POOR

... little washing, charing, or weeding, not to speak of the more laborious field-work, for the mother; and cowslip, elder, blackberry, and mushroom picking, in their several seasons, for the children; by all which methods various small sums are obtained ...

Published: Saturday 26 February 1853
Newspaper: Salisbury and Winchester Journal
County: Wiltshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1776 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

RE V 1 EW S

... several good woodcuts are given of the rious inembers of this family, from the beautiful Rusa Centifolia, down to the humble blackberry. * Groups from the British Exodus” is a lively’ entertaining sketch ; anc *The Dead Bridal ” is the commencement of a Venet ...

Published: Thursday 17 March 1853
Newspaper: Wiltshire Independent
County: Wiltshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 305 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

-n ikCtVl SI' EASTER of peace spring the reprieved with fragrance strife man in roan’s and that of fruitful life

... The writer says I would advise but hard working labourers and mechanics to come this colony Gold is not picked up like blackberries as many imagine in England but must be worked hard for There are many hundreds on diggings who never did day’s work in ...

poet•o Corner. TO A FRIEND DRINKING THE CHELTENHAM WATERS. UrWt Foram mbar. Reri• St raises pest country moos.. ..

... through its delightful Wean shades, plucking oft the tempting as they hung peurlaat arid low from thy teeming boughs, or the blackberry and dewberry from the network of Moms which protected them, until, replete in our pvekets and satiate our stomach, we have ...

Vcruu

... morning mut and evening base (Unlike this cold gray rime), &teed woven warm of golden air— When I was in my prune. And blackberries—so mawkish now— Were finely devoured then ; And nuts—sueh reddening clusters ripe I ne'er shall pull again': Nor strawberries ...

To the Editor of the W. k G. Standard and Express

... his parishioners; then we have national anal other schools; baptist, and independent chapels, with preachers plentiful as blackberries, as well as the champion of teetotalism; with Antinomians, Unitarians, Weelevans. Primitive Methodists, Ranters, Catholic ...