BLACK NORMANDY OATS

... To the poor in the vicinity of Newcastle it is of great importance, many of whom go a great number of miles to gather blackberries, while they are in season, and carry them from ten to twenty miles to Newcastle, Shields, and Sunderland, where they sometimes ...

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

THE INCO.VE TAX

... that Lord Aberdeen shell not be idle for want of deputations, and that reasons for cxemp. lions will be as plentiful as blackberries in October. We are still inclined to think that the present mode of charging the duty is not susceptible of much practical ...

Published: Friday 21 January 1853
Newspaper: Nottingham Journal
County: Nottinghamshire, England
Type: | Words: 1331 | Page: 5 | 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

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

WAKEFIELD JOURNAL AND EXAMINEII, JANUARY 15, 1,53

... in quick succession, from the direction where, on the followinz day, the body was discovered by some children gathering blackberries. About 4 o'clock —about half an hour after the murder is supposed to have been committed—the prisoner entered the Royal ...

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

RURAL AFFAIRS

... supply arise. I passed through one of our fields, last week, in which was flock of turkeys : these were occupied in picking blackberries from the hedge; and they had cleared otf all within their reach, determined to help them to some of the higher boughs ; ...

Published: Saturday 15 January 1853
Newspaper: Armagh Guardian
County: Armagh, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 7005 | Page: 3 | Tags: none