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

- 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

GREECE

... excessive frequency that met with. All the sons of a Graf are Grafen from the day their birth- Barons are plentiful as blackberries, so that the diminution of the material and couventional influence of nobility goes in a sort of geometrical progression ...

Published: Monday 21 March 1853
Newspaper: Evening Mail
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 714 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

Lancaster and Carlisle

... instead of poverty would now have been the state of that Company; but instead of this, branches as numerous almost as blackberries on a bush, were pushed out into barren districts (as if to embrace all the land in the district, not caring what the population ...

Published: Saturday 12 March 1853
Newspaper: Herapath's Railway Journal
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 767 | Page: 18 | Tags: none

GRIMSY AND ITS IMPROVEMENT ACT

... effectually rectified until the town is supplied with water from a distant source. 'l'here are political reasons, plentiful as blackberries, why Mr. Heneage should go with Lord Yarborough, but even with him, too, there is a little bit of self. Mr. Heneage is ...

Published: Friday 04 March 1853
Newspaper: Hull Packet
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1088 | Page: 8 | Tags: News 

2 adortiMe S. Earl, shows us a country girl decked out with Nature's u v etoe r u her bonnet

... be likely to possess in a death-struggle so desperate. 00' J. E. Cobbett exhibits some extremely clever pictures. vie Blackberry Gatherers, is a fine specimen of hi s sty leroisg colouring is fresh and rich, without being gaudy; and the and finish ...

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 ...

The Norfolk Chronicle

... have been practised thereat, —the boast of Mr. Wilde that he had bought men the market place £30 a piece, as plentiful blackberries—the private meetings to ascertain what grounds there oxistcd for petitioning, and the probable, or intended effect of such ...

Published: Saturday 26 March 1853
Newspaper: Norfolk Chronicle
County: Norfolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 2204 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

FACTS AND SCRAPS—Original and Select

... in, no beds of water-cress, No woods to play the truant in when pedagogues oppress, No hedges and no gutters where the blackberries may bide, And wild roes-trees luxuriant trail in all their summer pride; No, none of these lI—I therefore feel to wish ...

Published: Sunday 06 March 1853
Newspaper: Weekly Dispatch (London)
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 2193 | Page: 10 | Tags: none