Refine Search

JUSTICE TO IRELAND. GOOD reasons against reform are always, as Falstaff says, as thick as blackberries. In ..

... JUSTICE TO IRELAND. GOOD reasons against reform are always, as Falstaff says, as thick as blackberries. In stormy, discontented times, we must concede nothing to the threats of agitators; when all is quiet and prosperous, then it is Leave well alone ...

The Ovbbtov Stasis

... Sfkuthoisi Stakm. Mr W. Long's bk Louisa beat *Mr H. F.irnell*e f d Firebrand Mr Bait's b Blackberry Mr Tweed’s w d Telegraph Mr W. Long'* Louisa beat Mr Bait's Blackberry, and won the stakes. Fees, by Flfer out Flora Lswajfga. by Labtache—Duchess Pig Le>iuire ...

THE NORTH WARWICKSHIRE

... them hardly known, except in their of-the-way locality, is good. Racehorses, and winner auseway, events, are plentiful as blackberries; and those with “ tin” have but to pay their money, and e their choic ednesday “there never were such times as these,’’ ...

TO OUR SUBSCRIBERS

... seldom agree. Science, in the hands of one man, becomes prejudice in the hands of another. Medical theories are numerous as blackberries. What one man tells you is certain death, another will tell you is a certain means of cure. We need hardly cite cases of ...

Published: Saturday 02 February 1856
Newspaper: Weekly Chronicle (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1240 | Page: 21 | Tags: none

THE MORNING ADVERTISER, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1856

... fact people; the soil i* fertile, the is green, the air is moist, and what would be exotics with us are there ns thick ns blackberries. For instance, it appears that Chief Justice Lefkot was called to the bar in 171*7, and is now in his eighty-second year ...

Published: Friday 08 February 1856
Newspaper: Morning Advertiser
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 5436 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE POLITICAL EXAMINER

... and spirit-rapping, for if he had been born two or three centuries ago, when witches and wizards were as plentiful as blackberries, he would in- 1 evitably have been burnt for proficiency in the black art. Invited to consider the terms of a Government ...

Published: Saturday 23 February 1856
Newspaper: The Examiner
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 11611 | Page: 4 | Tags: News