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FREEDOM OF ELECTION

... romance. Garlands of oelc and olive have lost their mar- ketable value; secluded groves are abandoned to whispering lovers and blackberry gatherers ; but we have our contests still-contests in which cities, and boroughs, and counties struggle for pre-eminence; ...

Published: Wednesday 01 July 1857
Newspaper: Belfast News-Letter
County: Antrim, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 2365 | Page: 2 | Tags: News 

AMERICAN DIPLOMAS—A HANDSOME FIX. Americas diplomas, purporting confer high degrees in rta. Laws, and Divinity, ..

... has the earth, this season, appeared fuller of promise. As indicative of early harvest the oats are ready the jar. and the blackberry bushes in full blossom—the latter being popu ar y regarded as most cheering omen. New potatoes are now daily in our vegetable ...

Published: Thursday 02 July 1857
Newspaper: Londonderry Standard
County: Londonderry, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 2598 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

CorresponTitiut

... deposited with us a number of documents bearing on Col. Sleigh's election—and which he informs us were gathered thick as blackberries' in the neighbourhood of the Fete—a selection from which will appear in our next. They certainly ,are of a startling nature ...

LOCAL INTELLIGENCE LEIGIITON BUZZARD WOOL FAIR

... Mr. Biddulph, banker 3 Mr. Theodore arris, 2 hanker; Mr. T. Bennett, of Wobnrn g Mr. W. Cooper Expricir.—There is o white blackberry deseribed | 3 3e.'if. Coopors Messrs. C. Eve, Newport; E. Lav ford, as heinz, when fully ripe, ofa light greenish brown ...

PITIFUL ARISTOCRACIES

... for their good taste. The honour proffered to them is not enviable in England where knights are almost **as plentiful as blackberries.’ Duriug the viceroyalty of the Duke of Rutland, who specially patronised systematic topers, we had ** a glue'* of knights ...

LOC AL & DISTRICT NEWS

... tben at Little Draught, in Mother Seller Channel, downward further at Cover Point, near the Lime Kiln Channel, and then at Blackberry Point, and the mod in tbe Channel, then at tbe mouth of the Lime Kiln Channel, and all over the harbour. They c*tch mullet ...

Published: Saturday 18 July 1857
Newspaper: Hampshire Advertiser
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 17177 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

WANDERINGS IN NORTHUMBERLAND

... wintergreen, Tricntalis euroimea, in some places quite whitening the ground, much as daisies in May. There are also plenty of blackberries, red whortle berries, and crowberries ; and Rhododendrons abound apparently as much home as among the Himalayas n««T returmi) ...

Published: Saturday 18 July 1857
Newspaper: Newcastle Journal
County: Northumberland, England
Type: Article | Words: 2030 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

New Btorv by Anna Lisle. —In the Press, One Vol., Poet Bvo. ALMOST; OR, CROOKED WAYS. By ANNA LISLE, Author

... young people published. Stories, prico Id. each.—Story of a Daisy—Rover and his Friends—Little Frank—Little Fortune Seekers —Blackberry Gathering—Fir Tree's Story—Child's Search for Fairies— Fisherman's Children—Little Peepy—Rabbits and Peewits- Alice and ...

Published: Saturday 18 July 1857
Newspaper: London City Press
County: London, England
Type: Advertisement | Words: 1505 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

E DURHAM CHRONICLE, FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1857. The Rev. C. Hey wood gave a lecture, descriptive of. Mr Digby ..

... lugubrious aspect, and the j allegorical figures of Fame, History, Prudence, Victory, Peace, and Plenty, are as thick us blackberries. The foreign competitors are encouraged by the fact that two of the prizes for the public offices were carried off by Frenchmen ...

Published: Friday 24 July 1857
Newspaper: Durham Chronicle
County: Durham, England
Type: Article | Words: 11733 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

BEVERLEY TOWN COUNCIL

... denial could Uirne out by Mr. Smith, the landlord, mid others. 11.-had he. li told that tin charge* against him were thick blackberries tic-, and wi'heil to know those charges were. In conclusion. Mr. Hold, n said tie was one maxim whieh u.lhere.l to, and ...

Published: Saturday 25 July 1857
Newspaper: Beverley Guardian
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2768 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

accustomed to ascribe all sorts of acts to the fabled

... or both, are bad, the task of tracing them to their origin is not difficult. Examples have recently been plentiful as blackberries ia autumn. Everybody sees why it was that Sir John Dean Paul, and Robson, and Redpath, and Palmer committed acts which ...

Published: Saturday 25 July 1857
Newspaper: Star of Gwent
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1808 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

THE OBSERVER AND STANDARD, Saturday, July 25, 1857

... in the proposed sculpture, while emblematical figures, as Peace, Plenty, Fame, History, War, and the like, are plentiful blackberries, About £20,000 are disposable for the proposed tomb (to be erected in St. Paul’s), and £3,000 will probably be given away ...

Published: Saturday 25 July 1857
Newspaper: Rochdale Observer
County: Lancashire, England
Type: | Words: 2560 | Page: 2 | Tags: none