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Ireland

Place

Newry, Down, Northern Ireland

Access Type

7

Type

7

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THE DESERTED FARM

... rough, burly kiss; and then deep in the valley, and skirting the copse, and across the common on which the furze and dwarf blackberry bush flourished. Bob led the way, bent upon the destruction of tho Squire's unsuspecting pheasants. Now they entered a thick ...

METROPOLITAN GOSSIP,

... progressively cooling towards him. There are reasons for this, plentiful .as blackberrieswhen in season; and the time the blackberry season | comes round perhaps this popular black-balling of the j groat little apostle of the ballot may explained. Lord ...

HOLY EV E

... long interest, and advised Jam to make venture to England, while his figure was good, and where rich wives were plenty blackberries. A season or two in London,” argued Andy, will make you the world’s wonder of a fine fellow, and then when you come homo ...

sir —Short stay was amoncst o«, Ir,.p. w. l.».« withoot eirTMMo, the

... wee-wee lum l innet. the Parson, grumble* tiona. Rtcent «trc»umUnoe* seem to promise that woman finished her bouny bunch blackberries, with- the Mayor, grumbles the Chairman Quarter this will not b« task of much time or difficulty, out farther mterrupiiou ...

Published: Thursday 16 September 1858
Newspaper: Newry Telegraph
County: Down, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 5828 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

A L A R K

... sisters were astir in their best bibs and tuckers, and he finished his Mass, as the wee-wee woman finished her bonny bunch of blackberries, without further interruption. Serious Accident on the Derry and Enniskillen Railway.—On Tuesday morning an accident of ...

ENGLAND

... appears that, on Sunday, party of lads from the neighbourhood of Richmond-hi 11, Leeds, went out into the country to gather blackberries. They were att .-acted by dark purple fruit, and asked a farmer what was ? His reply was, that it was the mulberry, and ...

ttatnrt. SKLBCTFC Pi) RT. OSCE UPON A TIME- I m, « plMsant time A hmmws l«r»g asp; The pleeeent’st I’ve

... balmily the dew. The mist and evening b'Z® (Unlike this cold grey rime), Seem’d woven warm golden When was in my prime. And blackberries-—so mawkish now— Were Snely flavored then ; And not*—such reddening clusters ripe I ne’er shall pull again. JJor ptpswberrie* ...

Published: Saturday 09 October 1858
Newspaper: Newry Telegraph
County: Down, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 188 | Page: 4 | Tags: none