Refine Search

DRAMA

... their mansger, tr. enter tainments are still marked by the same taste and enteyprise. Music-halls are now as plentiful as blackberries, both in town and country, nod the capital invested in them has reached an amount almost equal to that invested in the ...

Fine Arts

... remarkable for, the v truth of gray open-air effect. Mr. F. Walker is more a I favourably seen in his drawing (88), Blackberrying t ) (Mr. X'Clean's), than usual; the colouring is agreeable in E .the prevalence of the grey tone over the piesure; the ...

LITERATURE

... deprecates his own presumption in venturing to print a poem. The charge in this lament we cannot admit. Poets do not grow like blackberries in a hedge. They are rare in every age asd country, and the last forty years have been as prolific of the true genius as ...

Published: Sunday 03 February 1861
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1644 | Page: 5 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

Music

... hopes of the of hunter so brilliant. In the large spreading wood. e and covers of Graythwaite foxes are as plentiful as md blackberries, and in the plantations of the Heald for they are fairly swarming. That there are many and o r families of the vulpine ...

FINE ARTS

... its good painting. We noticed also a good study of an Italian woman though a very or model, by Madame de FeyL Miss mollae Blackberry Gatherers (204), Miss Brownlow's Farmer's Boy-Brittany, I and Miss Mutrie'a beautiful roses. are other pictures by ladies ...

FINE ARTS

... capital work. From Lord Northwick's collection, where it fefelled 52 guineas. 40 guineas (Pott). 81. P. F. Poole, R.A., 1 Blackberry Gatherers. Very richly coloured. A beautiful cabinet example. 44 guineas I (H83oPe. Muller, A Scene near Bristol.-A ...

THE WINTER EXHIBITIONS

... other pictures by lady artists in this gallery may be mentioned the flower studies of Mrs. Duffield and Mrs. Harrison. The blackberries and honeysuckles, the heaths and bilberries, of Mrs. Duffield, painted in the open air, have all the freshness of autumnal ...

GUSTAVE III. ET LA COUR DE FRANCE

... is a member of the paragraph on the intensity of the alliance between France and Sweden, blunders lie almost as thick as blackberries-uno avulso, non deficit aller. Between i631 and 1648 some half-dozen treaties relating to the German war were indeed made ...

LITERATURE

... I strew, The cheek of the peach 'noath siy gaze doth fiask, (Like a maiden's, in twilight's love-taught hush), And the blackberries gloom through dew. Ha I ha ! his laugh rings loud and clear, I'm older and sturdier now, Like a sturdy wight who loves ...

LITERATURE

... ezoommunicattoflh, asd rsuspensions, and threatening of the spirial rswrord twice sharpenedl, weres as plentiful as blackberries. But how werte the people gettinig on all this time I There were nO evil preachers of sedition in those days; there ...

THE HANDEL FESTIVAL

... deserves the patronage extended to him. MESSRS. SA&MURL BROTHERS' NEW MAP *F LosDoir.-Maps of London are as plentiful as blackberries, and if this was nothing more than a Map we should content ounselves with merely giving its title and stating who were ...

Published: Sunday 29 June 1862
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3312 | Page: 12 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... Hasler; 2nd, Chit- r tenden; collection fruit and flowers, lst, Hasler; e 2nd, -Mr. Perry. By J. Young, Esq.: quart of wild r blackberries, tittler. J. Martin. Esq. : twelvepota- toes, slt, Thomas; 2nd, Carr; collection cut flowers, 1st, Hasler; 2nd, Chittenden ...