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LONDON CORRESPONDENCE

... genuine wit, and in which the actors are expected behave as if they had jnst escaped from lunatic asylum, are as plenty blackberries. Mr. Byron will undertake to burlesque anything: Mr. Tom Taylor will defy any French author to write a piece incapable ...

Published: Friday 25 December 1863
Newspaper: Newry Telegraph
County: Down, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 2135 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

NEW ZEALAND

... fact that ripe blackberries arc now frequently to found in the hedge-row* in this part of Devonshire and the borders of Somerset. the last day of tho old year, youth called Nelder, of this town, picked a very fine bunch of ripe blackberries on Exelcrhiir; ...

Athen

... \ckukkhiks Jaxuaiiv.— It a remarkable tact Kin John and liis unhappy nephew, than that that the frost Saturday last ripe blackberries Henry the Sixth’s judges when required the peers, W ere frequently be found the hedge-rows in tins at the imminent risk ...

Published: Saturday 16 January 1864
Newspaper: Downpatrick Recorder
County: Down, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 3639 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE NEWRY & DUNDALK EXAMINER

... with black lace. The front has half wreath of brown heath, and velvet leaves ; in the inside, the same flowers, mixed with blackberries. Blonde cap and green satin strings. A felt-coloured velvet bonnet had the curtain of blue velvet and white lace ; a torsade ...

HOLY EVE A BTO K Y

... interest, and advised him to make a venture to England, while his figure was good, and where rich wives were as plenty as 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 home ...

A working man on reform

... that Paddy may drink the more freely. 11 in | Bat all the while that the French drinks, nick- Hill | named wines, which blackberries would repu- 100 diate as their juice, the English ales, and the stitution we enjoy, w mouthed aiter for place. the time ...

Published: Tuesday 07 June 1864
Newspaper: Newry Telegraph
County: Down, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 2152 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

TUB STATK CHURCH IN IRELAND

... upon kites, marbles, and play time. At ten. the , boy wishes to leave school, and have nothing to but go bird-nesting and blackberry hunting. At fifteen, he wants a beard, a watch, and a pair of boots. At twenty, he wishes to cut a figure and rides horses ...

WITCHCRAFT

... classed in quite another category—the « good people/’ and in the old Irish chronicles miracles and signs are scattered thick blackberries. None bat « virgin, for instance, could use the magic circle St. Golnaan St. Oulhbert’s zone had the power of curing numerous ...

DROGHEDA FEBRUARY FAIR

... ing sloe, High the mountain the bilberry springeth, Cranberries creep 'mid the moss of the moor, Over the high-crag the blackberry swingeth, Down in the valley it scatters its store. Beautiful wild fruits! when ling’ring affection Seeks the memorials ...

A MOUNTAIN OF SILVER

... the taste of Still the snake ba may be overdone, and the market glutted. The lot above quoted was sent in by a SouthJersey blackberry picker, and realised higher prices than a similar lot last year—probably owing to the style in which they were put up more ...

Published: Saturday 05 August 1865
Newspaper: Newry Telegraph
County: Down, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1951 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

SMITH FIELD MARKETS

... his missing nephew. Pali MaU zette. Stino of a Wasp from Eating Blackberries.—The Dorset Express says that few days since as a journeyman butcher named Dufall was gathering blackberries in the neighbourhood of Lewell, he espied a tempting looking one ...

Tilt: CHILD AND THE FLOWERS

... among the brown leaves of the hedges; lovely mists full and vanish suddvulv, revealing bright and sweet autumnal si-hts • 'blackberries, stacks of corn, brown leaves crisping upon the turf, great peers hanging sweetening in the sun over the cottage Imuds ...