THE LONDON THEATRES

... Evans). He has a daughter Evelina (Miss Graham), adored by the bashful Toby. Mr. Pan- technicon Pantile (Mr. Andrews), and Blackberry Thiltletop, a Yorkshire farmer (Mr. Moreland); are invited to dinner by Brace- button. Toby makes his way to the banquet ...

Published: Sunday 14 October 1866
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 4120 | Page: 10 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

FINE ARTS

... in an rndian China jar, ,wiith a basket of red and white currants; (288) Quinces a and Plums, with a bunch or two of blackberries and some wild hips, is a wonderful fea of truthful colouring. The exhibition will be foamd an interesting one, though it ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... wreaths of spring flowers, of ivy, passion- flower, May, convolvulus, apple-blossom, wheat and oat, with poppy, harebell and blackberry, &c., of jasmine and of lily and of rose, look as if artist and engraver had bent with unflagging delight, refreshing and ...

LITERATURE

... porpeet, gelnillte st'utte. 'I'iitis 1, hiewrreC, ?? muds virtue in cii ?? Imperfect copies an,~ itcma ly as plciurty us blackberries, hot we tie icot believe ti'tt tlutre. are abhove a dozen iabsolutoly perfect omies known to Ttua Tijunr WINiDS.-Wc re ...

FINE ARTS INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION AT IPSWICH

... Smvthe's picture Mr. Wnr. Cuthbert, for three paintings, ¢Old Stokse Church, PlFayed Rabbit,'and Honeysucklec and Blackberry; Mfr. T. Smith, sketch Of, Soothwcld Breakwater; Mrs. Noy, groups of-flowers, n' 4Por~trait of B. DisraelIg °and ...

LITERATURE

... thought by messy persons to be far better flavoured in the wild state. Tlse raspberry is certainly not an improvement upon the blackberry. The gigantic rhubarb is tasteless beside Use small English variety. All our vegetable produce grown around London is known ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... apples and pears of small size, such as still grow in the Swiss forests, stones of the wild plum, seeds of the raspberry and blackberry, and beech-nuts, also occur in the mud, and hazel-nuts in great plenty. Near Merges, on the Lake of Geneva, a settlement ...

LITERATURE

... land with their straggling beauty, shrouded the grassy borders of the pastures with catkinned hazeis, an( tossed their long blackberry branches on the corn-fields. Perhaps they were white with May, or starred with pale pink dog- roses; perhaps the urchins ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... no lemons, cherries, or currants raised at Fuhchau, and no berries of any kind, as strawberry, gooseberry, whortleberry, blackberry, raspberry, &c. The pine-apple, plantain, cocoa-nut, mango, and a fine variety of pumelo, are brought from Formosa or Amoy ...

LITERATURE

... we 'wound slowly arid a painfully Up the green shady roaid, thanskful that it was A E elnshdy, that there were luts of blackberries, and one - flower, a sort of eamupion, quite nowv to me-which is ) saying a good deal for its rarity-wa rouse upon a priasi- ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... really does not afford us the means of gratifying their desire. Mawkishness pervades its pages, and mistakes are plenty as blackberries. Such works, having to claims to literary merit, are only to be classed among trade specu- lations. Queen Hortense has ...

PROVINCIAL THEATRICALS

... week, riter a e vrpepru eon AL R.ESCO 8om~esmeoti appear to be the rage just now, Cricket Clubs ace as plentifli ye blackberries. Every Saturday seen three or fear matehes played, and the dieplay of erioboting unmentionabieso and loot cas(wt wells ...

Published: Sunday 07 August 1864
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 14133 | Page: 12 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture