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TOO EARLY SCHOOL TASKS DISCOMMENDED.—THE MONTHS.-- WILD SPORTS.—ANECDOTES

... blackthorn, and elder berries, which furnish the farmer with a cordial cup on his return from market on a winter's eve, and blackberries reminding us of the babes in the wood, and a host of boyhood's associations. The hedgerows are also brightened with a profusion ...

AN IMPORTANT DISCOVERY

... length, swarming with fish. have been two or three tunes becalmed there, ami caught cod big as donkeys and as plenty as blackberries. * U]Km that information Captain Rhodes acted. He had often thought of trying it, but it is a lonely place to alone, St ...

Published: Saturday 03 August 1861
Newspaper: Bury Free Press
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 550 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

IMPORTANT DISCOVERY,

... length, swarming with fish. 1 have been two or three times becalmed there, and caught cod big as donkeys and as plenty blackberries.” Upon that information Capt. Rhodes acted. He had often thought of trying it. but it is a lonely P‘ ac ® go alone, St ...

Published: Saturday 03 August 1861
Newspaper: Suffolk Chronicle
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 596 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

POETRY. A House is good, and a Home ie good. SONG FOB THE GBUMULEBS AND GBOWLSBB. A house is good,

... arbours good to talk in; apple is good, aud pear is good, is pulpy cherry; piue aud peach, too, are also good, And so is wild blackberry ; So with sun so good, aud with air so good, We’ll brave the roughest weather ; And with dowers so good, and with fruits ...

Published: Saturday 18 May 1861
Newspaper: Suffolk Chronicle
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 1024 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

MURDER AT CHICHESTER

... some years ago.” Witness also asked him if was tired, and he said, Yes, I was walking about the fields yesterday, picking blackberries. I slept a wood near on Wednesday night.” He also said that left the barracks about ten o’clock on Tuesday evening, and ...

Published: Saturday 26 October 1861
Newspaper: Bury Free Press
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 1134 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

NARRATIVE OF AN ADVENTURE AT SEA.—GARDENING- GOSSIP. DOMESTIC LIFE OF A LONDON PHYSICIAN

... yet bare, while the hedges are glittering with berries of various colours—the red tips of the rose, the deep purple of the blackberry, the fruit of the hawthorn, the scarlet and green berries of the nightshade, while the holly and ivy begin to put brighter ...

DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE. Before leaving Holyhead the afternoon of Friday, the ;M)lh ult.« the Prince Conwirt and ..

... to the North Sea, he did not know , where to catch cod, for they might caught at Kockall “as big as donkeys and plenty blackberries Accordingly Capt. Rhodes sailed, in company with I another smack, the 2nd July, for Rockall. an isolated group of rocks ...

Published: Tuesday 10 September 1861
Newspaper: Bury and Norwich Post
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 2197 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

A ROLAND FOR AN OLIVER!

... empty. Decidedly the vein has been against him all day-*the album is lost—what pity—there was one clump of frost bitten black-berries with the spider’s web, which could have been effective with the sunbeams glittering thr ...

Published: Saturday 26 January 1861
Newspaper: Bury Free Press
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 2343 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

U ARRIAOES

... against their dress, or the fear of upsetting a basket of eggs down the last new satin, or the juice trom pailsfull ox blackberries smeared over your newly-painted shop fiont; we waul a Corn Exchange whore there is plenty of room, that business may be ...

Published: Saturday 16 March 1861
Newspaper: Bury Free Press
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 2730 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

Miscellaneous

... arriage.— ln by-gone years, befori* the gold-fields were overrun by the rush of emigrants, and when gold-holes were as blackberries, a party of two or three men having worked out a good claim, which had yielded, say 500/. man, would forward their gold ...

Published: Saturday 14 September 1861
Newspaper: Bury Free Press
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 3280 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

THE BURY FREE PRESS

... stopping gap; aftei he had discovered himself them with his men. they dropped th? sticks and ran away.—Green said she took a blackberry oil'the hedge, and that was all she took ; she never touched stick.—ln their behalf they called a woman who said she passed ...

Published: Saturday 05 October 1861
Newspaper: Bury Free Press
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 3052 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

THE BURY FREE PRESS

... was that master, not mistress.—“ Modern Englishwomen” in the London Rcvicv. Coal. —ln Lancashire, coal trucks are thick blackberries. Coal—coal-coal meets tho eye wherever the eye peeps -bla/.ing away at the pit’s mouth, half-a tou time, say a ton while ...

Published: Saturday 09 March 1861
Newspaper: Bury Free Press
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 3467 | Page: 4 | Tags: none