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EXHIBITION OF DRAWINGS AT THE LEEDS SCHOOL OF ART

... Ikettlewell, also' possess considem-able merit. Two landscape studies by N-isa Mar- galet Selby ; drawings of bratiles and blackberries by C. Gilbert and T. Al. Townsley and of a thistle leaf, by W. CIaister, are well execated, and carefully finished. Severat ...

IPSWICH SCHOOL OF ART

... piece which is handled prettily and with much delicacy and care. Miss C. Josselyn, for a study in chalk from the fiat, a blackberry stem and fruit; the foliage is very softly shaded out. the next two medals are given to MlissNotcutt and Mrs. R. Noy, for ...

LITERATURE

... to a clever writer's ordinary work. It is true that autobibgraphies of horses, dogs, Cats, and flies are i as plenty as blackberries and as old as the hills, in aliterary sense.; but though Mr. Bennett adopts the same style with his loquacious hero, the ...

Published: Sunday 14 December 1862
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1565 | Page: 6 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

A TOUR TO GUERNSEY AND THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... sea; but, though iso-I lated, the gardeners are well defended; each man isa soldier, and batteries are as plentiful as blackberries. Au I Bud how loyal are these gardeners; in each drop of their blood is refleeted the image of our good and gracious Queen ...

THE ROYAL SCOTTISH ACADEMY EXHIBITION

... ment about the picture to redeem these defects. a- The children have not been wandering through is the wood, aad eating blackberries ; but have hail of their hair combed within the last half -hour, if in children's heads are what we know them to be. is ...

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 

Literature

... We have the green and ripe Goosborry, red and white Currant, Elderberry, Quince, Cherry, Mulberry, Sloe, Orleans Pluni, Blackberry, Strawberry, Barberry, Raspberry, Primrose, Cowslip, Beetroot, Parsnip, Turnip, and many others. The most extraordinary ...

PICTURES OF SLAVERY IN THE SOUTHERN STATES

... flirters, and a howling alley and shuffle hoard wihcoaches and' trotting waggons at the stable ; re poor women pickin~g blackberries, poor men bring- ro ing fowls, school girls studiously climbing romantic hi rocks, anid otherwise making tlemsclves as ...

THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... its anti ladies, troetid its lesel I' be quite a t ri ettopit of situ i btet Pt taken witit all its ?? accesenriss-tite blackberries drooping wi dotvet, rsttgh usiettetres sf greets frteit attd blooone, tite lit uctetterod ctsk leases and eprays of ivy ...

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 ...