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EMMA'S BLACKBERRYING

... EMMA'S BLACKBERRYING. 0,411.'4r‘,.a0,0r WIIAT a mellow, golden Aucust day it was! dust , such a one as makes us involuntarily step aside from crushing the worm in our path—life, worm-life is so beautiful! Just such a day as geese • to have wandered away ...

OF CHILDHOOD. The calmly o'er the rugged steep The p i thongh it were !yin whop; The whispering night-mode blow

... blamer that rev ta OIT _ sweet. Awl We lunged for the that ahead aer cup lb. dtgeilied title of being green up. What r .' blackberry-harm we Si Iris ma leas milting- ! Whit magas we bad le hay! oar lives as brigla is the leas ! welt Out el *Mead de- P• ...

Published: Saturday 24 October 1874
Newspaper: Clare Freeman and Ennis Gazette
County: Clare, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 195 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

AMERICAN INIZLLIGKNCIL

... tomatoes, mushrooms, egg-plant, and mores of other vegetables are cultivated and thrive well. Strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, gotmeberries, whortle berries, currants, and other berries nourish. There is scarcely a day in the year when strawberries ...

Published: Wednesday 22 December 1875
Newspaper: Clare Freeman and Ennis Gazette
County: Clare, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 604 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

A GRIM HOUSE

... but then it was in the old days of a flippant House of Commons led by a flippant leader, when jokes were as plenty as blackberries, and the First Ministerof the Crown regarded the first question of the day chiefly as a joke. Bartow we have got an earnest—may ...

3grialtare. WHAT IS A SWEET POTATOE (From the /rig Farmer)

... start from the exile of little scales, and they are with. out order. They are like the beds on the roots of Osage. orange, blackberry, dsc, by which these plants are freely propagated by root cuttiugs. It is to me that a sweet is • true root, but one that ...

Published: Saturday 01 March 1879
Newspaper: Clare Freeman and Ennis Gazette
County: Clare, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 744 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

irt _ to boy some one of the neighbouring cities by reason of the Inferiority of goods at home. fhe

... intelligent, smartly dressed flazen-baired, agreeable.looking young woman, who who might have seen her four and twentieth blackberry @sewn, after raising her veil and removing her glove from h. r Lilly white hand, was solemnly sworn to tell the truth, ...

Gaudin

... for some to eat with his blackberries. She refused. He appeared resigned, but added, gravely. 'You know, mamma, what ' roand the corner 1 happened . was a little boy, and his mother would not him any sugar on his blackberries, and---' *And ? And next ...

Published: Saturday 11 November 1876
Newspaper: Clare Freeman and Ennis Gazette
County: Clare, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1557 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

AND oTHER TALES &c.,

... by its broad black ribbon, that all the family—eers ants inclusive—bad gone some half-a-dozen miles out of the place on a blackberry excursion, and had installed him. —who couldn't possibly be coaxed to accompany them —as housekeeper. had run away from ...

imaplos of peopsdiek t. bs ••111. We elm t • giaje writing op 91111)ftembi sad meweri.g let • tom

... orriag to befog and of areal derabiThy W•IJ fruits of the blateklorry and durforry—seatetfieg Irk* bat was 6 Isror thas .r blackberry—shich is 6s sassoer form the Urged portios of food skis set in wok ; chorrios, sad erspeo, s e. the most of all, sad n small ...

Published: Saturday 06 July 1872
Newspaper: Clare Freeman and Ennis Gazette
County: Clare, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 739 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

D KILR ON THE RIGHT TRACK

... being of this class spoken of called Aim i.e. Hobgoblin, Sprite, or Bugbear, part of whose work it is to destroy all the blackberries on November Eve, and render them unlit for use; and also to take away on that night, those who may have been born upon ...

GAZETTE

... behaviour towards Norry especially in consideration of Norry hay. hog enjoyed the privilege of disporting her wavy curls many blackberry seasons before Peggy turned op her beck hair—and as crusted Port is cherished for its age—so in like manner their worships ...

THE IRISH GUIDE'S STORY

... you see the little marks like goose-tracks? Those are witches' footsteps. The witches and the fairies were plenty here as blackberries, and I know a man who had friends amongst them once. His name is Tom Nolan, aid today he lives a rich man in America; but ...