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long engagements, (Cmlum.) Marriage, with all its trials and cam. is after all a basis and starting-point. If ..

... proud having had the good fortune win heart. He does not know that hearts are cheap commodities which may gathered like blackberries, or that the fair one would have tied herself readily any one who exhibited sufficient docility go through tbe dread trial ...

Published: Saturday 11 June 1870
Newspaper: Chepstow Weekly Advertiser
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1961 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

CARDIFF

... exhibits a series of sculpture pieces, illustrating the British legend Corineus and Goemagot. Another Academy sculpture is Blackberry Picking, sent by Mr. E. B. Stephens. The First Lord of the Treasury has sent a portrait of John, Earl Bate, painted by ...

Published: Saturday 20 August 1870
Newspaper: Monmouthshire Merlin
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1639 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE PONT YP(>OL F&EE PRESS

... will find that the simplest pleavnres generally yield the moot abiding gratification. Try the experiment going to pick blackberries, taking with you all your little troop, and if you don’t afterwords confess that yon hove in that occupation spent few ...

Published: Saturday 10 September 1870
Newspaper: Pontypool Free Press
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 4340 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

man

... planted something akin to despair. If ° TV only find a Oambetta for the military dilficulll . men are as plentiful as blackberries, the tobaen t). is being replaced by the chassepot or snider , basis of a grand army of three million of braver exists ...

Published: Saturday 15 October 1870
Newspaper: Monmouthshire Merlin
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 2467 | Page: 10 | Tags: none

AN EVENTFUL CAREER

... military phenomenon who shot Prussians like sparrows, and to whom the helmets of I his dead enemies were as plentiful as blackberries—should now turn out to have been nothing but Prussian spy, must go far towards exhausting the land of Parisian cre- I dullty ...

Published: Saturday 21 January 1871
Newspaper: Monmouthshire Beacon
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 717 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

SATUBDAY, SEPT. 2,1871,

... feet in depth- The spot now exceedingly rich fa flowers and berriee, and the Uttle girl pointing a tempting cluster of blackberries the tried to reach them and fell over the cliff. Fortunately her fall wae broken by elder tree, where she wsa suspended ...

Published: Saturday 02 September 1871
Newspaper: Pontypool Free Press
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 3622 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

gin awing gilltgitam. SEPTEMBER 19, 1571.. NOTES AND COMMENTS

... class troubling Mr Thos. Baker. In the months of September and October country youths and wayfarers have a penchant for and blackberries. Wilcriok woods produce both these articles, and hence oow and then a traverser is found on the pet preserve, and is often ...

Published: Tuesday 19 September 1871
Newspaper: South Wales Daily Telegram
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 442 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

ilturport folict Ontelligract. DIVISIONAL PETTY SESSIONS

... on the Newport side. Neither of them had a bundle then. About half•psat three he saw them near the cottage, pick. ins blackberries, and they had a large bundle then. He again saw them at Roath at six o'clock. The woman was carrying the bundle then. By ...

Published: Saturday 04 November 1871
Newspaper: Star of Gwent
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1604 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

WIT AND HIIMOIIII. (From lbech). Woman is at the heart of man from birth to mae- AND Aarenes.—Emlly the Eldere—l

... coming back again. Two gentlemen paring • blackberry bush when the fruit was unripe, one said it was ridiculous to call them black berries, when they were red. Don't you know, said his friend, that blackberries are always red when they are green. An ...

Published: Saturday 25 November 1871
Newspaper: Star of Gwent
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 3215 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE PONTYPOOL FREE PRESS

... animal ongjn of the whole vast mass of limestone. Encrinites, corals, bivalve and nautilus-shaped shells are plentiful as blackberries. Some of them arc of good size, and others small that upwards of 500, all apparent to the naked eye, may counted in the ...

Published: Saturday 02 December 1871
Newspaper: Pontypool Free Press
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1929 | Page: 4 | Tags: none