Refine Search

BAKER'S HISTORY OF ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE

... egarded ?? approval by those who inherit the morality of patl! age. In the sixteenth century they were as p'erty ful as blackberries, and wvcre not heeded ShortiY0. the first master of St. John's, became master ,- Pembroke, archdeacon of Bath, master of ...

MR. ARTHUR TOOTH'S FINE ART GALLERY

... of Mr. Mason is very apparent, especially in the odd, effective, but not true use of filmy white, in Mr. W. S. Coleman's Blackberry Gatherers. Mr. J. F. Skill's works are very careful and nice, especially Exterior of a Mill, Brittany (No. 53). Mr. W. S ...

Published: Sunday 17 April 1870
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 961 | Page: 5 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... verdure, and green belts of trees, which droop over streams as bright and cool as those of New England. Here the familiar blackberry is indigenous, and the bushes which impede the travellerare covered with fruit. Wheat-fields, billowing beneath the cool ...

PICTURES IN THE ROYAL ACADEMY

... which are here, but by the absence of the major work which we had hoped for. One of these small upright pieces, called Blackberry gathering,' is a master-piece of the most poetical kind in colour and design, with its two figures of girls climbing among ...

THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... Mr. Stephens' Blackberry Picking, well carved as it is, may be qnoted as another example of what is to deprecated. What does it mean? Here is a pretty, but absurd young lady, enzisha. bile, supposed to have been picking blackberries! The truth is, the ...

NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS

... kind : the tale of the Pioneer's Cottage, though somewhat dawdlingly treated, is original, graphic, and mildly tragic; Blackberry Farm (describing a site which Nature reclaims as her own) is naive and amusing. The fable about the narrator's Pegasus ...

WOMAN'S WRONG

... trees, &c., until she is as healthy and brown and active as any mother might desire. Their last exploit included a day's blackberry bunting, an expedition to a neighbouring fair, and a misadventure after- wards in consequence of assisting themselves on ...

LITERATURE

... very poor. A long and serious article on Mr. Hare's system of Repreaentation, is followed by an admir ible sketch of A Blackberry Bush in Autumn, from the learned pen of the Rev. J. G. Wood. We recommend this paper to all lovers of nature: it contains ...

LITERATURE

... wholesome warning against discontent in Little Frank, and a suggestive picture of childish suspicion and greediness in the Blackberry Gathering. The third yearly volumes of The Infants' De- light and The Children's Treasure, published by. the Graphotyping ...

THE READER

... spelling of Phidias to be found in the lexicon. The engrav- ings in the book are exquisite, particularly those of the blackberry, the Ulvainza, and the fever-few, which last would be charming in a frieze. Anthologia Anglica, by Howard Williams, ...

Published: Saturday 22 February 1873
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 3018 | Page: 19 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LITERARY

... the best way they. can, head first or tail first. s Give you reasons upon compulsion ? If reasons were as plentiful as blackberries, I would not give you reasons upon compulsion? If Mr Stephen fails to accomplish all his wish, it will be due, we anticipate ...

FASHIONS

... brims are much worn. A very pretty trimming for them consists of a black velvet bow and ends to fasten a wreath of ivy, blackberry blossom, and fruit. Wild flowers and fruit are much used for trimming straw hats and bonnets. The cavalier- shape hat in ...