Refine Search

A BREAK DOWN!

... higgledy-piggletly—olierries, plums, apples, Arc., all mixed together in the dirt and dust, the rod cherries appearing like blackberries. But amongst this amusing sight, there was one or two scenes which marred the fun, as for iustauces, these robust, jolly ...

require no apology for their existence, as their antiquity carries us back to the Fall of Man. Lord Bacon, who

... natural. When we consider the vest strides matte floriculture and horticulture front that remote period when crab apples and blackberries were the chief produce of our woods and forests, we must admit that we are much indebted to our explorers and navigators ...

Published: Friday 01 August 1879
Newspaper: Carmarthen Journal
County: Carmarthenshire, Wales
Type: | Words: 767 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

I will step over the details of David's infancy, as there we+ nothing remarkable about it; as for his eduation,

... the morning be arose • sadder but not a wiser boy. He had nothing for breakfast. He made • meal as well as he could of blackberries and wood nuts, but they did not satisfy lam. he went along the road, he thought he would ask for a piece of bread at a ...

Published: Friday 17 October 1879
Newspaper: Carmarthen Journal
County: Carmarthenshire, Wales
Type: | Words: 1670 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

ATIT I NTS' SOCIETY

... chose the same plant ou whiah to concentrate their observation, the result showed by the persistence of our study that the blackberry war a worthy subject of c ntup'ation and experiment. We next entered tha new road mode by Mr. is in 184 e, and very shortly ...

THE COUNTRY CURATE

... the coloured leaves the blue My was visible, and far ahead a faintly bluish shadow fell athwart the hollow. There still blackberries on the bramble, beside which the brown fern filled the open spaces, and behind upon the banks the mosses clothed the ground ...

Published: Friday 26 December 1879
Newspaper: Carmarthen Journal
County: Carmarthenshire, Wales
Type: | Words: 1243 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

Prime swill V eel Inferior Mulls, Middling do. Prime do

... sheltered situation in soil moderately light and well enriched. Hints on cultivation will be given in due time. The Lawton blackberry is worthy of more extenped culture, giving, as it does, an abundance of fine fruit for tarts or jam in late summer and autumn ...

Published: Friday 27 September 1878
Newspaper: Carmarthen Journal
County: Carmarthenshire, Wales
Type: | Words: 1255 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

GAIR AM ARKANSAS

... gwaith plwm, dau waith haisni—set, coar un gwaith glo. Ri (shoed ydynt walnut, hickory, pob math o dderw, pine, cypress, blackberry, botwood, &o. Yr anifeilisid a feithrinir ynddi ydynt geffylau, mulod, gwartheg, defaid, mooh, &o. Oofyna rhywrat, Os yw ...

Published: Friday 24 October 1879
Newspaper: Seren Cymru
County: Carmarthenshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 901 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

FASHIONS FOR JULY

... sweeping corded silk. The plume called bronze done is another elegant adornment. It is combined with mulberries and blackberries of the same shade. Otter and vieitor are a favonrite mixture. The Gainsborough is, with the Huguenot, the chief seaside ...

Published: Friday 13 July 1877
Newspaper: Carmarthen Journal
County: Carmarthenshire, Wales
Type: | Words: 1514 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

THE ALABAMA CLAIMS

... popularity. But they won't make England budge. Nowadays big words are as common, and happily they produce as little effect, as blackberry leaves. If the American nation should persist in the mysterious delusion that England trembles before it, it will provoke ...

THE WELSHMAN, CARMARTHEN, FRIDAY, JANUARY 4, 1878

... let ea renounce all friends. A coachman may break my neck; I never will drive oat. A cook may poison me ; I will live on blackberries and acorns. The wife, the friend, the coachman, and the cook, are all in an allegorical sense the Parliament ; and to ...

Published: Friday 04 January 1878
Newspaper: Welshman
County: Carmarthenshire, Wales
Type: | Words: 2157 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

r, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1878

... this case the f ees had been remitted. —Defendant's wits stated that the oldest child had been kept from school to go blackberrying in order to obtain some food for the family, who were frequently without bread. The fade elicited showed that the family ...

Published: Friday 18 October 1878
Newspaper: Welshman
County: Carmarthenshire, Wales
Type: | Words: 1851 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

EARTHEN JOURNAL, FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1877. EVENTS OF THE LAST SIXTY-SIX

... children (the eldest only two and a half years old), whose parents lived in Wate-street, went into the fields to search for blackberries, and losing their way as night came on created a great panic. They were found safe next morning, and it appeared that they ...

Published: Friday 03 August 1877
Newspaper: Carmarthen Journal
County: Carmarthenshire, Wales
Type: | Words: 2505 | Page: 2 | Tags: none