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Scotland

Place

Wick, Caithness, Scotland

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5

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FACETIAE

... ridiculous to call them black- Two gentlemen passing a blackberry bush when the fruit berries when they were red. * Don't you know,’ said his green — The World of Wit and Humour. friend, ‘that blackberries are always red when they are A witty clergyman, accosted ...

Published: Thursday 21 December 1871
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1249 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

A DARING PRUSSIAN SPY

... military phenomenon who shot Prussians like sparrows, and to whom the helmets of hie dead enemies were as plentiful as blackberries—abould now tuns out to have bees nothing bet a Prussian spy. must go far towards exhausting the fund of Periaan credulity ...

I\ A COUNTRY LANE

... boy pulls forth • monse's meat: ♦nd then the tempting bramblemoths invite the balms again, Their pretty mouths with blackberries so sweet and ripe to stain ; And many a brown not slips its sheath to share, poor little thing. A bunting pocket with a ...

PUPA RI:01 for the /V.,* Tski. to say goori-iiy to use'. helot...rt. WHAT is th. hest Sunday reading for ..

... of our beset.. Wass a little uesgo boy wanted to attend his father's funeral, he the schoolmaster for a holiday to ge blackberrying. WHIR a man dies, people se:sessile inquires. What property has he left behin t bin' The angels will ask : What good deeds ...

MISCELLANEOUS

... increase the liscomfiture of the planters, most of them are short of hands, many of the people having gone off to sather blackberries. The alarming condition of the cotton crop has caused the corn to be neglected. A similar state of things is represented ...

Published: Thursday 20 July 1871
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2722 | Page: 4 | Tags: none