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Poetry

... Vattxg. II BLACKBERRY GATHERING. In the ?? davs of autumn, when the sun glows on the trees, Th0 ?? of chfldren's voices echoes upon tbe breeze As to the tangled hedge6 a scoro of little feet Hurry along to search once more for berries ripe and sweet. ...

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 ...

Poetry

... forget The least or thy sweet trifles I The window vines that clamber yet, Whose bloom the bee still rifles I The roadside blackberries growing ripe, And in the woods the Indian-pipe? Happy the man who fills his field, Content with rustic labour I Earth does ...

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

... tOur Garden Pitcher Plants, On 'Potting Window Plants, Roses and Rose Culture, and anaccountof The Lawton American Blackberry, The Gardener. October. London: WILLIAM BLACKWOOD and SONS, 37, Paternoster-row. Fig-Culture is the leading subject this ...

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 ...

A LOST LIFE

... shadows, fragrant violets grew, and clematis and wild roses clung together in a tangle of sweetness; where the bushes of the blackberry, with it% abundance of tinted blossoms, gave fair promise of a rich crop of its luscious fruits ; beside this lIke, in the ...