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THE BLACKBERRY

... THE BLACKBERRY. The blackberry bush what cad is because it happens to be common in the vegetable world ! If were exotic, growing here and there, and only growing at all when you cursed it, made much of it, manured it, and all the rest, then should have ...

Published: Saturday 08 June 1872
Newspaper: Westmorland Gazette
County: Westmorland, England
Type: Article | Words: 494 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

EMIGRATION TO VI.RGINII

... every ose of which has blossom and fruit and are tropical in appearance; and yet all the wild home fruit flourish, such as blackberries, rasp. berries, and grapes (which make excellent wine), and every kind of nut. This year we have a fine harvest of peaches ...

Published: Friday 11 October 1872
Newspaper: Maryport Advertiser
County: Cumberland, England
Type: Article | Words: 526 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

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 ...

THE JUDICIAL DOZEN

... completed in the granting of Commission of the Peace for the borough. We are waiting the men, and here they are as thick as blackberries. We can put our hands upon an embryo Justice of the Peace anywhere when wanted. The difficulty in selection. We are to ...

Published: Saturday 27 January 1872
Newspaper: Burnley Advertiser
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 836 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

LANCASTER

... assault upon a respectable married woman, Mrs. Smith, the wife of a p lumber and glazier. She and a little girl were out blackberrying on the canal banks, near Aldeliffe, when prisoner went up to Mrs. Smith, threw her down, and at- tempted to commit the ...

Published: Saturday 12 October 1872
Newspaper: Preston Chronicle
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 855 | Page: 7 | Tags: News 

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 ...

Published: Friday 16 February 1872
Newspaper: Maryport Advertiser
County: Cumberland, England
Type: Article | Words: 1281 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

WEDNESDAY. REAL ISTATES TITLES BILL. OCCASIONAL SERMONS

... fine flowers and green leaves. Some old favorites_are gone but others succeed, and when the rose has passed its best the blackberry takes its place. The Corn-law Rhymer hose poems by the way are not so well known as they deserve to be), beautifully notices ...

Published: Saturday 29 June 1872
Newspaper: Warrington Examiner
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1209 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

SIX WEEKS' TRIP IN THE PIEDMONT DIS.TRICT OF VIRGINIA

... purposes, owing to their being easily worked, and ol great dura- bility. Wild fruits consist of blackberry and dewbeny— something like bat mnch larger tban our blackberry — which in the summer time form the largest portion of the negro's food when not in work ...

Published: Saturday 24 February 1872
Newspaper: Lancaster Gazette
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 3662 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

Trespassing in Pursuit of Game at Gothorne.—At the Wigan County Police Court, cn Friday, John Club and John ..

... originally charged with the offence, was examined, but denied that Yates placed any obstruction on the line. They were simply blackberrying.” The Bench said the witness had evidently been tampered with.—The charge was dismissed.— Mr. Barlow, presiding magistrate ...

THE lILVERSTON MIRROR, April 6. 1872

... temperance principles, was well appreciated and frequently applauded- WISIL The followinc: is an American recipe for making blackberry wine: Crush the berries with a wooden p-stle in a wooden tub or bucket ; draw off all the juice, and add to it an equal ...

SATUEDAY, MARCH 2, 1872. SIGNS AND TOKENS

... SATUEDAY, MARCH 2, 1872. SIGNS AND TOKENS. SHALL we live to see strikes amongst the agricultural labourers as plentiful as blackberries? Shall we live to see the Church of England disestablished and disendowed ? We ask these questions, not because they are ...

Published: Saturday 02 March 1872
Newspaper: Warrington Examiner
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1325 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

CURRENT LITERAT CUE

... ve Voting. Naturalists, young and old, will thank the Bev. d. G. Wood for his clear end instructive examination of a Blackberry Bush in Autumn. Alias is an amusing romance of crime by Compton Bcade though we must ow such facile damsels as the ...

Published: Saturday 26 October 1872
Newspaper: Crewe Guardian
County: Cheshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1717 | Page: 6 | Tags: none