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LITERATUR

... 'Home in Secretaries, iand Chancellors of the Exchequer are abundant, and members of Farliament are at as nuraerons as blackberries. The chatnm of the' Y. book -lies in the thorough -acquaintance with s what may, we suppose, be taken to be a kind of. ...

LITERATURE

... ,-It is noc'dli'so8 to say that first-class joissrnahsits, in wbatever patty we look for them, are not as plentiful as blackberries. If we (consider TI what such a man ought to bi, -we shadl be overwhslmoicd t2 with the multiplicity of his requirements ...

ART, LITERATURE, AND SCIENCE

... was supplied by the B&ck-the little trout stream besides which the. discharged forges had supped on self-denial aln ?? on blackberries and water during Joh Joyee'h reign. 0f ?? Wood, Mlorde Copse, and Fox Wood, no- thing need be paid at all. It is more ...

LITERATURE

... I our fate's the same If he sball e'er Bnd me or you siok. Compliments to the fair sex are,, of course, as plentiful as blackberries in a Devonehire lane:- The world must now two Venuses adore Ten are the Muses, and the Graces hour. Such Dora's wit, so ...

LITERARY AND ART GOSSIP

... formed in hollow square-a scene from the battle of Waterloo. Fine art exhibitions are really becoming as plentiful as blackberries. Even the Chilian Government must needs follow the fashion, and announsece an exhibition of works of art, manufactured ...

THE HORSE AND DOG SHOW AT DARLINGTON

... Sweet. Ci8a, 41-PaIre (f Ponies, not ?? 14 bands 2 Icehes,to be driven on the ground, ?? Fowler, S uth End,e Darlington, Blackberry, Emprese ; *cSOD mended, Henry Pease, Nelly, Johncy. Ciabs 42-Ponies not exceedfng 14 bande, to be driven o theground-A ...

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 ...

THE READER

... warning to the careless swimmer we may mention Medusa and her Locks, a story of the poisonous Cyanea, capillata, and a Blackberry Bush in Autumn, as a pleasant sketch of one of these common objects of the hedgerow, from which so much may be learnt had ...

Published: Saturday 14 November 1874
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 1373 | Page: 14 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

VARIETIES

... with sheet-lead. Perhaps it al was the same man who saw a white blackbird sitting on a 38 wooden mile-stone, eating a red blackberry. [e A swell, while being measured for a pair of boots t, observed, Make them cover the calf. Impossible l ex- t.. claimed ...

TOWN EDITION

... coat-borrowing propen- sities tend to so many curious and diverting complications. Private Raston, as the rough and ready Blackberry Thistletop, was a little too boisterous and extravagant, but it is only fair to say that he caused considerable amusement ...

Published: Sunday 20 December 1874
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 9886 | Page: 4 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture