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... their true zw. and if unirmp:&‘nity seads be objected to, they can be nfil{hafimdmtdm}mdmlhm. and then what is comparable to blackberry jam. qu&th‘:‘:htvhwwmfi were to on homeward rinr'ith.lnlh-odnk;':k:'h me after Pangbourne, I looked grand new station _at ...

Published: Friday 19 September 1884
Newspaper: Tunbridge Wells Standard
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 594 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

A PLAGUE OF SNAKES

... which were racers, horn-tail adders, gray adders, and pilots, in an old, worked-out flag-stone quarry, while he was picking blackberries. They were all coiled in together, and when he disturbed them they made a terrible hissing. He and an Irish boy, named ...

Published: Saturday 28 August 1880
Newspaper: East Kent Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: | Words: 688 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

THE SOCIETY PAPERS. (From Truth.)

... certain age, better known in the financial than in the political world. I hear that a company—with Lords as plentiful as blackberries—is about to be launched, the object being to buy, and sell in building plots under the local management of Captain Percival ...

THE COMIC PAPERS

... enough. And then, too, how you see the children trying to pull the hedges to pieces with their confounded blackberrying. j Who wants to go blackberry ing.l should like to know ? One comfort that when they do they s manage to scratch themselves, or else to ...

Published: Friday 06 September 1889
Newspaper: Dover Express
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 1513 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

deaself. They al baud de tepid al a hut took he. • signal that lose was the wood to Wein

... went on, uncoandoudy following the track by which the mind red boy had molded from the ,bAl)w. • stem, stony path, with the blackberry and wild row tangled across it under foot. and arching boughs of oak seplinp, young 'abet, sod hazel trees, thickly entwined ...

Published: Saturday 05 December 1885
Newspaper: Tonbridge Free Press
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 687 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

SOMETHING FOR YOUNG FOLKS

... was full of brambles and brushwood, with birds’ nests out of numbet in the spring, easy to be reached, and the finest of blackberries in the autumn to be had for the finding. Willie and his brother were often to be found there, especially in the nesting ...

OUR NATIONAL DRINK

... counterfeit with remarkable histrionic genius the especial characteristics of the black currant, the blackberry, or logwood, It never allows the blackberry, logwood, or the black carrant to force on it an wonataral alliance, Such as it is, it is itself and ...

AGRICULTURAL ITEMS,

... those and Mr. Whitehead adds 15,000 acres foe soft fruit (strawberriwo, raspberries, gooseberries, currants, and cultivated blackberries), supposed to be excluded. Hut little soft fruit was grown, except in palms, in and that little was produced near Landes ...

Published: Saturday 18 May 1889
Newspaper: Tonbridge Free Press
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 1742 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

-i BITTER REVENGE

... given for her Teem be dipped Me Ihe street, out of the finger of the les • Upon it was mitres in _ _ Ani a* sraiiimaJ A BLACKBERRYING ADVENTURE. lis ray suensme net miellar. It ▪ ddiebetelmcs In Shot anew at I. timber. end I wee the kihe fie Mot in was ...

Published: Saturday 30 October 1886
Newspaper: Faversham News
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 1467 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

WIWI= STUDIIII

... make enough fuss over the uu• wonted luxuries of baths and as much water as they fare to drink. There is a rarethow of blackberries la the hedges, and dewberries among the undergrowth in woods and plantations. A short time ago there was no promise of ...

Published: Saturday 24 September 1887
Newspaper: East Kent Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: | Words: 921 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

CHAPIER Xv

... office. Crossing the stile that cuts the Church meadow, he surprised a couple of urchins in the heiuous act of picking blackberries on a Sundaay. Seeing *‘ parson,” the youngsters bolted, leaving their hook hanging in the brambles. 'l'hey had a good start ...