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Northumberland, England

Access Type

15

Type

15

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MARCH MAGAZINE LITERATURE

... interesting r Gleanings from the Public Records, are given DI. H. D Hewlett, who says- * d Recipes are as plentiful as blackberries in an autumn lane;t and it would seem that the scribes and accountants of three hundred years ago had nothing better to ...

CCQUETDALE AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY

... was a good entry, Mr J, NV. Anuett of Togstone, winning with his beautifully shaped eleven yeas old, by Stockton out of Blackberry. Mr F. C. McCabe was a good second with a brown mare, by Marquess, and Mr T. H. Jobling getting an h c for Young Bella. ...

HIS DEAREST WISH: A NOVEL

... regard to herself. She is becoming quite a celebrated toast, like I was. Then I say suitors must be as plentiful as blackberries, replied Mr flog. So, so, Miss Winnie, he added, laugh- ing, we may expert Ae hear that you are making the whole county ...

MAD JACK HALL OF OTTERBURN

... uttering a preliminary clucking, addressed to her offspring, withdrew with them to the friendly shade of the hedge, where the blackberries, already ripening, clustered in purple bunches amongst the dark green leaves, Far below, beneath the sunlit nastures and ...

MAD JACK HALL OF OTTERBURN

... himself to General Forster. Aye, WVogan? Well, he'll be mighty acceptable, seeing that our recruits are not as plentiful as blackberries. What is his name? Mlr John Hall of Otterbarn. John Hall, repeated Forster, with a look of slight dis- apppointment; ...

ONLY A WOMAN'S HEART

... barely sufficient to keep the wolf from the door; for the pro- e fession was overstoocked, teachers were as plentiful as v blackberries in the autumn, and the pay wss miserably t poor. Her history was sad enongh-one of those romances of fe real life which ...

Extracts from New Books

... raysont This explains the pun employed in the words, Give you a reaqon on compulsion ? If reasons were as plenty as blackberries I would give no man a reason upon ?? H. Griron's Shakspeare herw. SIBERIAN CRUELTY. The entire absence of sympathy withi ...

Art and Literature

... same firm, Mrs Hulme has figured and described the commnn vetch and the dewberry. The dewberry has a close affinity to the blackberry, and some of the varieties of each are found to closely approach each other; but one ordinarily finds no difficulty in identify- ...

Chats with Housekeepers

... done. When blackberry jam is made of blackberries only, half a pound of sugar to a pound of frail is quite sufficient, but if apples are put with the blackberries a little more sugar is needed. Seeing that, in many districts, blackberries are to be had ...

GERMINAL; OR, MASTER AND MAN

... state; pushed as far as the forest of Vandame, where they gorged themselves with wild strawberries in spring, with nuts and blackberries in summer. Soon the immense plain had become their proiperty. But what flung them so constantly upon the roads from Marchiennes ...

Chats with Housekeepers

... water which is round them until they fall. Tuis gvrt rrtfl'?'-'' better be performed the day beforo the 3 vii' -5 Boil the blackberries gently till the jul the apple pulp with ehem, and when this 5 ?? add three pounds of sugar to four poucis 0 ?? till the ...

IN THE KING'S SERVICE

... run- ning up with continual r,'c100ars, that Wil.cnm, won hadeoch long arms, woald come aiid help him to get a hunch of blackberries which were out of lila react4. And then William, ever good-naturco fri children, regard' less of the risk of cateniug his ...