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LORD BRACKENBURY: A Novel

... everything. I am so worried The children Oh yes, the children are all right. I've sent them to hunt up blackberries for a blackberry pudding. Blackberries are over, of course but they don't know that, and it keeps them out of the way. And Mr. Pennefeather ...

Published: Saturday 08 May 1880
Newspaper: The Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 7356 | Page: 15 | Tags: Illustrations 

LORD BRACKENBURY: A Novel

... ng. I am so worried !- The children? Oh yes, the children are all right. I've sent them to hunt up blackberries for a blackberry pudding. Blackberries are over, of course-but they don't know that, and it keeps them out of the way. -And Mr. Pennefeather ...

hboiledi the action for broach of promise of marriage, and than deprive deluded females and unprotected make of ..

... there is • moral to both the, little tales, and ono that is particularly easy to see. In fact, there are morals as thick as blackberries to be drawn from the recital. The but le that ladies should under no cireurn- Mimes elpresent thew years to be lime or ...

ANOLOTO

... wae? Ul nuvuity have a fancy for sitting in the a big len: 8 in puris naturalibus. Affable [lawl od as far ler mtiful es blackberries, and the records scenery, bi vorce C Og done | oli me ourt day by day prove only too pitifu tangere” ia an unknown quantity ...

DEATHS

... of Westminster. STCCHIBLIUT. —May 10th, at St. Helens-villa, Whitehorseread, Croydon, Ellen Margaret, wife of Mr. Thomas Blackberry, aged 33. Wnra.— May 10th, at 19, Derby-road. Croydon, Ann Hester, widow of Mr. James Waldie, aged 55. WORCKRTZ R. —May ...

Published: Saturday 15 May 1880
Newspaper: Croydon Express
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 565 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

LONDON, TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1880

... which iv doubtless exactly informed to the whereabouts of every tree, will find in the summer time many • treat. Nor is the blackberry far behind, while the strawberry positively abounds here, and has many a little berry already growing fast, in • very few ...

THE ENTR’ACTE. Merry-go-Round

... represented at our music-halls just lately, and have resolved to stay a little longer in the land where geniuses are plentiful blackberries. • • Now, Dr. Vellere, cannot you get your King and Rebel accepted at the national theatre now that Mr. Chatterton is out ...

CHOISTID•LLNZ ♦S IT NVAS

... carts; but rarely so traversed, and, for the most part, little else than a narrow strip of untilled field, separated by blackberry hedges from the better cared-for meadows on each side of it: growing more weeds, therefore, than they, and perhaps in spring ...

Published: Thursday 03 June 1880
Newspaper: Christian World
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 189 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE ABBEY SCANDAL

... of doors would infallibly move Parliament. As for arguments in favour of energetic action being taken, they are thick as blackberries. The Napoleonic dynasty has from first to last been an unmitigated curse to France and mankind, and the youth whom it is ...

Published: Sunday 06 June 1880
Newspaper: Weekly Dispatch (London)
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 440 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

748

... Jager', at the country whims, used to liken them when they were neglected young things, wandering about the park and picking blackberries, to the Babes in the Wood. Alexander was the name of the lad. He was seventeen years the junior of his brother Ludwig; ...

Published: Thursday 10 June 1880
Newspaper: Truth
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1160 | Page: 18 | Tags: none

BT ■■LEATHXBHXAS

... should say up to the present year, & le, Loss have been many isap intments; but now be taken Waggs seem as plentif: as blackberries, and ruption over, they all bear a very strong 1 of the bowels, ness, though as yet by no means appr race the the form ...

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH, MONDAY, JUNE 14, 1880

... however, from the days of Jan Steen down to those of George Morland—to go, in &Limey, no further—have been as plentiful ea blackberries. Poseibly Mr. Hope said, conceit, and not novelty, and we are in accord with him as to the Keepers of her Majesty's ...