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Pall Mall Gazette

OPERA BUFFA, FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC

... OPERA BUFFA, FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC. Fior's for opera buffa can scarcely be said to grow on blackberry-bushes. In France even, where dramatic invention measured by the standard of English barrenness seems almost fertile, some difficulty is experienced in ...

THE PALL MALL GAZETTE

... of reality. One of the prettiest of the modern subjects is Mr. Christie's full-length figure of a little girl gathering blackberries (3 1), to which he gives the title of A Rose among Thorns ; and in the same class of purely naturalistic art may be placed ...

AN OLD-FASHIONED FIRST

... faithful, venerable, red-eyed spaniel, cannot stand our loitering any longer; he sees no beauty in the hedgerows heavy with blackberries, beautiful with clematis, and scarlet and yellow foliage, with hip and haw, and the bedeguar of the rose; he has no curiosity ...

THREE NEW NOVELS

... picking leathers off a toad, or clothes off a naked man, and i} you squeeze a crab apple you get only sourness. Sloes and blackberries grow in the:same hedge, and their natures are as they began. Older they grow, they grow either sweeter or sourer. A screw ...

THE TRUE STORY OF MRS. GORDON BAILLIE

... her acrommoda- tion, and in such numbers were the acceptances given that tbey became in the City almost as plentiful as blackberries in the country in September. Actions were threatened right and left against the old gentleman on these bills, and when ...

THE CANARY ISLANDS

... 200 feet, sweet-scented violets. Mrs. Stone speaks of Devonshire and Surrey lanes, which lead up to pines and heather and blackberries that remind us of England. The road by which the heights were reached was not always of the Devonshire and Surrey sort ...

OUIDA ON THE PLAGUE OF BOOKS

... autobio- graphy in detail from the cut of their pinafores to the items of their menus, from their early recollections of blackberries to their present affection for white- bait or oysters. MUSHROOM AND TOADSTOOL LITERATURE, There must be a public which ...

ART NOTES

... The Reaper and the Flowers; Mr. Orchardson's Hamlet and the King, Mr. Hook's Friends in Rough Weather, Mason's Blackberry-gathering (that was etched by M. Regamey six years ago), Fred. Walker's Right of Way (his last work), together with ...