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 ...

NORTH-EAST AGRICULTURAL ASSOCIATION

... 2, i 'Tlhoemas Valelitine, Stralldtowiti, llelfast-itrry hla-lh ?? Mistletoo ; X, ?? Watson, Derry- I .Kerry bliik cow Blackberry. )iEON, hPOLLE, Oil ANY ?? AMEusD NOT INCL'JDL'D, EN Tlt iOlli:ttOiN6IN ?? . Ciam'i 8-Best bull, of any nage-, Alfred Cross ...

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 ...

SOME LITERARY NOTES ON HASTINGS AND ST. LEONARD'S

... from the windmills to the sea, and from the Barons of the Cinque Ports to the hut of the poor labourer, with his basket of blackberries. His tomb was erected by the Committee of the Religious Tract Society. Here have come Archdeacon Hare and John Sterling ...

FLOWER SHOWS

... we're not many bouquets or floral devices. Fruit did not make up a large, class, and, excepting the F strawberries and blackberries, do6 not -call I for special nmentibn. Vegetables were well, C- Ithough siot largaly, tispresetited. Mr Jaomes Eddie, gr- ...

New Novels

... that make at any rate the more tender-hearted class of readers inclined to feel sympathetically pitiful are as common as blackberries ought soon to be ; but a tale which makes us laugh, not at it, but with it, is a veritable treasure. He, or she, who can ...

Published: Saturday 01 September 1883
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 1649 | Page: 22 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

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 ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... with one or two exceptions, has a good cast. Ladies who can speak English, sing, and act are not just now as plentiful as blackberries, i and Mdlle. Camille D'Arville, who acts the part of an Al. |satianglove-girl,proved an acceptable actress and vocalist ...

PARISIAN GOSSIP

... a little towards the general suc- cess. Dramas in verse, are not, to quote a cynicalfriend, like lords, as common as blackberries. M. Richepin is a naturalistic poet, young in years and of the new school: a poet, in fact, whose verses have hitherto ...

Published: Saturday 15 December 1883
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1722 | Page: 8 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

PERIODICALS FOR JANUARY

... guaranteed gosts, and novelists devoting heir best powers to the revival, we may lope soon to have bests as plentiful as blackberries. The clever story, The Baby's Grandmother, will he better reading for the njority. A long criticism on ' The Ajax and ...

YESTERDAY'S [ill]

... TROMMDAT'3 TNNLT391ATAS. OLYMPIC THEATRE. Hatislies, which have during the past Week been -s plentiful as blackberries in autumin, yesterday pro- duced yet another novelty in the shape of a new and orginal nautical dranma in four acts entitled Before ...