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LORD BRACKENBURY: A Novel: THE DARK-FOLK

... stooping under a bundle of cut furze or a horde of shy little flaxen-polled savages beating the bushes in quest of a few late blackberries but sometimes they went for two or three miles without encountering a soul. More than once, a covey of partridges rose ...

Published: Saturday 01 May 1880
Newspaper: The Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 3698 | Page: 14 | Tags: Illustrations 

LORD BRACKENBURY: A Novel

... stooping under a bundle of cut furze; or a horde of shy little flaxen-polled savages beating the bushes in quest of a few late blackberries ; but sometimes they went for two or three miles without encountering a soul. More than once, a covey of partridges rose ...

Published: Saturday 01 May 1880
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3775 | Page: 16 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE GLOBE, WEDNESDAY; MAT 5. 1880

... realistic, are the flowers of a poisonous species onion) and the straggling white heather, there is the blooming gorse, the blackberry, the hawthorn, and all that are accustomed see those familiar tracts of land in dear old England. ...

Published: Wednesday 05 May 1880
Newspaper: Globe
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1214 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

GAIETY THEATRE

... best ; things present, worst. The revival in this age of table-turning and spiritualism, when ghosts are as plentiful as blackberries, of a drama abounding in spectres, apparitions, and all kind of super- natural agencies, is at all events opportune. Besides ...

Published: Friday 07 May 1880
Newspaper: Morning Post
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1047 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

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 

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 ...