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REVIEWS

... ?? ?? 011C hC~iI1IICT still to Cherish hlis Staunton and his Philidor. I'hc ice. on-~ i'r) this ,are as plentiful as.- blackberries,. Firstly, these ?? .Is (il nt II-, like \lr. Masoii, talk r-anting nonseuse about thieit -vii ?? is -aitaing l1011 euse ...

LITERATURE

... did so onl- last week. Bab I declare that you are the very first poet and man of letters who euter camie here-tO steas blackberries! -fiete he paused, and then added, .or cibly, ' 1 do believe you are agipsy, after all. These e traets will show that ...

The Mirror and the Magpie

... they -wire bad. .ou don't always like to see 'yourfn 4'too painly p1t before you, do e Mlel had' githerd 'mea her- riss-blackberries, and mulberries, and etr~wberrishiat .ske'found -growing wild up theinib-iikmext, gand shared her 'xidday i tie with Jaek ...

THE DEMOCRATIC WORLD

... county, have passed a resolution in favour of an Act'of Parliament making it a criminal offence to gather mushrooms or blackberries, or to take wild roots in the Essex fields. Very soon we shall have the land owners and squire-like farmers taxing the ...

Books Worth Reading

... successful explorer, or a Master of Foxhounds-or anything, in fact, a little less cotmot than a baronet, who grows like a blackberry on every hedge. In such wise scolds and stoyms the setpposc(lly refined Mary Raynhans before throwing her engagement lritg ...

Published: Saturday 13 March 1897
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 5577 | Page: 21 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

SIR ROBERT PEEL'S PAPERS.*

... heir-apparent to the throne, but the ordinary recurrence of a Royal birthday, or the turn of the vear, shower baronetcies lile blackberries, and peerages like plums into the baskets of eager applicants. PEEL AND THE QUEEN. It is odd to notice the way even Peel ...

HIGHLAND COUSINS

... whetn one s own country finds one a good berth. But the fact is that the purserships of the Australian liners don't grow on blackberry-bushes ; and, in the useasitinse, Miss Barbara, I've just to put up with what I've got as best I can's And so, with varied ...

Published: Saturday 17 March 1894
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 7150 | Page: 14 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE LONDON THEATRES

... groundless. Almost everybody in the cast is mistaken tor someboaly else, and, while misunderstandings are as plentifuil as blackberries in September, the real lunatic rides oni the whirlwind of error, frolicing in and out awith tie iaresponsible frivolit- ...

Published: Saturday 11 November 1893
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 7059 | Page: 9 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture