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TURKEY

... hare time and opportunit? to unbend, here is fund of amusement, which will never fail them. Tbe puns are 0 plentiful as blackberries,” and much more piquant, and wit seems to raise smile with every period. The poetical portions are indescribably funny ...

Published: Tuesday 03 February 1835
Newspaper: South Eastern Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 5627 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

WEDNESDAY

... box, and some bread and cheese, and had been driven it distress, not having had anv food for several days, except a few blackberries which had gathered from the hedges. That he had been brought into his present destitute situation by the treatment of his ...

Published: Tuesday 24 March 1835
Newspaper: South Eastern Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 3457 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

BIRTHS

... he stated that want drove him to the offence. For two days before the commission of the crime he had eaten nothing but blackberries, all his applications for relief having been unsuccessful. AVant overcame the principles of religion and honesty, and induced ...

CORONER’S INQI'EST,

... parliament. A deputation waited upon the learned lord Manchester, lately, when the pledge was given. M P.’s are plentiful blackberries; but a lecturing peer and ex-chancellor is novelty. Rkuarkablk Pact.— Moore, his ** Almanac, the end of July and beginning ...

ittteratur, r, Srr. THE LIFE OF GENERAL PICTON. Published by Richard Bentley, New Burlington-street, The ..

... intelligence that no biography had as yet appeared of Sir Thomas Picton. Now the materials for such memoirs are as plentiful as blackberries ; so that he has nothing to do but to set some hack author to work at so much per sheet, who, of course, does not fail ...

bile Dinner at Chatham. Thursdav evening the memhera of the Chatham IndependeSciub dined together the Chest ..

... the press, that weighed with them hitherto as to the taxes on knowledge; but he was satisfied the people would know the blackberry from the nightshade, and not poison but refresh themselves. concluded by giving *• His Majesty’s Ministers, and more courage ...

Published: Tuesday 15 March 1836
Newspaper: South Eastern Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 1863 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE EPPING HUNT

... of shoes attended the Epping hunt on Easter Monday. The coaches, cabs, and carts on the Essex road were as plentiful as blackberries, and were drawn by horses of all sorts and sizes, consisting principally of hiogling, higgledly piggledly, galloping ...

LONDON GAZETTES

... kept in confinement for the lest mnetee Substitute for Tan. —A discovery has been made, and a patent taken out, for using blackberry bushes to the process of StOtMof King William.—The Corporation of Dublin have advertised for proposals re-erect the slain ...

Published: Tuesday 19 April 1836
Newspaper: South Eastern Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 976 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

TO CORRESPOSDEXTS

... reasons,” like the immortal Falstalf-the only point, we fear, in which the Journal resembles him—if “reasons are plentiful as blackberries, e never gives one compulsion.” The shielding himself acorrespondent-the willing wound, but yet afraid to strike system ...

Published: Tuesday 30 August 1836
Newspaper: South Eastern Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 526 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

6

... title-page, and its table of contents presents an array of names, amid whose assemblage peers and peeresses are as thick as blackberries, and baronets, grand-crosses, members of parliament, and such small deer, are the mere rulgum pecus,—admitted amongst ...