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COUNTRY LIFE

... endless cloud studies and felt supremely bl]essed. drank from the Hermit's Well, and our nooole repast consisted of a leaf of blackberries. Snrey this was pastoral happiness. We were many, mua miles from anywhere. We had, however, to get us back to the practi ...

PUBLIC AMAUSEMENTS

... Prince of Wales Theatre last evening, when the auditorium of that popalar house was crowvded. The title of the first is Blackberries,' and that of the second Turned Up. It is made Iown that the former has been expressly wnitten for Miss Alice Atherton ...

GOSSIP WITH THE CHILDREN

... Moor to see mygrandmamons. I enjoyed myself very much ideand spent many pleasant afternoons in the 14) susie gathering blackberries; I don't think I have any more to tell you, dear uncle; with best love to _gbawafald Iameto-yorself, lam Youaraffeetionate ...

GOSSIP WITH THE CHILDREN

... The coal ceollar Picking blackberries t Do you lovo meP I like my turnips mashed. Six months' holiday. But the leader says The beantifnl Miss Jenkinson met adorable John Smith in the coal cellar. They were picking blackberries, and she said 'Do yon love ...

COUNTRY LIFE

... abandant provisions for the birds. The seed of the heather, and the bilberry; the cow, MAount Ida, or 1 whortle berry; the blackberry, the cranberry, the blaeberry, the crowberries, and the juniper fruits- all these are the food of the birds in the winter ...

LANCASHIRE BIRDS

... domestication, and it is alosw. this condition that we must look at it now. few days prior to the advent of October, the blackberries hang lascious on the bra:j and the brown nuts drop from the cluastere, the lea, goes, as is his'wont, to the coppice of ...

THE THEATRES

... acting keepsishe audience revelling insmerri. mnent from the rise of the curtain to its fall, Turned Up is preceded by Blackberries, a clever and diverting farce in one act, by the same author. At the Rotunda Theatre Mr. Edward Compton and his company ...

GOSSIP WITH THE CHILDREN

... DAnvevsacrnu. KERNELS OF LAST WEEK'S NUTS 1. Smiles, miles, limes, lime. 2. Conquest. 3. Sheath, heath, heat, eat, tea. 4. Blackberry. :KI T M I D O LE T 0 LJ L E I, 1, A All correctly extracted by Afilly Lewie, Stratford; Florrie Chimer, Wem; Lizzie Richardson ...

GOSSIP WITH THE CHILDREN

... silence, you may be sure. It was autumn,' and the blackberries were ripe. Now and then they came across a black- berry bush, and stopped to gather the berries before they went on. But as they met many a blackberry bush, and had a dispute over each one that they ...

GOSSIP WITH THE CHILDREN

... week's nuts. 1. 1, Llantrisant; 2, Omahh; 3, Narva; 4, Durham; 5, Orte; 6, Nervers. Initials. London; finals, Thames. 2. Blackberry. 3. We had been drifting days and weeks, Nor sighted laud nor ship; Hollow with hunver were omr cheeks, And cracked with ...

NOTES IN LOCAL STUDIOS

... Southern's only contribution will be a large oil, The Fringe of a Pine Forest. James Towers has a large oil painting, called Blackberry Time, Barton, Cheshire ; fir trees, fern, and bramble, with meadows sloping to the Dee. Also two water colours, A Chat ...

GOSSIP WITH THE CHILDREN

... a distance greater than usual, some twenty miles, but I hope to tell you something about it another time. The luscious blackberries are most abundant and of great size, and seem to cry alond to all who pass by, Take me to your lips. But no gatherers ...