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Examiner, The

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England

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The Examiner

LITERARY NOTICES

... see it, and it was flattering to the crew, of whom each has a copy.- Were reasons as Falstaff observes, as plenty as blackberries, better could not be furnished. A Revieiw of the Causes, Tendency, ann Progress of the Revolution of Portugal. This will ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... belongs to us all. Whether the Germans mean now to run upon Burns, and produce translation on translation of him, thick as blackberries,-thick as English Fausts -we cannot say. Four in one summer do seem to be enoughi! But the Germans themselves can look ...

NOTABILIA

... and fishes; sometimes many colours at once, like the peacock; or changeable like the chameleon; or successive, like the blackberries, which are first green, and then red, and then purple ? Surely there be objects for ornament, as well as things for use-or ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... is, without going to the woods to make her wilder; and as to Master Willy there, he would do nothing all day but gather blackberries. ' I am more disposed to the other place, I confess,' re- plied the meek husband, not venturing to go into the ex- planation ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... Shall meet, and take thee by the handI But serve him not as who obeys: He is thy slave if thou command: And blossoms on the blackberry-stalks He shall enchant as thou dost pass, Till they drop gold upon thy walks, And diamonds in the dewy grass. Such largess ...

THE THEATRICAL AND MUSICAL EXAMINER

... care is taken not to lose the beauty of the story in burlesquing it. The stcenery by Mr Callcott is exceedingly good; the Blackberry Brake is quite equal in beauty to MIr Bever- ley's Mistletoo Home, and the Transformation scene, in which is shown ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... really does not afford us the means of gratifying their desire. Mawkishness pervades its pages, and mistakes are plenty as blackberries. Such works, having to claims to literary merit, are only to be classed among trade specu- lations. Queen Hortense has ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... apples and pears of small size, such as still grow in the Swiss forests, stones of the wild plum, seeds of the raspberry and blackberry, and beech-nuts, also occur in the mud, and hazel-nuts in great plenty. Near Merges, on the Lake of Geneva, a settlement ...

Notabilia

... for trespassing in a wood belonging to the Misses Starkey, of Hattrin Hall, and taking therefrom, on the 15th of October, blackberries (wild brambles) of the value of six- pence, or thereabouts. The gamekeeper stated he had cautioned the defendant more than ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... wreaths of spring flowers, of ivy, passion- flower, May, convolvulus, apple-blossom, wheat and oat, with poppy, harebell and blackberry, &c., of jasmine and of lily and of rose, look as if artist and engraver had bent with unflagging delight, refreshing and ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... no lemons, cherries, or currants raised at Fuhchau, and no berries of any kind, as strawberry, gooseberry, whortleberry, blackberry, raspberry, &c. The pine-apple, plantain, cocoa-nut, mango, and a fine variety of pumelo, are brought from Formosa or Amoy ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... verdure, and green belts of trees, which droop over streams as bright and cool as those of New England. Here the familiar blackberry is indigenous, and the bushes which impede the travellerare covered with fruit. Wheat-fields, billowing beneath the cool ...