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miscellaneous

... of good wine a day for twenty-pence. —Literary Cstxci. Lamentable Superstition —A species blight grab nai settled on the blackberry leaves, gnawing them in a serpt ntine manner, that the dead fibre shows through the remaitaDsT green. It will hardly be ...

Published: Thursday 19 May 1825
Newspaper: Fife Herald
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 3563 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

Ctyj* JWovmnj’iS ijßlartutjs

... deealecb* needs only to turn over page or two of bis writings to prove that he has these * similes in one word* •os plenty as blackberries.’ The formal long-winded similitudes, in which he sometimes indulges, would probably except out of the definition. Be it ...

Published: Thursday 01 December 1825
Newspaper: Fife Herald
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Illustrated | Words: 6569 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

NEWBURGH

... winter is sure to be a wintry one. Robin has been ehaunling his song evening and morning and mid-time of. day, among the blackberry hushes for these two months past—a cheery dreary sign ; and flocks of wild geese innumerable have been holding nightly orgies ...

Published: Thursday 28 October 1830
Newspaper: Fife Herald
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 265 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE FIFE HERALD, AND KINROSS, STRATH EARN, AND CLACK MANA N ADVERTISER

... from its being able to stand our winters as well any the nalire plants. It resembles its leaves and appearance the common black-berry (with which it is also related in its botanical characters) ; hut instead of the pale yellowish blossoms of that species ...

Published: Thursday 03 May 1832
Newspaper: Fife Herald
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 4884 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

TO CORRESPONDENTS

... its being able stand onr winters as well as any the native plants. It resembles in its leaves and appearance the Common black-berry (with which it is also related in its botanical characters) ; but instead of the pale yellowish blossoms of that species ...

Published: Thursday 03 May 1832
Newspaper: Fife Herald
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 3275 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

art opinion at variance with that of the majority, cr posed majority, of the people ;_that it is a moral

... appoint their friends to the House of Peers to act as puppets of the Administration. until peers would be es plenty us blackberries, and the distinctive character of an independent gentleman would be a commoner. If the House of Peers is a fungus excrescence ...

Published: Saturday 15 June 1833
Newspaper: Fifeshire Journal
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1687 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

of Christ, and the hest Interests and welfare of their native land. In such a cause they h.el reason to

... grapes. even into the winter. long after the the vintage. refuse rape* may always Ile hanging. Tidy food, so superior to our blackberries and taws. may well cause the of the bird to be in the highest perfection for the fruit is so nutritious that the labouring ...

Published: Thursday 22 September 1836
Newspaper: Fifeshire Journal
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Illustrated | Words: 3451 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

Domestic Intelligence

... with pious horror at the idea of an extended suffrage, or shorter duration of Parliament, while the Ballot as Utopian as blackberries March. Notwithstanding all this, there is much beneath the surface that cheers one. The barbers, the blacksmiths, and that ...

Published: Thursday 25 October 1838
Newspaper: Fife Herald
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 11757 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

Foreign Intelligence

... (Andrew and Lucinda) told her they would show her good blackberry patch that evening, and Lucinda told her she must bring Mary and Margaret Mayse with her, and she would show them the blackberries. Whilst on her way to meet the children returning from ...

Published: Thursday 25 October 1838
Newspaper: Fife Herald
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 5254 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

Net pleased, however, with the Journal into • matter with which it Mr Crichton wades still further his end will

... nonsense, would be a much more Christian object. FOOT P . . lhiring the last three weeks, we lave received notes, 'thick as blackberries,' complaining of the very disagreeable and dangerous condition of the foot•pairement, and beseeching the Dean of Guild ...

Published: Thursday 16 December 1841
Newspaper: Fifeshire Journal
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1722 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

MEW VERSION OP THE BABES THE WOOD. By Tom Ingoldtby. • Having thought on the now and the When To

... ruffian his dear comrade Jack buries; Then he cries, Lores, amuae youraelres here With the hips, and the haws, and the blackberries *' IH be back in a eouple of shakes; So dears, be quivering and quaking ; I'm going to get you some cakes. And a nice butter'd ...

Published: Thursday 13 October 1842
Newspaper: Fife Herald
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Miscellaneous | Words: 542 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

—the fair ouhhle

... in casks to ferment, are said to produce an excellent wile'. The colour of wine le often rendered darker by a mixture of blackberries with the grapes.— Lowien's Gardener's Clwyd. do. A SCARLET PANTREII.—A paragraph ors letter from Gibson. dated August 23 ...

Published: Thursday 23 November 1843
Newspaper: Fifeshire Journal
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Illustrated | Words: 863 | Page: 4 | Tags: none