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Pall Mall Gazette

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Pall Mall Gazette

LA MADONNA DELLA VITTORIA

... woods that grow up into the hills, and turf and moss that spread beneath them, and little hamlets dotting the wayside, and blackberry hedges by the road. There are many little torrents bubbling across the footpath, and these must be crossed on the roughest ...

Published: Tuesday 29 September 1874
Newspaper: Pall Mall Gazette
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2087 | Page: 11 | Tags: News 

LA MADONNA DELLA VITTORIA

... woods that grow up into the hills, and turf and moss that spread beneath them, and little hamlets dotting the wayside, and blackberry hedges by the road. There are many little torrents bubbling across the footpath, and these must be crossed on the roughest ...

Published: Tuesday 29 September 1874
Newspaper: Pall Mall Gazette
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2095 | Page: 11 | Tags: News 

CORRESPONDENCE

... going to begin now. With a slight change in Falstaff's words they would each and all say, If reasons were as plentiful as blackberries, I would receive no reason upon compulsion, I. It is of no use, therefore, to argue with the Asylums Board. If the garden ...

Published: Friday 12 March 1875
Newspaper: Pall Mall Gazette
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2039 | Page: 5 | Tags: News 

COMIN' THRO' THE RYE

... remembered (in one of the lucid intervals) that the month which is not too late for nightingales is a trifle early for ripe blackberries. While nature does these things, man and woman become creatures of clinging lips, gleamiling ripe shoulders, and veils ...

COMIN' THRO' THE RYE.*

... P ii'i. (in one of the lucid intervals) that the month which is not t ?? PVC , nightingales is a trifle early for ripe blackberries. Wh\ile n:ilx itO l . things, man and wvomnan become creatures of clingin, lips, gici nda shoulders, and veils of rippling ...

PAROCHIAL ANNALS.*

... outside Tours. The weakest part of the book is the remnants of Cornisl. in tl: present speech of the people. Jfo.i'-an blackberries, mezirriaoi ants, ;1l l root, quale faded and dry, and many more words Mr. ?? nau have heard in the district where the ...

OCCASIONAL NOTES

... tomatoes, mushrooms, egg-plant, and scores of other vegetables are cultivated and thrive well. Strawberries, ,aspberries, blackberries, gooseberries, whortleberries, currants, and other becries flourish. There is scarcely a day in the year when strawberries ...

Published: Tuesday 07 December 1875
Newspaper: Pall Mall Gazette
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3285 | Page: 5 | Tags: News 

AFRICAN TRAVEL.*

... expressed with admirable truth and refinement. Among other flower pieces maybe mentioned (r59) by Miss Marrable, and a study of blackberries (88) by Miss Hopkinson. ...

FIRST EDITION, 2.30 p.m

... during the strike. A boy named Thomas Cottenden, aged eleven years, of Robert-street, Plum- stead, has died from eating blackberries. He was taken ill about twenty-four hours after eating a quantity of the fruit, gathered by himself, and which it is thought ...

Published: Monday 24 September 1877
Newspaper: Pall Mall Gazette
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3811 | Page: 7 | Tags: News 

POACHING AS A PROFESSION

... Philologists may trace a resemblance between the present provincial word mouching and Shakspeare's m itcher, who ate blackberries. Of the three probably the largest amount of business is done by the local men, on the principle that the sitting gamester ...

Published: Wednesday 12 December 1877
Newspaper: Pall Mall Gazette
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1572 | Page: 10 | Tags: News 

LONDON IN THE JACOBITE TIME.*

... that the author of Robinson Crusoe was one of the most pitiful scoundrels of a time when spies and traitors were like blackberries. The present strike of the London masons, however much to be deplored, is not, at any rate, so unjustifiable as that of ...

LONDON IN THE THE JACOBITE TIMES

... that the author of Robinson Crusoe was one of the most pitiful scoundrels of a time when spies and traitors were like blackberries. The present strike of the London masons, however much to be deplored, is not, at any rate, so unjustifiable as that of ...