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Leeds Mercury

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Yorkshire and the Humber, England

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Leeds Mercury

LEEDS AND THE EXHIBITION OF 1862

... FRUIT OF THE YEAR.-It this neighbour- fI boot, however it may be elsewhrere, wild fruit, such as fr-i r hws, hips, and blackberries, are this year uncommonly th I scarce. On high hawthorn hedge-rows, which in fonner- su. I years were ,white with blossonm ...

EXHIBITION OF DRAWINGS AT THE LEEDS SCHOOL OF ART

... Ikettlewell, also' possess considem-able merit. Two landscape studies by N-isa Mar- galet Selby ; drawings of bratiles and blackberries by C. Gilbert and T. Al. Townsley and of a thistle leaf, by W. CIaister, are well execated, and carefully finished. Severat ...

LITERATURE

... thought by messy persons to be far better flavoured in the wild state. Tlse raspberry is certainly not an improvement upon the blackberry. The gigantic rhubarb is tasteless beside Use small English variety. All our vegetable produce grown around London is known ...

LITERATURE

... land with their straggling beauty, shrouded the grassy borders of the pastures with catkinned hazeis, an( tossed their long blackberry branches on the corn-fields. Perhaps they were white with May, or starred with pale pink dog- roses; perhaps the urchins ...

LITERATURE

... we 'wound slowly arid a painfully Up the green shady roaid, thanskful that it was A E elnshdy, that there were luts of blackberries, and one - flower, a sort of eamupion, quite nowv to me-which is ) saying a good deal for its rarity-wa rouse upon a priasi- ...

LITERATURE

... porpeet, gelnillte st'utte. 'I'iitis 1, hiewrreC, ?? muds virtue in cii ?? Imperfect copies an,~ itcma ly as plciurty us blackberries, hot we tie icot believe ti'tt tlutre. are abhove a dozen iabsolutoly perfect omies known to Ttua Tijunr WINiDS.-Wc re ...

NATIONAL EXHIBITION OF WORKS OF ART IN LEEDS

... you don't believe in all that senltimental nocnscnae about the picture having e ouble meaningr, look at the mutton and blackberries painted by the great modern religions artist. From such thorny entanglements destructive to the snowy fleeces and sharp ...

LITERATURE

... With a few blackberries in it to convince him it was what he did not care for. On the contrary he did care, and ate up every one, and then whined end looked in my face very hard, and enforecd it with a stamp of the paw, wanting more blackberries, askifng ...

LITERATURE

... ,-It is noc'dli'so8 to say that first-class joissrnahsits, in wbatever patty we look for them, are not as plentiful as blackberries. If we (consider TI what such a man ought to bi, -we shadl be overwhslmoicd t2 with the multiplicity of his requirements ...

LITERARY AND ART GOSSIP

... formed in hollow square-a scene from the battle of Waterloo. Fine art exhibitions are really becoming as plentiful as blackberries. Even the Chilian Government must needs follow the fashion, and announsece an exhibition of works of art, manufactured ...

FASHIONS FOR OCTOBER

... bonnets these are placed, tl en panache, curving gracefully, and haven most distilgaul Si appeara llce. Fiuits, especially blackberries, of all shadess, tl are much worn ; the little grains that enliven the hessges I p and fancy grasses are also greatly in ...

LITERATURE

... villagers found themselves without houses, food, or money. One day, we are told, Mary went up the Streckelberg to gather blackberries; but soon afterwards she ran back joyous and breathless to her father, with two shining pieces of amber, each of very great ...