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Yorkshire and the Humber, England

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6
26

Type

28

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Literary Notices

... from the sofa. Guide-booesh, and hanel-books, and notes, and glances, and loiterings, nnd peiscillingo, are ptentiful as blackberries, auid travellers so ilvariably and industriously keep their diaries, that it is to be feared, that writers are the majority ...

Reviews

... and he is described as bringing leaves in his mouth, and covering their dead bodies with them Their pretty lips with blackberries Were all besmear'd and dyed; and when they saw the darksome night They laid them down and cried. No burial these pr.tty ...

Reviews

... and he is described as bringing leaves in his mouth, and covering their dead bodies with them:- Their pretty lips with blackberries Were all besmear'd and dyed; And when they saw the darksome niglt They laid them down and cried. , No burial these pretty ...

Reviews

... ; how many violets I have picked there y- in March-how many lilies of the valley in May I 'ert How many strawberries, blackberries, and filberts I have eaten ; how many butterflies and lizzards I n a have pursued and caught; how many nests I have of ...

Reviews

... paths ; how many violets I have picked there in March-how many lilies of the valley in May ! l1 How many strawberries, blackberries, and filberts G, I have eaten ; how many butterflies ani lizzards I d have pursued and caught; how many nests I have discovered ...

Reviews

... avenue, but neither white farm house nor gay green shutters greeted his anxious sight. * # Marty a vow he made and many a blackberry he picked as he walked hither and thither, in every direction. The day wore on, the sun bad long passed the meridian, and ...

Reviews

... avenue, but neithder white fiirrn house nor gay green shutlers grceted his anxious sight. * * Many a vow 1 e made and many a blackberry he picked as h i walked hither and thither, in every direction. T Ihes day wore on; the sun had long passed the V a eridian ...

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- ...