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All the year round25.09.1875
  • Datum
    Samstag, 25. September 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] commoners, in old days at Trinity, were the only undergraduates permitted to cross the college grass-plots, so this creature was the only one, except the players, who was free of the Rectory croquet-ground— [...]
[...] made on the tender grass by the intruders; [...]
[...] years of frontier life, lost his New Jersey accent. “Good grass, wood, and water; a creek up to your very door, and as rich a bottom as ever bore a heavy corn crop. [...]
[...] ruin of the farmhouse, commanded an ex tensive view of the rolling prairie, a very sea of grass, and of the shining waters of the creek. There was a tract of woodland near the river, and some deep, rich land, [...]
[...] States, occasioned, it is supposed, by the strange herbs and weeds that mingle with the tall grass of the virgin pastures, and soon after they were well and strong again they left me, to better their condition in [...]
[...] my fields and meadows as with the mower's scythe. Before their sharp teeth fell every green blade of grass, and wheat, and maize, tobacco, and flax, until the ground was as bare as a threshing-floor; but, as if with [...]
[...] crop was gone ; so were the crops of madder, flax, and tobacco. Worst of all, there was no grass left on the stripped prairies to feed the stock. My sheep died. My horned beasts, growing desperate with [...]
[...] and runlets were tainted with the smell and taste of their decaying bodies. The grass was cropped, the herbs shorn away, the lower leaves of the trees cut off as by the shears of a gardener. Excepting [...]
[...] not keep a single hoof about the place. Bullocks and milch-kine, desperate of re straint, had roved off in search of grass. The farmhouse, with its ruined garden and fields laid bare, looked inexpressibly [...]
[...] head, as I made answer: “You forget, Cassio, that we have no grass. It goes against me, sorely, to deny these poor brutes the meal they beg of me in their dumb fashion, but the locusts [...]
All the year round21.12.1872
  • Datum
    Samstag, 21. Dezember 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] for the figure of the old man pacing the grass beneath. But I did not see him. Down the stairs we came, I peeping into every narrow doorway we passed, and so [...]
[...] on the birches down in the Glen of Tilly riach, my mother, with myself at her feet, was turned out to grass on the rich hun dred acres of the Nether Hill. Those were happy times. While our dams placidly [...]
[...] well cared for, continued to grow steadily and rapidly, and when, as yearlings, we were ready for the grass in the spring, we looked to the full as big and as “furnished” as the two-year-olds of less enlightened [...]
[...] straw. There was no stint to our allow ance of turnips, and when the time came to go out on the grass again, I was in high condition, what is known as nearly “half-fat.” But it must be understood [...]
[...] commercial purposes, is the most unpro fitable policy conceivable. When a forced two-year-old is turned out to grass, he positively goes back instead of improv ing for the first three months, so that the [...]
[...] positively goes back instead of improv ing for the first three months, so that the owner loses his grass without increasing his beef, a method of procedure which can not aid materially in paying the rent. We [...]
[...] his beef, a method of procedure which can not aid materially in paying the rent. We were out on the grass—it was new grass— quite early in the season; it was, I think, the first week of May. I once heard Mr. [...]
[...] the first week of May. I once heard Mr. M“Combie remark that “Cattle never forget an early bite of new grass,” and my per sonal experience goes to prove the truth of the observation. I gained nearly a third [...]
[...] the observation. I gained nearly a third in weight in the first five weeks I was on the grass. We were housed at night till the warm weather set in, and shifted from park to park on to the best of the grass, for [...]
[...] with me the other day at “the top of the market” by the round tower in Copen hagen Fields, I was taken up from grass next day; and the work was begun of getting ripe in earnest for the London [...]
All the year round21.02.1874
  • Datum
    Samstag, 21. Februar 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] anxiety about the safety of the West India Islands, as reports had come that Count de Grasse, the French admiral, after a decisive battle with the British fleet, off the Chesapeake, and the surrender [...]
[...] and forty-eight seamen. Rodney's great desire was to reach the West Indies before Count de Grasse, and through storms, tempests, and contrary winds the admiral forced his way to Bar [...]
[...] badoes in five weeks. He found, to his chagrin, that St. Christopher's had already surrendered, and that the Count de Grasse, fearing the junction between Sir Samuel Hood and Rodney, had moved off to Mar [...]
[...] soldiers, with a train of heavy cannon, intended for the reduction of Jamaica. De Grasse had no wish to fight, his object being to reach Hispaniola and join the sea and land forces of the Spaniards waiting [...]
[...] on board their ships a corps of artillery men expressly trained for sea fighting. As for Count de Grasse, who was a man of honour, he allowed that his nation was a hundred years behind us, and was [...]
[...] the British West Indies, and a thousand pounds was voted by the House of Assembly for a marble statue. As for De Grasse he was treated with respect and sympathy and received at St James's, his sword [...]
[...] and received at St James's, his sword being returned to him by Sir Peter Parker. De Grasse was the first French commander in-chief who had been brought prisoner to England since the Duke of Marlborough [...]
[...] ment of men to the same tonnage, they had the assistance of a large body of land forces. “Comte De Grasse,” said Rodney, in a private letter to his family, “who is at this moment sitting in my stern gallery, [...]
[...] abreast of the Ville de Paris, I ordered the main-topsail to be laid aback. “De Grasse, who was about three miles to windward, did not accept the challenge, but kept his wind, and did not fire one [...]
All the year round22.06.1872
  • Datum
    Samstag, 22. Juni 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] As a shelter for curing it, he had built an inclosure of rails, a dozen feet in height, and covered with cane and grass. Stalks of tobacco are usually split and strung on sticks about four feet in length. The ends [...]
[...] than suffocating prisons if the toiling people could not now and then make their escape, to feel their feet on the grass, see the blue sky above their heads, and breathe the fragrant air blowing freshly around [...]
[...] mere excursion, in the fact that the main part of the enjoyment consists in the lunch or dinner upon the grass, or under the shadow of trees, or upon the sea-beach— anywhere except in a covered room; and [...]
[...] may be ginger-beer or lemonade, or milk and-water; and, greatest treat of all, to partake of it upon the grass. The first thing that nine-tenths of them set about doing is to gather daisies and buttercups, [...]
[...] of their future lives will ever equal the joy of helping to make that pot boil under the trees upon the grass, or of eating the too rare plum-cake in the sunny open air. The boys of the same age scarcely seem to [...]
[...] trees after birds'-nests, or jumping over each other's backs at leap-frog. Another pleasure is to lie upon the grass, and roll over and over down the side of the hill, as if that species of locomotion were the [...]
[...] and their happiness, they are not to be a quiet and drowsy delight in stretch called pic-nics proper; but whatever they ing themselves on their backs at full may be called, they are occasions of length upon the grass, shading their eyes genuine, healthful, and inexpensive enjoy- with their hands to gaze up at the beauti ment, which the rich, who make their ful blue sky, or the sailing white clouds, [...]
[...] whenever opportunity presents itself, or Others reverse the attitude, and, needing their spirits are moved to do good by those no shade from the sun, contemplate, the who know and feel for the wants of the poor. grass amid which they lie, doubtless allow The second class of pic-nics is the true ling their thoughts to revel in the dolce far and genuine pic-nic, when hard-working niente, and in the half-consciousness, not [...]
[...] beyond the smoky limits of the town, for of all but the passing minute as if they a few hours' enjoyment. As many as from were bees or butterflies, or the blades of two to five or six hundred persons, all in grass they are stretched upon. the service of, or maintained by, one firm of But these contemplative and quiet men employers in the great metropolis, some- are in the minórity. The smokers and the [...]
[...] relics of the loves of past ages. But next to this amusement and occupation, and the walk on the springy grass, the refection al fresco, the ostensible but not the sole object of the pic-nic, is the event to which [...]
All the year round30.12.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 30. Dezember 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] raggedness about its chimneys, and window sills, and door-steps, tufted with tall wild grass, and fluttering with streamers of the most flaunting weeds. The greenness of the earth had not been content with eating [...]
[...] With its carven cross adorned. Another, that left its pauper's grave, Where rank and coarse the grasses wave, O'er rest, unnamed, unmourned. And two, who sought their Redeemer's feet, [...]
[...] freedom and freshness on its wings; and as I fixed my position and spread my tools all around me on the grass, in haling the while the intoxication of the scene, I fondly hoped that all memory of [...]
[...] means in my power. I whistled aloud; I sang the tunes most in vogue amongst us; I pulled up the long grass and nibbled it between my teeth, and then set to work at arranging my colours and crayons with [...]
[...] in a kind of artistic frenzy I flung myself upon the ground, burying my face amid the grass to listen to her holy teaching. Just then, when my whole soul was detached from earth in communion with [...]
[...] to me, and as the group opened I beheld, with horror and amazement, a human form stretched out upon the grass, the head sup ported by a stone, and the blood pouring from a wound in the throat, so rapidly that [...]
[...] ported by a stone, and the blood pouring from a wound in the throat, so rapidly that its crimson stream had dyed the grass and flowers all around. As I approached I recognised at once in the young man who [...]
[...] and the blood had gushed out with such sudden violence that the youth, uttering but one shriek, had fallen lifeless on the grass. “Ay, but all that will never be listened to by the Procureur Imperial,” said one of [...]
[...] had been gathering up the two long wea pons which lay half-buried amongst the grass. . And, after wiping them carefully upon the silk handkerchief in which they had been enveloped, and looking down the [...]
All the year round07.08.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 07. August 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] There are wide, flat meadows all round about it, where herds of cattle graze on the dew-fed grass. The principal farms in the immediate neighbourhood of Shipley in-the-Wold, are grazing farms. All the [...]
[...] the plants; no, nor a tenth part of 'em. It's my belief that Nebuchadnezzar, when he ate grass, took a physic as was good for him, and that there is a great deal more virtue in grass than the world knows on, [...]
[...] virtue in grass than the world knows on, with all its wisdom. For of all “herbs, is not grass called in Scripture the herb of the field, as if it was, which I sometimes think it is, the best as well as the commonest of [...]
[...] The only fault in old Culpeper as ever I could find is, as he says nothing about grass. If I was a scholard and could write as well as him, or only half as well for the matter of that, I'd write about grass my [...]
[...] matter of that, I'd write about grass my self. I knows, because I’ve tried, that what the people calls mountain-grass is a certain cure for the rheumatics, that is to say, the tea or broth made of it by boiling. [...]
[...] say, the tea or broth made of it by boiling. And it's my opinion that there isn't any kind of grass as isn't good for man as well as beast, only, as I said before, men are, for the most part, such fools, and has to be [...]
All the year round31.05.1873
  • Datum
    Samstag, 31. Mai 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] it being alleged of him that his extended toes brushed the dew off the grass inordi nately as he went along. With a heavy, labouring, clumping tread [...]
[...] legs, shook its ruffled plumage into tidy shape, made two or three skips above the grass, and finally flew away, disappearing behind a group of lofty trees. Monsieur Saint-Marc then tried to dis [...]
[...] and there with stunted pollards, and bear ing apparently great crops of long rank grass. Then the foreground undulates a little more and a small chain of hills rises against the horizon, and the quality of vege [...]
[...] against the horizon, and the quality of vege tation changes. It is now grazing land, the grass richer and not so rank, and spread ing over it, browsing, resting, or madly galloping about without apparent cause, [...]
[...] cockcrow, from the gateway of Fitzford to Okehampton Park, returning whence she started with a single blade of grass in her mouth, and repeating the journey night after night, until there was not a blade of [...]
[...] mouth, and repeating the journey night after night, until there was not a blade of grass left for her to glean, when the world and her work would end together. A lady told Mrs. Bray she had seen the hound [...]
[...] seen a hound slip away from the kennel at the midnight hour. The legend has not yet outlived belief. The grass still grows in Okehampton Park, and promises to find the lady-hound in employment for many a [...]
All the year round11.06.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 11. Juni 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] tract from it. In the part of Ceylon to which he refers, swamps abound, covered with rank grass, forming a sod sufficiently firm to support men and cattle, which move freely on it. Between this sod and the true [...]
[...] and trampling a portion of it down to the more solid mud at the bottom. The long grass, which is thus carried down, makes a kind of fence, which is supposed to confine the fishes, but which one can hardly suppose [...]
[...] it with some of the more solid mud, or peat, scooped up from beneath. Some of the long grass which grows on the surface is then laid over the thickened mud in two strata, the stalks of which the one is com [...]
[...] is no difficulty in securing a fish when he shows himself in this way, as the blades of grass, which have been arranged so as to cross each other beneath the surface of the mud, form a net through which he can [...]
[...] the base of the skull. No. 4. Three specimens of walking fishes were then placed on some wet grass in an [...]
[...] No. 8. A number of these fishes were placed in a tub, with a small amount of water and plenty of common grass. No other food was allowed them; but at the end of three weeks they were perfectly well [...]
[...] very active in its movements, and almost invariably gives rise to an exciting chase over the grass before it can be captured. Most of the great tenacity of life for which many of the Indian fresh-water fishes [...]
All the year round02.12.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 02. Dezember 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] the long green alleys were already dotted with freshly fallen leaves. In many spots the grass had been worn away entirely, in more it was brown, brittle, and stubbly; the leaves lay where they fell, being not yet suffi [...]
[...] A female figure, trim, neat, and lissome, strolling along with somewhat languid steps, and idly pushing up the grass with her parasol. Just the sort of figure to in duce a wish to see the face belonging to it. [...]
[...] “You startled me, Mr. Gerald,” she said, with a half-laugh. “You came so quietly behind me on the grass that I did not hear you.” “But you expected me, Rose?” [...]
[...] foot underground. The best plan to effect the burglary is to thrust into the orifice of the mine a straw or a long stem of grass, to serve as a conducting clue, and then to sap round it with a garden spade, so as to [...]
[...] Of spiders spreads its silver tracery, Glistening with morning dew ; and yellowing tufts. Of brake-grass, withered by the early frosts, Give covert to the lark, whose clear shrill pipe Wakes the hill-echoes with its melody, - [...]
[...] trailing his weary steps through the cool grass, with a sense of thankfulness after the hot flinty road, were pleasant breaks in the monotony of her day, which she would have [...]
All the year round19.11.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 19. November 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] daintiest pothooks. Not that I think our friend will prove arable pasture. Deuce a blade of grass I’ll ever raise off him. Lord forgive him for all my wasted dinners, which he’ll have to account for one day !” [...]
[...] For ever and ever the reddening leaves Float to the sodden grasses. For ever and ever the shivering trees Cower and shrink to the chilling breeze, [...]
[...] the first place, a weed need not be natu ralised. Such plants as the troublesome couch-grass, the coltsfoot, and the chick weed certainly come under this category, and their nativity is, so far as we know, [...]
[...] which connects it with the Anglo-Saxon weod, which originally signified not only weed, but also herb or grass generally; in this sense it is used by Spenser and others among the older writers. In the Promp [...]
[...] the earth was burnt half a foot deep, yet it put up again as fresh as ever, covering the ground so close as not to let any grass grow amongst it; and the cattle can't abide it. But it doth not injure corn so [...]
[...] grow amongst it; and the cattle can't abide it. But it doth not injure corn so much as grass, because the plough cuts off the stalks, and it doth not grow so high before harvest as to choke the corn. It is [...]
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