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Examiner03.07.1841
  • Datum
    Samstag, 03. Juli 1841
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] successful growth of corn demands hot and dry summers, which we seldom have, and hence our grasses, with our root and green crops, are far better, and our corn worse, than those of almost all the countries of the Continent of Europe. [...]
[...] would be more profitably employed both for the community and the landlord. Some of them would be laid down in grass to be mown or pastured, and some tilled with green and root crops for human food or for that of cattle. The gross produce of an [...]
[...] throughout Holland and Belgium, and well known as the best in Europe. The case with regard to grass or meadow land is still more conclusive. These, when the soil is equal, bear, as is well known, a higher rent than lands [...]
[...] English farmer can grow, without the possibility of any, or at least any material, competition. There are grass, hay, a great variety of root and green crops, garden vegetables, small fruits, cattle for food and labour, and the whole produce of the dairy. These, [...]
[...] ragement afforded to the latter by the superior extent and spirit of our manufactures and commerce. In butter, cheese, grass seeds, madder, flax, hemp, linseed, rapeseed, and other agricultural produce, they are the greatest exporters in Europe. [...]
[...] distress, he turned back into the road, and escaped. In a. few minutes afterwards his wife, Harriet Simms, was seen to kick the long grass on the margin of a ditch, as if in search of ºft. which had been dropped. Simms and his wife were taken, and fully committed for trial. Nicholls [...]
Examiner18.05.1844
  • Datum
    Samstag, 18. Mai 1844
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] between seven and eight o'clock, he was crossing a field called the Thirty Acre Field, at Stoke Newington, when he saw amidst the grass, which was very high, a hole appa rently newly dug, but only a few inches in depth, close try which lay a small deal box, such as is generally used by [...]
[...] age, stated that about five o'clock he was walking in the Thirty Acre Field, when he saw a woman lying on the grass at a retired part of the field. She soon afterwards got up, and a man also, whom he did not see before, fol lowed her. They walked towards the spot where the de [...]
[...] depositing something on the ground, and they both hastily quitted the spot together. On going to the spot where they had been lying, he saw blood on the grass, and a piece of blue checked rag, which was also spotted with blood. He should know the man again.—Another boy, named [...]
[...] §. e had the appearance of being in the family way, ing very stout about the waist. After a time she sat her self down on the grass, when the young man, seeing wit ness, whispered something in her ear, when she gºt up, and they walked away in a contrary directiºn, being [...]
[...] CoRN Exch ANGE, Mox DAY, MAY 13.—During the past week we had a few hours' rain, but it was not nearly sufficient to be of any benefit to the spring corn and grass, which no longer have the promising appearance of a week or two since; and we fear the want of moisture has prevented some lands being sown with [...]
Examiner15.10.1842
  • Datum
    Samstag, 15. Oktober 1842
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] For the production of the grasses, no country can bear a comparison with Great Britain and Ireland. The same humidity of climate that favours these is [...]
[...] You cannot cultivate two corn crops in succession without injury to both crops and land. It is the very reverse with the grasses, and with root crops. You may pasture for ever, and, with ordinary care, you not only do not impoverish, but you improve [...]
[...] course the difficulty, to carry undertakings of this kind to completion. Once completed, success is pretty sure; “while the grass grows” is the time of danger. Our public can hardly be trusted to support any work, when support is to be given [...]
[...] Barnet, Redbourne, and other towns in the route, that depended upon the traffic, are mere shadows of the past. Between the former and St Alban's grass to the width of two feet may be seen growing in the middle of the road, too plainly demonstrating the effects complained of. [...]
[...] LiAM JAckson Hookrri, K.H. L.L.D. F.R.A. and L S. &c. &c. &c. Fifth Edition, with Additions and Corrections; and 173 Figures illustra tive of the Umbelliferous Plants, the Composite Plants, the Grasses, and the Ferns. In 2 vols. Vol. II, in Two Parts, completing the British Flora. 24s, bds. [...]
Examiner25.08.1839
  • Datum
    Sonntag, 25. August 1839
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] your regiment. This afternoon, six individuals on horseback passed through the river, and amused themselves by riding through my son's grass, laid in for hay. On their return I spoke to them civilly, and told them I thought they were not aware they had been committing trespass in my land. [...]
[...] in that regiment, having passed on horseback through the river, and amused themselves in riding through your son's grass land laid in hay,’ and that after some personal alter cation on their part, “ you had told them they were black guards, and that you knew they were officers of the 11th [...]
[...] not in the direction ‘towards Herne Bay;" for, after quit ting my land, they were ſound riding, across a field of high grass at the back of Hale's Place, and were practising their hºrses in leaping over hurdles in the same field, sºme of which they broke down; that they were remonstrated with [...]
[...] my field in question, nor any thoroughfare whatever, which the parties well knew; that they did not even keep on the pasture, but broke into a field of high grass laid in for hay, and, as can be proved by eye-witnesses, rode several times backwards and forwards, dama ing the same; and [...]
[...] had its prolific little mansion, teeming with ſº with an old hat nailed against the wall fºr the house-keeping wren: a motherly hºn, under a coop on the grass-plot, cluºking to keep around her a brood of vagrant chickens: a coºl stone well, with the moss-covered bucket suspended to the long [...]
Examiner29.07.1838
  • Datum
    Sonntag, 29. Juli 1838
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] here and there the picturesque forms of Arabs, relieved by the fresh sounds of waterfalls, and over looked, in picturesque quaintness, by little grass roofed mills upon its banks. The entrance to Naplous itself is thus graphically given— [...]
[...] midst of her desolation. All around was a beautiful valley, watered by running streams, and covered by a rich carpet of grass, sprinkled with wild flowers of every hue, and beyond, stretched like an open book before me, a boundary of fruitful mountains, the vine and the olive rising in terraces to their [...]
[...] º capital under a fig-tree by its side, and I asked him what were the ruins that we saw ; and while his oxen were quietly cropping the grass that grew among the fragments of the ... oor, he told me that they were the ruins of the palace of a king—he believed, of the Christians; and [...]
[...] “It stands perfectly isolated; rising alone from the plain in a rounded tapering form, like a truncated cone, to the height of three thousand feet, covered with trees, grass, and wild flowers from the base to its summit, and presenting the combination so rarely found in natural scenery of the bold [...]
[...] Kenilworth Castle; and perhaps these venerable ruins were never seen to greater advantage. Some showers, early in the morning, had given to the grass, the trees, and above all the ivy, a brilliancy that contrasted strangely, but admirably, with the cold grey stone which they surrounded or embraced. [...]
Examiner10.06.1843
  • Datum
    Samstag, 10. Juni 1843
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] tionary, as now, but progressive. Then, as to supply; the plant miscalled “a cane" is a grass, as much as wheat, or barley, or rice, or maize, or rye-grass, and grows in perfec tion in any good soil fit to raise to advantage the [...]
[...] Henry for our love. Worshipful my lords and brethren, while barons and knaves go to loggerheads, honest men get their own. Time grows under us like grass. York and Lancaster may pull down each other—and what is left P Why, three things that thrive in all weather—LoNDoN, [...]
[...] — On Saturday last the river Tivy (Cardigan), swelled by the late rains, overflowed its banks so as completely to destroy all the corn and grass. The loss to the neighbouring gentry and farmers is immense. - The Henley regatta is fixed for the 29th of this [...]
Examiner09.09.1838
  • Datum
    Sonntag, 09. September 1838
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] sheep, 10,200,000l.; wool, 4,056,000l. ; pigs, 1,000,000l.; poultry and eggs, 1,344,000l. ; horses, 3,000,000l. ; dairy produce, 12,000,000l. ; and grass, 13,000,000l. Mr Rodwell then proceeded at great length to compare the numbers of the various classes of the community, from [...]
[...] I then shook my head and said, “Good by, God bless you,” and he said “Good by.” I then assisted in laying him down on the grass, and immediately undid his garments, when I discovered a wound between the fourth and fifth ribs; I robed it with my finger, and at once pronounced it to be a [...]
[...] and the gentlemen out of the gig went down the hill toge ther. One of the gentlemen who got out of the gig sat down on the grass. He spoke to two young girls. I did not then know for what purpose these gentlemen were assembled. The gentleman who sat on the grass said to the girls, “Here, [...]
Examiner05.05.1839
  • Datum
    Sonntag, 05. Mai 1839
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] always relieved by masses of rock of a dark Fºl. or red dish brown, . lº.º.º. with the light green tender moss or darker coloured grass." See how they can rise too above the squalidness of circumstances even in point of meatness of dress [...]
[...] The next morning I took a delightful walk before breakfast on the sand hills, at whose base the house is situated, and whose slope, covered with fine grass, forms the grounds beyond the plantation. The view over the bay is beautiful: its fine sandy beach—the rocky mountain which forms its [...]
[...] by the clap-trap of political names, nor by garbled and weak misrepresentations of political characters, nor by that very popular snake-in-the-grass style which, though its bitter personality and coarse cari cature may raise it to temporary notice, proves those [...]
[...] ridge. Just published, the Fourth Edition, with Plates containing 83 Figures illustrative of the Grasses and Umbelliferous Plants, price les. Plain, [...]
Examiner26.10.1844
  • Datum
    Samstag, 26. Oktober 1844
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] in one contracting and .. ring, yet always going on as fast as he, danced merrily before him; the colour of the long grass came and went, as if the light clouds made it timid as they floated through the distant air. The birds, so many Pecksniff consciences, sang gaily upon every branch : [...]
[...] and some to spare. Yoho, beside the village-green, where cricket-players linger yet, and very little indentation made in the fresh grass by bat or wicket, ball or player's foot, sheds out its perfume on the night. Away with four fresh horses from the Bald-faced Stag, where topers congregate [...]
[...] The prisoner said he had gone out early on that morning to Stepney fields to gather mushrooms, and picked up the powder-flask on the grass.-The policeman remarked that if the flask had been lying on the wet grass all the night it would have been quite rusted, but instead of that it was [...]
Examiner08.07.1843
  • Datum
    Samstag, 08. Juli 1843
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] found a gentleman, who gave his name Lieut.-Colonel Fawcett, and his address, 188 Sloane street, lying on the grass, bleeding from a wound in the right side; another gentleman named Grant; and a third, who gave his name as George Gulliver, surgeon of the Royal Horse [...]
[...] Mr Grant, a lieutenant in the Guards, but the name of the fifth individual was not ascertained. In the field on which the occurrence took place the grass is very high. so that the whole positions of the duellists were perfectly traced, and more particularly the spot where the unfor [...]
[...] koned me, and told me to follow him. I did so, and went into the field adjoining the rifle ground of the Brecknock Arms, where I saw a gentleman standing on the grass look ing at the Colonel, who was lying at his feet. That gentle man was Mr Gulliver. Colonel Fawcett was lying on his [...]
[...] there was anything there, but found nothing. - John Holland re.examined: When the gentlemen were in the high grass Colonel Fawcett was in my sight, but not the others, and I was watching what they were going to do. The moment I heard the report I saw the Colonel fall. I [...]
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