How To Use Midsummer In A Sentence

  • They wor wed at Midsummer, an Sydney kept his word abaat smookin -- he started chewin, an suckin owd empty pipes, but it worn't like smookin, an whenivver he smelt th 'reek ov a cigar it fair set him longin, but like a man owt to do, he didn't braik his promise. Yorkshire Tales. Third Series Amusing sketches of Yorkshire Life in the Yorkshire Dialect
  • Ms. Miller's imprisonment for civil contempt of court was less a perfect storm — to use one of the press 'hoarier clichés to characterize a grim convergence of unpleasant events — as it was a brownout, a distressing midsummer sign that a full power outage is on its way. The Great D.C. Plame-Out, Or: Novak, Lord of the Journo-Flies
  • The main thoroughfare there is Midsummer Boulevard, or H6, if you prefer the totalitarian grid system peculiar to the area.
  • As the vines have yielded their fruit by midsummer and ripened their wood early so as to be ready for starting into growth again in December or January, the grapery is kept cool and ventilated in the fall and early winter, but this need not interfere with the mushroom crop. Mushrooms: how to grow them a practical treatise on mushroom culture for profit and pleasure
  • I don't normally take my holiday in midsummer.
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  • Everything grows very slowly there and all northern hemisphere herbs are grown under shade cloth - the herbs can't manage the intense dry heat of midsummer.
  • Stunted, twisted growth and oddly distorted flowers are the symptoms of aster yellows, a disease which often shows up in midsummer.
  • We use to go for a midnight walk during the midsummer.
  • In the perennial border, a shrublet is the plant that's always in bloom, providing a wonderful contrast with peonies in the spring, delphinium in midsummer, and phlox in late summer.
  • Softwood cuttings are taken from new growth made in early spring to midsummer and are green at the tip and base.
  • Amid the midsummer heat and the excitement in central London, as citizens celebrated Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee, the principal contenders were becoming clear.
  • The trio's third movement is a scherzo, full of fleeting and magical tunes very reminiscent of the Midsummer's Night Dream overture, a piece that Mendelssohn wrote when he was just 17.
  • These days, Midsummer is celebrated with songs, feasts, and dancing around the maypole.
  • Its straggle of brightly-coloured box-like houses is dramatically set between steep stark mountains and a sound strewn, even at the height of midsummer, with huge stately icebergs.
  • When the midsummer sun rises directly over the heel stone, it marks the turning of the season and the approaching harvest season.
  • The cuckoo comes in April, and stays the month of May; sings a song at midsummer, and then goes away. 
  • The trio's third movement is a scherzo, full of fleeting and magical tunes very reminiscent of the Midsummer's Night Dream overture, a piece that Mendelssohn wrote when he was just 17.
  • I played Iago's codpiece in Othello, and I gave my Bottom nightly for two months - and it was very well-received, I might add - in a production of Midsummer Night's Dream. Archive 2009-06-01
  • Shakespeare, in _Midsummer Night’s Dream_, represents him as “a very Shetlander among the gossamer-winged, dainty-limbed fairies, strong enough to knock all their heads together, a rough, knurly-limbed, fawn-faced, shock-pated, mischievous little urchin.” Character Sketches of Romance, Fiction and the Drama A Revised American Edition of the Reader's Handbook, Vol. 3
  • It will be at its most intense on a hot, dry midsummer day. Times, Sunday Times
  • There's a new Royal Shakespeare Company production of 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' at the Barbican.
  • The flower-woman at the gate of her garden had now only autumnal blooms for sale in the vases which flanked the entrance; the windrows of the rowen, left steeping in the dews overnight, exhaled a faint fragrance; a poor remnant of the midsummer multitudes trailed itself along to the various cafes of the valley, its pink paper bags of bread rustling like sere foliage as it moved. Their Silver Wedding Journey — Complete
  • In southernmost regions, your garden's rest period probably will coincide with the intense midsummer heat instead of winter.
  • The monument was orientated to mark sunrise at the midsummer solstice (and sunset at the midwinter solstice), but whether it has further astronomical significance is debatable.
  • A few dwarf birches unfold their leaves amid the rocks; a few sub-arctic willows hang out their catkins beside the swampy runnels; the golden potentilla opens its bright flowers on slopes where the evergreen _Empetrum nigrum_ slowly ripens its glossy crow-berries; and from where the sea-spray dashes at full tide along the beach, to where the snow gleams at midsummer on the mountain-summits, the thin short sward is dotted by the minute cruciform stars of the scurvy-grass, and the crimson blossoms of the sea-pink. The Cruise of the Betsey or, A Summer Ramble Among the Fossiliferous Deposits of the Hebrides. With Rambles of a Geologist or, Ten Thousand Miles Over the Fossiliferous Deposits of Scotland
  • What other cosmic reasoning can explain this insufferable, graceless production of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream now playing at the Poor Alex?
  • midsummer
  • Plants sown in midsummer tend to bolt quickly. Planning the Organic Herb Garden
  • A peculiar experience occurs in thick Australian bushland in the shimmering heat of midsummer's noon.
  • The Mani is a good place to walk at any time of the year, except in the searing heat of midsummer.
  • The quaint pinkish-white flowers of the turtle-head showed in wet places, and instead of the lilac racemes of the purple-fringed orchis, which had disappeared with midsummer, we found now the slender braided spikes of the lady's-tresses, latest and lowliest of the orchids, pale and pure as nuns of the forest, and exhaling a celestial fragrance. Little Rivers; a book of essays in profitable idleness
  • Mexican bush sage grows 3 to 4 feet tall and bears velvety purple flower spikes from early- or midsummer into winter, or until a cold snap shuts them down.
  • It is the lust of a mother (not, say, an uncle) that so tortures Shakespeare's Hamlet ( "Frailty, thy name is woman"), a girl's sexual fickleness that takes out the hero in Troilus and Cressida, a queen's love for an ass that brings down the house in A Midsummer Night's Dream. Fidelity With a Wandering Eye
  • Just as in Scandinavia the parasitic rowan is deemed a countercharm to sorcery, so in Germany the parasitic mistletoe is still commonly considered a protection against witch-craft, and in Sweden, as we saw, the mistletoe which is gathered on Midsummer Eve is attached to the ceiling of the house, the horse’s stall or the cow’s crib, in the belief that this renders the Troll powerless to injure man or beast. Chapter 68. The Golden Bough
  • By midsummer you'll be able to take your vacation snapshots with standard film, and the photofinisher can return not only slides or prints but a compact disc as well. Honey, I Shrunk The Disc
  • There's no fairy-tale involved like Midsummer Night's Dream where there's make-believe.
  • A perfect late midsummer day - the cruel heat has abated, and the humidity has been replaced with clear cool air that rests lightly on your skin.
  • The Black Forest is a country of almost unbroken shade, and in the still days of midsummer the whole place was covered with a motionless canopy of verdure. Confidence
  • Playing for the worst team in the league means that journeymen sometimes get an unexpected trip to the midsummer classic.
  • At the midsummer revels Miss Julie indulges in a flirtation with Jean.
  • A cool day in midsummer is always a good day to watch blues taking shelter in the grass.
  • Foxtail lilies (eremurus), which come in a range of colours, produce tall bottlebrushes of flowers in midsummer, growing from one to two metres. IcNewcastle
  • On a warm Friday in June, Sweden will celebrate Midsummer - the day of the summer solstice.
  • As the large, loose clusters of tiny greenish flower blossoms fade, the flower stalks get longer and by midsummer are covered with fuzzy purple or pink hairs.
  • The novel I'd dreamed of for years, the one set in the merry, sinister woods of fairytale and midsummer, was there, waiting for me.
  • The little white flowers which appear in midsummer are racemed in leafy whorls, followed by small black fruits, popularly called seeds. Culinary Herbs: Their Cultivation Harvesting Curing and Uses
  • Like its counterpart in the winter, Giuli from which we get the word Yule, Litha was a double-length month, or two months of the same name, placed either side of the midsummer solstice. Litha (July) and Trilithi: the early English calendar
  • The Colchicum is much larger with goblet-shaped, fleshy flowers that are resistant to rain and should be planted in midsummer.
  • The next big social event on the calendar is the Commodore's Midsummer Night Ball.
  • We use to go for a midnight walk during the midsummer.
  • A Midsummer Night's Dream will transport you to an enchanted world of fairies in elfin glades, love and romance in rural Tuscany.
  • Any day now, I can just picture it, I'll nip down to them in the basement and they'll be beavering away at Two Gentlemen of Verona or A Midsummer Night's Dream.
  • The Colchicum is much larger with goblet-shaped, fleshy flowers that are resistant to rain and should be planted in midsummer.
  • Just as in Scandinavia the parasitic rowan is deemed a countercharm to sorcery, so in Germany the parasitic mistletoe is still commonly considered a protection against witch-craft, and in Sweden, as we saw, the mistletoe which is gathered on Midsummer Eve is attached to the ceiling of the house, the horse's stall or the cow's crib, in the belief that this renders the Troll powerless to injure man or beast. The Golden Bough: A Study in Magic and Religion
  • Plants sown in midsummer tend to bolt quickly. Planning the Organic Herb Garden
  • Four seperate police forces are monitoring every traveller's vehicle in the four day countdown to midsummer.
  • The alignment in question is four ways: to midsummer sunrise and sunset, and to midwinter sunrise and sunset. BRITAIN BC: Life In Britain and Ireland before the Romans
  • The cuckoo comes in April, and stays the month of May; sings a song at Midsummer, and then goes away. 
  • Now, it was midsummer: the tubbed oleanders, everywhere set out, were masses of intolerable red sweetness. Two Tales of Old Strasbourg
  • For a nice midsummer picknick – mushroom and zucchini quiche, homegrown cherry tomatoes and sugar peas, and bulgur. June « 2009 « Were rabbits
  • It starts blooming in midsummer with huge panicles of showy, white florets surrounding smaller fertile flowers.
  • The cuckoo comes in April, and stays the month of May; sings a song at midsummer, and then goes away. 
  • We use to go for a midnight swim during the midsummer.
  • The soft midsummer evening was just right for a romantic stroll around Malham Tarn.
  • Sheep graze the area between midsummer and late autumn to prevent the fields deteriorating into scrubland and no nutrients are placed on the land to create better conditions for flora and fauna to flourish.
  • May-day dances and revelling have reached our days, and probably they have, like the Midsummer Eve's festivities, their origin in the far off times when the Fairy Tribe inhabited Britain and other countries, and to us have they bequeathed these Festivals, as well as that which ushers in winter, and is called in Wales, _Nos glan gaua_, or All Hallow Eve. Welsh Folk-Lore a Collection of the Folk-Tales and Legends of North Wales
  • Because many birds which become silent about Midsummer, reassume their notes in September; as the thrush, blackbird, woodlark, willow-wren, The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 17, No. 475, February 5, 1831
  • Although the plants bear tall spikes of white or lavender flowers in midsummer, hosta are planted primarily for the season-long show of their striking foliage.
  • Nowhere does the night seem more "stilly," or the sense of seclusion more profound, than in the middle of the broad bay on a midsummer night before or after the theatre-goers have crossed. Lippincott's Magazine, November 1885
  • Hard by our trysting-place was a hazel-copse thick enow, for it was midsummer, and she said she would go thereinto and shift gowns, and bear me out thence the gift of the old clout (so she called it, laughing merrily). The Water of the Wondrous Isles
  • Though it was midsummer, the mornings at Glastonbury were still cold and could chill a person to the bone.
  • She taught a hairweaving seminar for part of our Midsummer celebrations in 1997 which got us interested in this ancient craft.
  • The fruiting season is midsummer to early autumn.
  • The cuckoo comes in April, and stays the month of May; sings a song at midsummer, and then goes away. 
  • Next, imagine you're down there, on the ground in midsummer's heat.
  • Bloom begins in midsummer and lasts until frost.
  • Now, in the static dry heat of midsummer, it seems nobody wants to keep their clothes on. Times, Sunday Times
  • But at last rose up Stephen the Eater and spake: "Meat and drink and lodging is free without price to every comer to Wethermel, and most oft, as here it is, our good will goes with it; yet meseemeth that since these friends of ours come belike from the outlands and countries where is more tidings than mostly befalleth here, it might please them to make us their debtors by saying us some lay, or telling us some tale; for we be not bustled to drink the voidee cup now, these nights of Midsummer, when night and day hold each other's hands throughout the twenty-four hours. The Sundering Flood
  • The last time they'd seen the tin can was in the baking midsummer sun - a holiday from way back.
  • CLICO Midsummer Classic winner Just In Time, who is blind in one eye, won the second jewel of the Triple Crown with a first-time eyeshield / blinker and has displayed marked improvement since that run. TrinidadExpress Today's News
  • The real action takes place when the image is downloaded to the computer: sophisticated software isolates the circular area around the iris called the limbus, where a film of tear fluid over the cornea reflects the world like a clear midsummer lake. MEET THE EYE CAM
  • By midsummer both police and protesters were girding for confrontation.
  • The topic, as good as a smart diagnosis of language, replete with lots of word play, quick rebuttal in stichomythia, as good as both comic as good as critical diagnosis of love, remind us of alternative early plays of a Bard identical to Love's Labor's Lost as good as Romeo as good as Midsummer Night's Dream. Philadelphia Reflections: Shakspere Society of Philadelphia
  • The whole experience will feel a bit like taking a sweat-stained midsummer National Express coach journey with an entire battalion of elite concert violinists who somehow manage to perform an hour and a half of Schoenberg even while they're banging each other in the ear with their bowing arm.6 Lionel Messi will do something completely different. Ten ways to satisfy your constant craving for El Clásico | Barney Ronay
  • Its most popular Midsummer Day finds many Finns lighting bonfires and drinking enthusiastically at their country homes. Finland is also home to the world's longest-running rock festival, Ruisrock.
  • By midsummer, the water was mucid, pea-green, fermenting, almost bubbling with corruption.
  • I would be doing another role as well: Tom Snout, one of the rude mechanicals in A Midsummer Night's Dream.
  • Since midsummer, torrents of big, sappy pine cones have rained down from the estimated 16 million Eastern white pine trees in Connecticut, carpeting lawns, sticking to dog paws and covering wooded areas.
  • It's midsummer - a mere week from the solstice - and the weather report is talking about snow in the South Island over the weekend.
  • It was created to mark Shakespeare's quatercentenary and broadly follows the plot of his A Midsummer Night's Dream. AvaxHome RSS:
  • Plants sown in midsummer tend to bolt quickly. Planning the Organic Herb Garden
  • A unique prehistoric tomb in Ireland has been revealed to align to both the midsummer Sun and the midwinter Moon.
  • The long axis of the structure at Woodhenge points to the entrance into the henge; like Stonehenge, the whole site is orientated towards the rising midsummer sun.
  • He took victory in the Chesterfield Spire Midsummer Road Race from an eight-man gallop on the hilly Baslow course in the Peak District.
  • His wife sits regally with her daughter, both seeming like fairyland characters from A Midsummer Night's Dream.
  • For the remainder of the 1930s its members continued to hold services either at Stonehenge or Normanton Gorse, but in July rather than at midsummer.
  • The midsummer's eve dance was in precisely four days, and she already had her dress all prepared.
  • Both have daisy-like flowers with a black cone at the centre, and both need well-drained, humus-rich soil and also benefit from feeding in midsummer.
  • The quaint pinkish-white flowers of the turtle-head showed in wet places, and instead of the lilac racemes of the purple-fringed orchis, which had disappeared with midsummer, we found now the slender braided spikes of the lady's-tresses, latest and lowliest of the orchids, pale and pure as nuns of the forest, and exhaling a celestial fragrance. Little Rivers; a book of essays in profitable idleness
  • When we had been safely lodged, at Midsummer, 1827, in the house with the gigantic roof and the wooden eavestrough, into which my father could easily lay his hand, this question immediately presented itself: The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 12
  • We arrived in Bonn on hot midsummer day of smog. Times, Sunday Times
  • Sitting in the sun-sodden upstairs lounge at Midsummer House in Cambridge, overlooking the river, we could smell the rich, meaty push of the stockpots in the kitchen below.
  • The cuckoo comes in April, and stays the month of May; sings a song at Midsummer, and then goes away. 
  • Midsummer vacations are eagerly awaited every year by all students with the sole objective of getting a break from the monotony of studies.
  • The facts are that the highest peaks of the flat racing season are in midsummer. Times, Sunday Times
  • I endured winter blizzards, biting gale force winds, pouring rain, fog, hailstones, and the energy-sapping humidity of midsummer.
  • The earliest print included, Midsummer's Night Mare, pictures a tuxedoed Dali, his hands on a sheep, as host to a hallucinatory gathering in a nocturnal forest.
  • To recreate the country's Midsummer celebration, people in traditional dress danced around a maypole.
  • The romantic entanglements of a touring dance company are played out one midsummer night as they travel on a train.
  • The quote is from "A Midsummer Night's Dream" by William Shakespeare.
  • This new axis also incorporated other solar events, for example the setting of the midsummer sun and the rising and setting of the midwinter sun.
  • In midsummer every town is impossibly crowded.
  • Midsummer Day I saw a sheldrake (probably an escaped bird) flying down the river, looking very splendid in its black, white, and red plumage, in the bright light of the morning. The Naturalist on the Thames
  • Overeaten, overdrunken, overexcited, overextravagant, in all ways figures of incontinence, these noisy Londoners made their way homeward, pursued by the advancing gray light of a Sabbath dawn in midsummer. The Message
  • The winters in Virginia, mild except for occasional freezes, with now and then snowfall during the three winter months, proved less arduous to the Englishmen than the two months of midsummer, when the mercury reaching into the nineties brought discomfort, especially since the men and women were clothed in the bunglesome garments, necessary in a cool zone frequently overhung with fog. Domestic Life in Virginia in the Seventeenth Century
  • The cuckoo comes in April, and stays the month of May; sings a song at Midsummer, and then goes away. 
  • At noon on midsummer's day he measured the length of the shadow, and calculated that the sun was 7° south of the vertical.
  • In the bleak midsummer, ceaseless rain made yet more mischief for cricket yesterday. Times, Sunday Times
  • When established plants go dormant in midsummer, you can divide them.
  • The children also took part in dance and drama activities, made dream catchers and created a silk screen about Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream.
  • It was a lovely midsummer morning.
  • A delay into late summer will mean resellers miss the traditional midsummer buying season.
  • She was progressing well in midsummer in better races than this until disappointing two months ago. The Sun
  • In "Music for Midsummer's Eve," time is an "untuned harmonium/That Muzaks our nights and days. Archive 2009-04-01
  • The cuckoo comes in April, and stays the month of May; sings a song at Midsummer, and then goes away. 
  • The shabby redbrick facades of Het Straatje, or the little street, drowse like its denizens in the midsummer heat.
  • She was progressing well in midsummer in better races than this until disappointing two months ago. The Sun
  • I don't normally take my holiday in midsummer.
  • Its straggle of brightly-coloured box-like houses is dramatically set between steep stark mountains and a sound strewn, even at the height of midsummer, with huge stately icebergs.
  • Scandinavia the parasitic rowan is deemed a countercharm to sorcery, so in Germany the parasitic mistletoe is still commonly considered a protection against witch-craft, and in Sweden, as we saw, the mistletoe which is gathered on Midsummer Eve is attached to the ceiling of the house, the horse's stall or the cow's crib, in the belief that this renders the Troll powerless to injure man or beast. The Golden Bough
  • It's midsummer sometime this week, isn't it?
  • In the dry heat of midsummer, this place of rugged beauty is as spooky as it is spectacular - a disaster waiting to happen.
  • Whether you start with seeds or transplants, planting in midsummer means heat is likely to stress young broccoli plants.
  • In A Midsummer Night's Dream it is the juice from heartsease that Oberon squeezes into Titania's eyes to make her fall in love with Bottom disguised as an ass.
  • “Pennant fever,” I said, looking at the noisy, midsummer lazy, shirtsleeved crowd. Death on a Vineyard Beach
  • The day before had started with midsummer Louisiana predictability, so smotheringly hot that the spongy air seemed to push down on Suzette as she hurried to the cookhouse after church. Excerpt: Cane River by Lalita Tademy
  • While we fault Shakespeare for depicting ordinary folks as "clowns" (recall the Pyramus and Thisbe play in Midsummer Night's Dream), we do much the same ourselves. Joan Williams: Class Creeps Into Our Times
  • The planet's axial inclination was 24-, and northern midsummer fell nearly at periastron. Agent Of The Terran Empire
  • The cuckoo comes in April, and stays the month of May; sings a song at midsummer, and then goes away. 
  • But seriously, there really are observations of circadian activity in arctic reindeer that suggest something interesting is going on in reindeer brains in midwinter and midsummer.
  • A Midsummer Night's Dream is back in Edmonton this week as Alberta Ballet remounts Christopher Wheeldon's rendition of the Shakespeare favorite.
  • If you haven't yet mulched your tomato plants, midsummer's the time to do it.
  • —Swart star: the Dogstar, called swarthy because its heliacal rising in ancient times occurred soon after midsummer. Notes: Book Second. Palgrave, Francis T
  • The cuckoo comes in April, and stays the month of May; sings a song at Midsummer, and then goes away. 
  • As the large, loose clusters of tiny greenish flower blossoms fade, the flower stalks get longer and by midsummer are covered with fuzzy purple or pink hairs.
  • The fairy of folk-lore in Shakespeare's day is nearly everything that the fairies of _A Midsummer-Night's Dream_ are; we may possibly except their exiguity, their relations in love with mortals, and their hymeneal functions. The Sources and Analogues of 'A Midsummer-night's Dream'
  • For a month or so in midsummer, one will see them speeding endlessly to and fro across the sky. Times, Sunday Times
  • A soft haar drifts over the water and the midnight sky is streaked with grey midsummer light.
  • This provision for the fifty-acre headright was set up for the seven-year period prior to Midsummer Day of 1625, but it continued beyond this date as the essential key to Virginia's land policy of the seventeenth century. Mother Earth Land Grants in Virginia 1607-1699
  • I endured winter blizzards, biting gale force winds, pouring rain, fog, hailstones, and the energy-sapping humidity of midsummer.
  • Before enclosures, festivals were vigorously convivial; they were ‘off-licence’ times, drunken, licentious and rude, from midsummer ales to apple-tree wassailing, to May Day's liaisons.
  • In midsummer the lilies reign, with blooms of vivid yellow, orange, maroon and pink.
  • We use to go for a midnight swim during the midsummer.
  • Known as gloriosa daisy, coneflower and black-eyed Susan, this favorite North American native species blooms nonstop - even in partial shade - from midsummer until frost.
  • We use to go for a midnight walk during the midsummer.
  • I was delighted when I read that a Midsummer Writing Festival was arranged for last weekend.
  • The author imagines Titania, the fairy queen of "A Midsummer Night's Dream," as the grief-stricken fairy mother of an adopted human child who has died. Cheeshahteaumauk, Class of '65 (1665)
  • We were noisily appreciative of this, and spent much time sitting around on Midsummer Common (outside the Fort St George), and toasting Heather's brilliant supportive role.
  • The cuckoo comes in April, and stays the month of May; sings a song at Midsummer, and then goes away. 
  • Over the years I've learned to plant black radish after midsummer so it will not bolt to flower before forming a root.
  • That interludes were sometimes performed by villagers we know from ‘Pyramus and Thisbe’ in A Midsummer Night's Dream.
  • Midsummer came, and by that time the desert was a desert no longer: it was a neat, trim-looking piece of ground with smooth walks, some small but promising crops, and a flower-border gay with geraniums, nasturtiums, sweet-peas, nemophila, and convolvulus. Holiday Tales
  • Bully Bottom" in _A Midsummer Night's Dream_, later an overbearing ruffian, especially a coward who abuses his strength by ill-treating the weak; more technically a _souteneur_, a man who lives on the earnings of a prostitute. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 4 "Bulgaria" to "Calgary"
  • A spitter is a freak in a regular tempest -- a midsummer madness of weather upheaval. Blow The Man Down A Romance Of The Coast - 1916
  • It was a rainy, bleak, and dark midsummer night, when nobody dared even to step through the door.
  • The mechanicals in Midsummer were slow and dull, indulging in endless, random byplay rather than the specific actions called for in the text.
  • It was a moment of epiphany in the magic midsummer twilight.
  • Unfortunately the midsummer heat in Athens means his young children Pippa, three, and Oliver, one, will have to stay at home in Faringdon with his wife Georgina, 38.
  • In A Midsummer Night's Dream, he takes his name from the term for an empty reel or spool used in weaving, though it obviously has additional comic implications.
  • Bellows-mender in the William S.akespeare play A Midsummer Night's Dream (5) 17 S.all agile ape of forests in S. Asia (6) 21 Edible subterranean fungus that is also called an earthnut (7) 22 Michael ---, author of the plays Alphabetical Order and Noises Off (5) 23 and 15 American Football team that won S.per Bowl III in 1969 (3,4,4) Mirror.co.uk - Home
  • In early spring, plant the garlic in the garden for harvesting in midsummer. Times, Sunday Times
  • Pea-like flowers open to a lavender blush, then mellow to buff yellow and will perfume the garden from midsummer to autumn.
  • After _A Midsummer Holiday_ no one can contend any longer that the ballade is a structure necessarily any more artificial than the sonnet. Figures of Several Centuries
  • The cuckoo comes in April, and stays the month of May; sings a song at midsummer, and then goes away. 
  • They did A Midsummer Night's Dream and the silicon-based rock kid proudly portrayed the "wall" in Pyramus and Thisbe. MIND MELD: Taboo Topics in SF/F Literature
  • 'Midsummer Night's Dream': a bold, bracing wonderland Seattle Shakespeare Com- pany brings something brac- ingly novel to the Bard's syl- van comedy of wandering lovers and meddling fairies. The Seattle Times
  • It is particularly difficult to bear up against the midsummer heat in Wuhan.
  • Some peaks were snowcapped in midsummer, soaring as high as twenty-five thousand feet. KARA KUSH
  • Both flowered at midsummer and midwinter. Times, Sunday Times
  • The midsummer's evening was warm and filled with anticipation, as a friendly crowd of about 4,000 gathered in a glade in the forest.
  • The cuckoo comes in April, and stays the month of May; sings a song at midsummer, and then goes away. 
  • In midsummer every town is impossibly crowded.
  • Members plan to produce a Golden Jubilee production of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream.
  • 'Midsummer Night's Dream': a bold, bracing wonderland Seattle Shakespeare Com- pany brings something brac- ingly novel to the Bard's syl- van comedy of wandering lovers and meddling fairies. The Seattle Times
  • In midsummer, container-grown plants in local nurseries will be in full leaf so you can get a good idea of what the different varieties will look like.
  • That cabin hadn't seen so much heat since midsummer. Times, Sunday Times
  • The weather has been appalling during the past 72 hours - more like midwinter than midsummer. Times, Sunday Times
  • Midsummer madness is upon us as Manchester United are linked with every footballer capable of standing on one foot and swinging the other.
  • More than 25 bands and ensembles will perform more than 40 concerts on Saturday for the Pershore Midsummer Brass event.
  • Now the wind like a kindly mother sways softly the village slept soundly in the cradle, rocking the midsummer night of countryside like Eden in my heart.
  • The Celts would light balefires all over their lands from sunset the night before Midsummer until sunset the next day.
  • It is a midsummer experience for the middle class every year.
  • On midsummer night last year, for example, he joined other artists for a special display on the River Thames.
  • I love all the lore about the tree: that carrying a double hazelnut in your pocket prevents toothache; that hazel twigs used for divining should be cut on Midsummer's Eve; that hazel twigs entwined in a horse's harness would keep it from being enchanted by the fairies; and that the tree's catkins (or lambs 'tails) were positioned around the kitchen fireplace at lambing time to help with the births. A life less ordinary: Tobias Jones

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