Like henbane, it is often seen on rubbish-heaps and in old brickfields.
2
He employs on his estate-inmines, brickfields, and plantations-overfour thousand men.
3
He would get up, and go out down to the brickfields.
4
And the air seemed always grey, and the smoke from the brickfields was grey.
5
Away to the right were Guinchy, with its brickfields and the ruins of Givenchy.
6
The cry from the brickfields had still to be heard.
7
It is in a very low neighbourhood, close to the canal and brickfields on the Tullingworth Road.
8
The village where you are going to speak has some rowdy elements-drawnfrom the brickfields near it.
9
Then they passed by lonely brickfields.
10
This act of more than savage barbarity was committed at the brickfields, in the house of one Jones, a soldier.
11
They have described the people employed in factories, workshops, mines, and brickfields, as well as in the pursuits of country life.
12
Then a voice rose from a lounging group of men, smoking like chimneys-powerfulfellows; smeared with the clay of the brickfields.
13
An ugly strike in the Latchford brickfields against nonunion labour was giving the magistrates of the country a good deal of anxiety.
14
These huts extended nearly to the brickfields, whence others were building to meet them, and thus to unite that district with the town.
15
It rained that night; rain was the most appropriate weather for the brickfields and sewage-farms and yards of old carts and railway-sleepers we were passing.
16
One of the sites in Newton was awarded to the Brickfields Property Developers.