Why is this peach-tree said to be better than that other; but because it produces more or better fruit? ❋ Unknown (2006)
Just at noon Maryanka was sitting in their vineyard in the shade of a peach-tree, getting out the family dinner from under an unharnessed cart. ❋ Unknown (2003)
She was, as he had guessed, in one of the greenhouses tying up peach-tree branches. ❋ Blyton, Enid (1957)
He had broken a blooming switch from the peach-tree beneath which he stood, and she reproached him fondly. ❋ Alice MacGowan (N/A)
The jasmine and hawthorn are just coming into blossom, and I see what looks like a peach-tree in full bloom in Sam's yard. ❋ Elizabeth Ware [Editor] Pearson (N/A)
_ -- A peach-tree, which grows beside our house and brushes against the window, is so burdened with fruit that I have had to prop it up. ❋ Various (N/A)
The root resembles that of the peach-tree; the leaves are green, longish at the point, and narrow, an inch and half long, and jagged all round. ❋ Various (N/A)
Its long, low facade, broken here and there by a miniature window or a narrow doorway, appeared to stretch out into interminable length beneath the towering beeches and the snarl of the peach-tree boughs. ❋ Anna Bowman Dodd (N/A)
In the foreground is a pavilion, and in the background an orange-tree, while to the right of the pavilion is a peach-tree in full bearing. ❋ Robert Naylor (N/A)
Blossoms of all kinds, excepting those of the red clover and of the honeysuckle, are excellent food; and the bees especially profit by the increased attention bestowed at present on the cultivation of the peach-tree in some parts of America. ❋ Various (N/A)
Sir James Smith mentions the peach-tree as a familiar example. ❋ Various (N/A)
The little peach-tree against the house is almost done for. ❋ Katherine Mary Barrow (N/A)
They burnt five of 'em around my best peach-tree, and killed it; so I ha'n't no peaches this year. ❋ Various (N/A)
The curate nosed it out like a slot-hound; he paced the track himself from the scrub to the peach-tree, and stood under this last gazing to its top, from there to its roots; he shook his head many times, stroked his chin a few: then with a broken cry he made a pounce and picked up -- a peach-stone! ❋ Maurice Henry Hewlett (N/A)
So Tess snapped off a peach-tree switch and, finally cornering the pony, proceeded to use it. ❋ Dana Gatlin (N/A)
And now we have come hither, what painter can draw a landskip more charming and beautiful to the eye, than an old Newington peach-tree laden with fruit in August, when the sun has first begun to paint one side of the fruit with such soft and tempting colours? ❋ Samuel Felton (N/A)
"I'm for that bench under the peach-tree, myself." ❋ Caroline E. Jacobs (1924)
Gabriel removed his eyes from a robin in the peach-tree long enough to say "good morning" at his nurse's request. ❋ Caroline E. Jacobs (1924)
The water is embroidered and shot with the reflections of the peach-tree blossoms growing on both banks. ❋ Unknown (1921)
And dreamily smiles at the peach-tree leaves, where-through ❋ Unknown (1920)