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Updated: May 11, 2025
"Plutus is at the door and to-morrow morning you shall both have garlands." "Yes, of violets, ivy and roses," added Dame Herse. "Is Agne asleep?" "As sound as the dead. She always sleeps soundly unless she lies wide awake all the night through. But we were both so tired and I am still. It is a comfort to yawn. Do you see how I am sitting?" "On the clothes-chest?" said Herse.
The good hunchback appeared cured of his old love, embraced the children, and when he was alone with the dyer's wife, recalled the night in the clothes-chest, and the night in the sewer, to her memory, saying to her, "Ha, ha! what games you used to have with me." "It was your own fault," said she, laughing.
To convince Jan he had pulled out the table drawer and thrown back the lid of his clothes-chest, to let him see for himself that there was no such letter. Of course he had forgotten what he did with it, Jan concluded. So, no wonder the little girl had turned to the mistress of Falla. Pity she hadn't done it in the first place!
He had a little wooden image of Nossa Senora in his rough wooden clothes-chest, and to this he always had recourse when any squall arose, or when we ran aground on a shoal. Another of our sailors was a tawny white of Cameta; the rest were Indians, except the cook, who was a Cafuzo, or half- breed between the Indian and negro.
"Plutus is at the door and to-morrow morning you shall both have garlands." "Yes, of violets, ivy and roses," added Dame Herse. "Is Agne asleep?" "As sound as the dead. She always sleeps soundly unless she lies wide awake all the night through. But we were both so tired and I am still. It is a comfort to yawn. Do you see how I am sitting?" "On the clothes-chest?" said Herse.
Housewives who operate kitchenettes in Manhattan will appreciate the amount of room which the cook has. And, by the way, this being a German submarine, the oily odors, the smell of grease, and the like are complicated by an all-pervading smell of cabbage and coffee. Two little cabins, the size of a clothes-chest, accommodate the deck and engine-rooms officers two in each.
Young, modest, rose and white, and just about as tall as Your Majesty. If you will allow me, I will not tell you who she is, till after I have been to our tent to fetch the gems with the copies of the marble." "You will find them in an ivory casket at the bottom of my clothes-chest," said Publius; "here is the key."
Glegg's slate-colored silk gown must have been; but from certain constellations of small yellow spots upon it, and a mouldy odor about it suggestive of a damp clothes-chest, it was probable that it belonged to a stratum of garments just old enough to have come recently into wear. Mrs. Glegg held her large gold watch in her hand with the many-doubled chain round her fingers, and observed to Mrs.
But he came into the apartment singing, and, whatever the scuffling had meant, found Bardolph in one corner employed in sorting garments from a clothes-chest, while at the extreme end of the room Mistress Quickly demurely stirred the fire; which winked at the old knight rather knowingly. "Then came the bold Sir Caradoc," carolled Sir John. "Ah, mistress, what news? And eke Sir Pellinore.
In the better class of houses special architectural arrangements are made for the butsudan; an alcove, recess, or other contrivance, often so arranged as to be concealed from view by a sliding panel or a little door In smaller dwellings it may be put on a shelf, for want of a better place, and in the homes of the poor, on the top of the tansu, or clothes-chest.
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