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Updated: May 3, 2025


The old woman was short, broad, black and wrinkled, with yellow fangs, red hanging lips, and wicked eyes. She leered at them; the boy shrank before it, but stood his ground. "Aunt Elspeth," he began, "Zora and I are going to plant and tend some cotton to pay for her schooling just the very best cotton we can find and I heard" he hesitated, "I heard you had some wonderful seed."

"Well, we marched along, looking right and left at the pretty faces and there were plenty of them, too that a momentary curiosity drew to the windows; but although we smiled and ogled and leered as only a newly arrived regiment can smile, ogle, or leer, by all that's provoking we might as well have wasted our blandishments upon the Presbyterian meeting-house, that frowned upon us with its high-pitched roof and round windows.

And a wave of the hand towards the advancing myrmidons indicated the searchers. "You go too far, sir," blustered the earl. "Ay, surely," put in Mr. Caryll. "You are mad to think a gentleman is to submit to being searched by any knave that comes to him with a cock-and-bull tale about the Secretary of State." Mr. Green leered again, and produced a paper.

Jerry telephoned over to Comanche and found out from Shanklin how you got the numbers, and then he laid out to start a fire under you and git you off. Well, he done it, didn't he?" Ten-Gallon leered up at Slavens with some of his old malevolence and official hauteur in his puffy face. "Go on with your story, and be careful what charges you lay against my son!" commanded the Governor sharply.

As the old lady could not speak Spanish, she leered at us pleasantly from where she lay, occasionally muttering something in her native tongue, that might have been a tribute to our charms of mind or person, but which sounded more like an incantation. I felt she was a veritable witch, and at any moment expected to find myself changed into some animal or other under the baleful light of her eyes.

Get what you want over to the van; it'll be charged ag'in' yer wages." Bill turned toward the door. "By the way," the boss growled, "what's yer name back where you come from?" "Bill." "Bill what?" "No. Just Bill with a period for a full stop. And that's my business see?" As Moncrossen encountered the level stare of the gray eyes he leered knowingly. "Oh, that's it, eh? All right, Bill!

I think it's disgusting that he and the red-haired man sleep in here with a little boy." He nodded and smiled at her, but Jimmy was not in the cabin at all. As she came out Ole Fred came along the alley-way. He leered at her but did not speak. She hurried into her own cabin, shut the door and pushed the bolt along instinctively.

"I would not be content with a fat Hindu cow after having known English girls. Thou shouldest see those of London, old man. How they love us of dark skin and believe our tales that we are Indian princes!" The father leered unpleasantly. "Thou hast often told me that these white women are shameless. Is it needful to pay the price of marriage to possess this one?"

Mavis did not reply. The man went on: "Although a proud little girl, I don't mind telling you I've had my eye on you, that I've watched you often and that I've great hopes of advancing you in life. Eh!" Here he turned his head so that his eyes leered at her. Mavis repressed an inclination to throw the teapot at his head.

Whisky, rum, gin, brandy, or spirits? Any thing, so it's strong enough to drink to old acquaintanceship. Ha! my boy?" And he leered in Martin's face with a sinister expression, and slapped him familiarly on the shoulder. "Brandy," said Martin. "Brandy let it be! Nothing like brandy! Set out your pure old Cogniac! Toby. A drink for the gods!" "Prime stuff! that.

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