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Quotes from The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett
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 Current Search - live in The Secret Garden
1  They want to live same as we do.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXIV
2  He's always talking about live things.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XIV
3  I am quite well and I shall live to be a man.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXIII
4  If I live I may be a hunchback, but I shan't live.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XIII
5  And he knows where foxes and badgers and otters live.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XIV
6  If I were to live, this place would sometime belong to me.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XIII
7  He said, 'The lad might live if he would make up his mind to it.'
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XIV
8  The Magic in this garden has made me stand up and know I am going to live to be a man.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXIII
9  If you let it stay there after it has got in you may never get over it as long as you live.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXVII
10  He says he feels it in his veins and it makes him strong and he feels as if he could live forever and ever.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XIX
11  When Mary Lennox was sent to Misselthwaite Manor to live with her uncle everybody said she was the most disagreeable-looking child ever seen.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER I
12  It's enough for a person who is going to die," answered Mary when first she heard this, "but it's not enough for a person who is going to live.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXIV
13  If he does live and that Indian child stays here I'll warrant she teaches him that the whole orange does not belong to him, as Susan Sowerby says.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XX
14  One of the strange things about living in the world is that it is only now and then one is quite sure one is going to live forever and ever and ever.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXI
15  Then when they took me to the seaside and I used to lie in my carriage everybody used to stare and ladies would stop and talk to my nurse and then they would begin to whisper and I knew then they were saying I shouldn't live to grow up.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XV
16  But she thought over it a great deal afterward; and when Mrs. Crawford told her that night that she was going to sail away to England in a few days and go to her uncle, Mr. Archibald Craven, who lived at Misselthwaite Manor, she looked so stony and stubbornly uninterested that they did not know what to think about her.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER II
17  She never remembered seeing familiarly anything but the dark faces of her Ayah and the other native servants, and as they always obeyed her and gave her her own way in everything, because the Mem Sahib would be angry if she was disturbed by her crying, by the time she was six years old she was as tyrannical and selfish a little pig as ever lived.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER I
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