MAMMY in Classic Quotes

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Quotes from Gone With The Wind by Margaret Mitche
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 Current Search - mammy in Gone With The Wind
1  'An' Ah say: 'Give dat chile ter its mammy.'
Gone With The Wind By Margaret Mitche
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER LIX
2  Go down to Mrs. Merriwether's and ask her to come up or send her mammy.
Gone With The Wind By Margaret Mitche
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXI
3  She had been Ellen's mammy and had come with her from Savannah to the up-country when she married.
Gone With The Wind By Margaret Mitche
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER II
4  Her manners had been imposed upon her by her mother's gentle admonitions and the sterner discipline of her mammy; her eyes were her own.
Gone With The Wind By Margaret Mitche
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER I
5  With her four daughters, their mammy and their ball dresses in long cardboard boxes crowding the carriage, there was no room for the coachman.
Gone With The Wind By Margaret Mitche
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER V
6  Fanny Elsing and the Bonnell girls, roused early from slumber, were yawning on the back seat and the Elsings' mammy sat grumpily on the box, a basket of freshly laundered bandages on her lap.
Gone With The Wind By Margaret Mitche
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XVII
7  I remember my mammy always said that when she went to Heaven she wanted a taffeta petticoat so stiff that it would stand by itself and so rustly that the Lord God would think it was made of angels' wings.
Gone With The Wind By Margaret Mitche
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XLVIII
8  Jouncing on the back seat of the carriage was her black mammy, Melissy, clutching a greasy side of bacon to her with one hand, while with the other and both feet she attempted to hold the boxes and bags piled all about her.
Gone With The Wind By Margaret Mitche
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXI
9  The thunderstruck Robillards knew the answer in part, but only Ellen and her mammy ever knew the whole story of the night when the girl sobbed till the dawn like a broken-hearted child and rose up in the morning a woman with her mind made up.
Gone With The Wind By Margaret Mitche
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER III