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Quotes from Little Women by Louisa May Alcott
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1  As the gate clashed behind them, a voice cried from a window.
Little Women By Louisa May Alcott
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER THREE
2  Laurie opened the window, and croaked out as hoarsely as a raven.
Little Women By Louisa May Alcott
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER FIVE
3  One day, as he went prancing down a quiet street, he saw at the window of a ruinous castle the lovely face.
Little Women By Louisa May Alcott
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER TWELVE
4  began Amy, gesticulating with unseemly energy, but she got no further, for Jo quenched her by slamming down the window.
Little Women By Louisa May Alcott
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER SIX
5  I beg your pardon for being so rude, but sometimes you forget to put down the curtain at the window where the flowers are.
Little Women By Louisa May Alcott
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER FIVE
6  It caught in the window, the tower tottered, leaned forward, fell with a crash, and buried the unhappy lovers in the ruins.
Little Women By Louisa May Alcott
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER TWO
7  They always looked back before turning the corner, for their mother was always at the window to nod and smile, and wave her hand to them.
Little Women By Louisa May Alcott
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER FOUR
8  Beth, who was ready first, kept reporting what went on next door, and enlivened her sisters' toilets by frequent telegrams from the window.
Little Women By Louisa May Alcott
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER TWELVE
9  This maneuver she repeated several times, to the great amusement of a black-eyed young gentleman lounging in the window of a building opposite.
Little Women By Louisa May Alcott
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER FOURTEEN
10  Feeling very much ruffled, she went and stood at a quiet window to cool her cheeks, for the tight dress gave her an uncomfortably brilliant color.
Little Women By Louisa May Alcott
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER NINE
11  Just as the dagger is at his heart, a lovely song is sung under his window, informing him that Zara is true but in danger, and he can save her if he will.
Little Women By Louisa May Alcott
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER TWO
12  All quiet, curtains down at the lower windows, servants out of sight, and nothing human visible but a curly black head leaning on a thin hand at the upper window.
Little Women By Louisa May Alcott
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER FIVE
13  A tower rose to the ceiling, halfway up appeared a window with a lamp burning in it, and behind the white curtain appeared Zara in a lovely blue and silver dress, waiting for Roderigo.
Little Women By Louisa May Alcott
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER TWO
14  She put on her hat and jacket as noiselessly as possible, and going to the back entry window, got out upon the roof of a low porch, swung herself down to the grassy bank, and took a roundabout way to the road.
Little Women By Louisa May Alcott
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER FOURTEEN
15  Instantly, Sir What's-his-name recovered himself, pitched the tyrant out of the window, and turned to join the lady, victorious, but with a bump on his brow, found the door locked, tore up the curtains, made a rope ladder, got halfway down when the ladder broke, and he went headfirst into the moat, sixty feet below.
Little Women By Louisa May Alcott
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER TWELVE
16  For two or three hours the sun lay warmly in the high window, showing Jo seated on the old sofa, writing busily, with her papers spread out upon a trunk before her, while Scrabble, the pet rat, promenaded the beams overhead, accompanied by his oldest son, a fine young fellow, who was evidently very proud of his whiskers.
Little Women By Louisa May Alcott
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER FOURTEEN
17  Since the party, she had been more eager than ever, and had planned many ways of making friends with him, but he had not been seen lately, and Jo began to think he had gone away, when she one day spied a brown face at an upper window, looking wistfully down into their garden, where Beth and Amy were snow-balling one another.
Little Women By Louisa May Alcott
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER FIVE
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