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I knelt; my hand rested by chance upon that little shrivelled form, and lo!
They urged him to forget about shrivelled corpses and stick to viruses.
He looked at the little shrivelled face.
As well as the two vases and the cake stand, she was clutching the remnants of the shrivelled flowers.
'Yes,' said the woman, steadfast in her scrutiny, and holding out her shrivelled hand. '
Hy was also dead, a poor shrivelled thing lying in a coffin that had cracked on its arduous journey between the two worlds.
That . . . burst of darkness had frightened Mr Pin to his shrivelled soul.
But then, his father wouldn't know that Readis felt far more comfortable in the sea, where his shrivelled leg posed no disadvantage or handicap.
For the moment her action simply directed his attention to the object towards which she had been leaning, a thing of shrivelled membrane, a pneumatic glove, lying on the table.
He was a little shrivelled monkey of a man, and Fonce had evidently pulled him out of a deep sleep because he was still yawning and blinking.
For at this moment, as with an earthquake, the Castle falls to ruins; the false Garden withers, and the damsels lie like shrivelled flowers strewn around on the ground.
His gaunt face, however, and his clothes, which hung so baggily over his shrivelled limbs, proclaimed what it was that gave him that senile and decrepit appearance.
I got its hood on to its poor shrivelled head again and set off to catch Lavie, but when I got round the corner of the verandah he was nowhere to be seen or heard.
Trunks were standing about half-packed, Claire was rushing madly round looking for her bonnet, Mary was trying to comfort Willmouse, who was crying loudly and looked, I thought, rather a little shrivelled thing.
I looked at the altar; in the orange glow of the valves, I suddenly saw the vision, the nightmare of the well-shaft - there was the huge seated figure, and, apparently, sitting on its lap, the dark shrivelled form of the Virgin.
The children buy these balls and toss them into the air, where they travel one way or the other, blown by winds we cannot see, till in the end they burst and of each there remains nothing but a little shrivelled skin, a shred of substance, which they are told is made from the gum of a tree.