No wonder then that they rejoiced with an exceeding gladness to see him return and take his place in the kiosk among them, as if he had never been a day's journey away from Bagdad.
The kiosk was raised two steps from the ground; the interior was painted with all the most splendid colors.
The scene of their social resort was a littlekiosk in front of one of the coffee-houses on the bank of the Tigris.
In the outdoor market he watched someone seated on a small couch at a kiosk under a huge umbrella, get a tattoo.
A kiosk selling soft drinks, Buddha statuettes, and cotton candy was already open.
And yet how adorable it is, this kiosk of Philae, in this the abandonment that precedes its downfall!
A veritable kiosk of dreamland now, which one feels is about to disappear for ever under these waters which will subside no more!
Before coming to the sanctuary of Isis, we touch at the kiosk of Philae, which has been reproduced in the pictures of every age, and is as celebrated even as the Sphinx and the pyramids.
He also complained that the work was too hard and was killing him; so that, one way or the other, he intended to shut up the kiosk and look out for something else.
Next time I saw the professor he was in charge of a newspaper kiosk in Palermo, looking older and more dilapidated and still waiting for the manna to fall from heaven.
It had a hillside garden, with a dove-cote in it, and a little kiosk in which Emma liked to sit, with the cat Satan on her lap, and projeck at the strange world in which she found herself.
No matter how the panic-stricken sovereign in Yildiz Kiosk may sacrifice his servants to gain his own ends, I, at least, have a higher motive.
There is something in the wind of more than usual importance in the neighbourhood of Yildiz Kiosk just now, I am certain.
I must tell you that she had nothing on but a peignoir of the finest linen, and the glorious lace-trimmed chemise which I did not choose to see on the day of the famous scene in the little kiosk in the park.
I cannot imagine paradise in any other form; and if God wills that I shall go there after my death, he will build me a little kiosk on that plan in the corner of some star.
At the end a sort of pylon broke the portico, and its large bay, framing in the blue air, showed at the end of a long avenue a summer kiosk of rich and elegant design.
And the kiosk with the orchestra was the hall where Aegidius had waited for death.
The coast appeared opposite him in the great mirror; nothing but houses without roofs, whose tiers of terraces towered higher and higher, and the orchestra was waiting impatiently up above in a quiet kiosk with a broken stone cupola.
The vaulted substructures near the ruins of Indjili Kiosk belonged to the Palace of the Mangana, to which the imperial household resorted to enjoy the cool breezes that winged their way down the Bosporus from the north.
When he had reached the kiosk he went from room to room, until at length he found his sister sitting with the dragon sleeping with his head upon her knee, while she passed her fingers through the hair of his head.
When they had embraced and kissed each other, the sister led her brother to the kiosk and sent his horse to the stables.
It is simply a summer-house, of the kiosk or pavilion pattern, standing in the ornamental grounds of a gentleman's residence.
She came to the kiosk in the centre of the island.
One day, then, worthy Gregory Biro appeared before thekiosk of Feriz Beg and asked to be admitted.
Here in former days on the heights stood the romantic and poetical kiosk of Feriz Beg.
Go back to the Vizier's kioskwhile he hath not noticed thy absence.
A few moments later the flames of the burning kiosk lit up the whole region.
In the middle stood an iron kiosk into which the king and the duke entered.
Near the kiosk was a space covered with bear-skins for the most notable men, and further on, an amphitheatre with an iron railing for the ladies.
The slope of the depression was dim here, merely starlit; it was a steep, broken and fairly shadowed descent, fifty feet to the little dome-like kiosk which marked the nearest subterranean entrance.
I went down it with a swoop, landed in a heap beside the kiosk and ducked into it.
At the kiosk a group of workers and several peering little brains leaped away in terror to let us pass.
In the centre of the kiosk was the fountain, whose alluring voice had tempted Tancred to proceed further than he had at first dared to project.
No," replied young Monsieur de Soulas, "he is raising the kiosk on a concrete foundation, that it may not be damp.
She dreamed of descending by a ladder from the kiosk into the garden of the house occupied by Albert; of taking advantage of the lawyer's being asleep to look through the window into his private room.
Rosalie to herself, standing in the kiosk and looking at the lawyer in his room, the day after Albert's interview with the Abbe, who had reported the result to her father.
If the night-scene in the kiosk is thus fully accounted for to all perspicacious readers, it was not so to Rosalie, though she derived from it the most dangerous lesson that can be given, that of a bad example.
By the light of the moon she saw a pair of arms stretched out from the kioskto help Jerome, Albert's servant, to get across the coping of the wall and step into the little building.
Below was a portion of the garden through which the walk ran, with a graceful curve, to the red kiosk by the front gate.
From ship to shore he looked; then, pursuing the curve inland to the bridge at the upper end; thence down what may be called the western side, he beheld people crowding between a quay and a red kiosk over which pended a wooded promontory.
Then he asked Alaeddin, "What is the cause that the lattice of yonder kiosk (kushk) is not complete?
In the middle of this garden he built a kiosk raised to the height of four stories.
Around the kiosk the chief Ismail planted walks of tall trees, terminating in the different parts of the garden.
The garden was divided by canals of water, and the kiosk was surrounded with ponds and reservoirs.
It had been his intention to do so when he left the comic book kiosk and it continued to be his intention when he sat on the seat in the bus.
In the Piazza del Plebiscito, hundreds of chairs were ranged before the bandstand, and before the kiosk where the women sing on the nights of summer near the Caffe Turco.