How the sunshine overhead Seem'd to trickle through the shade.
She had indeed run away so far from a mere trickle of blood, but that was a movement of instinctive repulsion.
With a sudden snatch at her skirts and a faint shriek she ran to the door, as if the trickle had been the first sign of a destroying flood.
These, steaming to the Sun, Give the lost wavelets back in cloudy fleece To trickle down the hills, and glide again; Having no pause or peace.
We eat several million pounds a year and 95 percent of that comes from Wisconsin, with a trickle from New York.
They are ripened by placing them on the floor of the cellar, covering with dirt, and allowing water to trickleover them.
I felt something moist trickle down upon the point of it, and I thought me that I was close enough to get the poison that it spat, but not close enough to allow of its fangs reaching me.
The little trickle that went from it seemed just to spread out and lose itself almost immediately in the earth; but it served our purpose, and here we camped.
We sat in silence (while the ponies browsed the tufts of grass) watching the clouds of mosquitos hanging in their phalanxes along the trickle of the stream and the bright, gauzy, blue wings of two mosquito-hawks flashing through their midst.
Here we found a trickle of water, and settled down amongst some small trees and thorny scrub.
To that therefore we moved in broad daylight, glad to find that we should at least have some water, for a muddy trickle flowed down the nullah bed.
After visiting one clump of trees after another, we were at length rewarded by the discovery of a trickle feeding a small pool.
The noise was made by the moving of the sand particles, as they stirred and seethed, with drops of water bubbling between them like the trickle of a spring.
Here and there a muddy trickle came oozing through, to be stopped by a clod of earth, but otherwise there was nothing to do.
Oh, Neale, now I do know what it is, how utterly hideous it would be to have to live without it, to feel only the mean little tricklethat seems mostly all that people have.
Do you think that, which is only a little trickle and a harmless and natural and healthy little trickle, could unsalt the great ocean of its savor?
Here at the bottom was some snow, a great big drift of it still left, all gray and shrunk and honey-combed with rain and wind, with a little trickle of water running away softly and quietly from underneath it, like a secret.
Only, I saw a drop of perspiration tricklefrom her temple along her ear.
With all his nerves tense as the string of a bow, he listened to the vague prison sounds, tried to catch through those inexorable walls all that might trickle in from the life outside.
The mutual action of the platina and the alcohol will be displayed by an increase of temperature, and a generation of acid vapours, which, condensing on the sides of the glass-case, trickle in streams to the bottom.
The contrivance for letting water trickle upon the pebbles, must be carefully kept in play, otherwise much of the evolved acid would be dissipated in nitrous fumes.
At first it seems inconceivable how they should obtain nourishment; but the vapours are collected by the hills above, and trickle down in streams to their roots.
Drops of water trickle down from the roof near one of the sides.
The last expression was given in a most sorrowful tone as he felt the blood trickle on his cheeks and freeze into icy appendages.
Phil simply gasped with relief, and was not satisfied that his eyes did not deceive him until I lifted some of the sparkling liquid in the palm of my hand and let it trickleslowly through my fingers.
They had the ranges well marked, too, and huge rents began to show in our parapets, strings of casualties began to trickle back to the dressing stations in a stream that was to flow steady and unbroken for many days and nights.
At last he could barely hear thetrickle of them, yet he knew the canoe was coming steadily nearer.
The hot tea was like a trickle of new life through every vein in his body, and he had the desire to get up and try out his legs.
They moistened his black, protruding tongue and let a few drops of the cool liquid trickle down his parched throat.
But it does not always trickle when you want it to--though it generally does when you don't.
Dunn resisted still, resisted, though the veins stood out like cords on his brow, though a little trickle of blood crept from the corner of his mouth and though his heart swelled almost to bursting.
Stickin' her through the wrist with his bayonet;" and the young man let a long, luxurious fume of smoke trickle through his nose.
There was no answer; Cecilia saw a tear trickle slowly down the woman's cheek.
But Dick felt he had only a drop or so of physical energy left; and so, lest they should trickle from him, he used them now.
A little trickle of blood had started afresh from the wound on his cheek.
With tender force she managed at last to send a trickle of the spirit into his mouth.
B346] for liquid to trickle down very slowly from a source.
A; b6] move, slide ortrickle slowly across or down on a surface.
Not a hundred feet beyond, a tiny spring bubbled up in the rocks, and dropping down beside it, the girl jerked the pins from her hat and let the cool water trickle into the capacious crown of the Stetson.
At length, conscious of a warm, moist trickle on his chin, he raised one hand mechanically to his face and brought it away, dabbled with bright crimson.
He flashed a glance at Bud, who sagged panting against the table, the fragments of a chair in his hands and a trickle of blood running down his face.
A tinytrickle of blood from Stratton's cut lip ran down his chin and splashed on the front of his torn, disordered shirt.