1 "Went out in the barn," said George.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 3 2 He'd sleep right alongside that box in the barn.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 3 3 He'll want to sleep right out in the barn with 'em.'
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 3 4 They's no call for a bucker to come into the barn at all.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 4 5 But in the barn it was quiet and humming and lazy and warm.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 5 6 She slipped out the door and disappeared into the dark barn.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 4 7 "I don't know what you're doin in the barn anyway," he complained.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 4 8 George chuckled, "I bet Lennie's right out there in the barn with his pup."
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 3 9 As they went through the barn the horses snorted and the halter chains rattled.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 4 10 The horses snorted out in the barn and the chains rang and a voice called, "Lennie."
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 4 11 The afternoon sun sliced in through the cracks of the barn walls and lay in bright lines on the hay.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 5 12 CROOKS, THE NEGRO stable buck, had his bunk in the harness room; a little shed that leaned off the wall of the barn.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 4 13 And while she went through the barn, the halter chains rattled, and some horses snorted and some stamped their feet.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 4 14 On one side of the little room there was a square four-paned window, and on the other, a narrow plank door leading into the barn.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 4 15 The hay came down like a mountain slope to the other end of the barn, and there was a level place as yet unfilled with the new crop.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 5 16 ONE END OF THE great barn was piled high with new hay and over the pile hung the four-taloned Jackson fork suspended from its pulley.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 5 17 Through the open door that led into the barn came the sound of moving horses, of feet stirring, of teeth champing on hay, of the rattle of halter chains.
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