1 He crouched cowering against the wall.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 3 2 He looked raptly at the wall over Lennie's head.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 3 3 He didn't look at old Candy, who still faced the wall.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 3 4 Then he rolled slowly over and faced the wall and lay silent.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 3 5 He looked at Lennie, still crouched fearfully against the wall.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 3 6 Crooks seemed to grow smaller, and he pressed himself against the wall.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 4 7 A pair of large gold-rimmed spectacles hung from a nail on the wall above his bed.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 4 8 He backed until he was against the wall, and Curley followed, slugging him in the face.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 3 9 Candy leaned against the wall beside the broken collar while he scratched the wrist stump.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 4 10 He stood his broom against the wall and he rubbed his white bristled cheek with his knuckles.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 2 11 He went directly to his bunk and lay down and turned his face to the wall and drew up his knees.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 3 12 Near one wall there was a black cast-iron stove, its stovepipe going straight up through the ceiling.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 2 13 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 14 When the ejector snapped, Candy turned over and looked for a moment at the gun before he turned back to the wall again.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 3 15 He put the pup under his coat, and he crept to the barn wall and peered out between the cracks, toward the horseshoe game.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 5 16 Now the light was lifting as the sun went down, and the sun streaks climbed up the wall and fell over the feeding racks and over the heads of the horses.
Of Mice and Men By John SteinbeckContext In CHAPTER 5 17 On the wall by the window there were pegs on which hung broken harness in process of being mended; strips of new leather; and under the window itself a little bench for leather-working tools, curved knives and needles and balls of linen thread, and a small hand riveter.
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