BABY in Classic Quotes

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Quotes from The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett
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 Current Search - baby in The Secret Garden
1  He wouldn't set eyes on th baby.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XIV
2  Perhaps that is the first baby way to get it.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXIII
3  Six baby mice were cuddled up asleep near her.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER VI
4  It was a soft thing with a darling silly baby face and legs rather long for its body.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XIX
5  Some were much bigger than the others and some were so tiny that they seemed only babies.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER VI
6  He's a big lad to cry like a baby, but when he's in a passion he'll fair scream just to frighten us.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XIV
7  So when she was a sickly, fretful, ugly little baby she was kept out of the way, and when she became a sickly, fretful, toddling thing she was kept out of the way also.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER I
8  She felt as if she had been on a long journey, and at any rate she had had something to amuse her all the time, and she had played with the ivory elephants and had seen the gray mouse and its babies in their nest in the velvet cushion.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER VI
9  She was, however, only an untrained Yorkshire rustic who had been brought up in a moorland cottage with a swarm of little brothers and sisters who had never dreamed of doing anything but waiting on themselves and on the younger ones who were either babies in arms or just learning to totter about and tumble over things.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER IV
10  But when on his way across the moor he stopped the carriage at the cottage, seven or eight children who were playing about gathered in a group and bobbing seven or eight friendly and polite curtsies told him that their mother had gone to the other side of the moor early in the morning to help a woman who had a new baby.
The Secret Garden By Frances Hodgson Burnett
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXVII