1 Half an hour's interval, for tea.
2 On the table they placed a china tea service.
3 "Also, we provide the tea," said Mrs. Swithin.
4 Wet or fine, the audience would take tea there.
5 Mrs. Manresa half-way down the Barn had gulped her cup of tea.
6 Rumour said that she had kept a tea shop at Winchester; that had failed.
7 He had given her a cup of tea at a tennis party; handed her, once, a racquet.
8 And a scatter of odds and ends, like Cobbet of Cobbs Corner, retired, it was understood, on a pension from a tea plantation.
9 And so running, panting, set upon reaching the Barn and taking up her station behind the tea urn before the company came, she reached the Barn.
10 He wanted to see her, not against the tea urn, but with her glass green eyes and thick body, the neck was broad as a pillar, against an arum lily or a vine.
11 Writing this skimble-skamble stuff in her cottage, she had agreed to cut the play here; a slave to her audience,--to Mrs. Sands' grumble--about tea; about dinner;--she had gashed the scene here.
12 "Down the ride, that leads under the nut tree and the may tree, away, till I come to the wishing well, where the washerwoman's little boy--" she dropped sugar, two lumps, into her tea, "dropped a pin."
13 So she sat down to morning tea, like any other old lady with a high nose, thin cheeks, a ring on her finger and the usual trappings of rather shabby but gallant old age, which included in her case a cross gleaming gold on her breast.