Which preposition to use with glares
It hid the thing from me, though the glare of fire shone through, dully.
At last they rested from the contest, and lay panting on the surface of the water, glaring at each other.
With you I'll face any dangerI'll die without a word; but to stay here in this awful place, with the black pools of water, like great dead eyes, glaring in their hideous light" (the pine-torch flaring in the wind filled the glade with vast ogreish shadows, as the clustering bushes were swayed in the night air) "and these hideous night-criesO Jack, I can'tI can'tI must go!"
Anything would be better than sitting in this lonely house, with those three forbidding faces glaring on her.
Youthful enthusiasm and determined good temper could make light of several hours of discomfort, but toward three o'clock the sun's rays grew unbearably hot, the glare from the water was very trying, and the mosquitoes were something awful.
sweet, noble, good my lord, whatwhat would ye" for Beltane had risen and was looking down at the crouching Pardoner, suddenly haggard, pallid-lipped, and with eyes a-glare with awful menace; but now the Pardoner saw that those eyes looked through him and beyondliving eyes in a face of death.
" At this the colonel raised his head suddenly and glared into the eyes of his guest, and yet so perfect was his muscular and nerve control that he did not interrupt the thin stream of amber which trickled into one of the glasses.
" At this, the Bishop glared like an angry cat, while even Sir Richard laughed; only Robin kept a grave face.
He glared over the cup with wild eyes, his teeth chattering against the tin.
" The sick man began to talk deliriously, and lifted up a terrible old face with fever-bright eyes glaring through wisps of straight gray hair.
The captain reappeared with a pail and brush, scrubbed feverishly at the offending spot, mopped it dry with that same old red bandana handkerchief, glared about him,and abruptly became as serene and placid as a noon calm.
Most of the plants crumble to dust beneath the foot, and the ground is full of cracks; while the thirsty traveler gazes with eager longing through the burning glare to the snowy summits looming like hazy clouds in the distance.
(with a glare for this appreciation, HARRY opens the door.
The truth glared around George with a violence that dazzled his brain; but he saw it all, he felt it all, and rushing to the feet of his brother, he exclaimed in horror, pressing his hands between his own, "Francismy own brotherdo you not know me?"
Handy Solomon glared after him, then down at his hook.
We are but two" Maud started, as if some frightful object glared before her eyes; then she sat in breathless silence, resolute to hear what would come next.
The snow had ceased falling, and, the clouds clearing off, the sun made a blinding glare off the freshly fallen snow.
I had scarcely perceived the flaming eyes which glared out of one of the bushes before shots were fired.
Whole districts were brilliant with bonfires, and their glare across a Highland loch, and from many eminences, formed an exceedingly picturesque scene."
" "Are you trying to annoy me?" demanded Diana, her eyes glaring under their curling lashes.
One bridge, half built, was set on fire, and one could see dark shadows, lit up by the glare amid the darkness, darting forward to extinguish the flames.
He glared along the road with eyes and face aglow with a sullen, beast-like hatred.
He is just behind There in the housesee how the great house glares, Glares like an ogre's maskthe whole dead house Possessed with bestial meaning....
Then, after the spring of the Riviera had whitened into summer, and San Remo hid, as well as it could, its sunny glare behind its pines and palms, Gerald suffered one long afternoon through the heat till the breathless evening, and went early to bed.
It was a superb scene, no doubt; the torches throwing their wavering glare against the tracery and the low, pointed arch of window and portal, so beautiful in this chapel, in the ruins of Kenilworth, or wherever it appears; the great space filled with the splendour that Roger Ascham thought so wonderful; and, among the glitter, the troop of handsome youths doing their best to please the sovereign.