110 Verbs to Use for the Word fares

It was then the Boy came and spoke to the man, finally drew out some money and paid the fare.

" "Got your car fare?" asked Laura.

It was this: A poor little mouse had, somehow or other, managed to get inside the prisoner's cell; and one day, while the unhappy man was eating his prison fare, he saw the mouse running timidly along the floor.

His aid has been courted, he has received high wages in Confederate notes, he has found better fare and clothing than he could procure at home, and has been lured to the contest by the eloquent appeals of the planter, by bitter attacks upon the North, and glowing pictures of the ruin which the abolitionists would bring upon the South.

" Next day he brought delicious fare, and dressed In manner exquisite to please the eye, As well as taste; partridge and pheasant rich, A banquet for a prince.

And when we to our homes repair, We'll send to you our richest fare, Such is the love to you we bear!

I jumped out and stretched my legs while the driver climbed down to collect the fares.

Then cease to nourish useless rage, and share With joyous heart my hospitable fare.

The advertisement to which I refer road as follows: "If the gentleman in a dark hat and gray pantaloons, who, in a Broadway stage, one day last week, passed up the fare for a lady with blue eyes and high-heeled boots, will call at 831 Dash street, second floor, he will hear of something to his advantage.

Of course it was impossible that the accommodation carried a fare for him; but then duty was duty, and Spike took exceeding pride in the company for which he worked.

I have long considered it the highest proof of honesty in a man to hand his street-car fare to the conductor who had overlooked it.

[Illustration: [Taxi-drivers who consent to pick up fares at a certain London restaurant at night have supper given to them by the management.]

"Ted stood the 'bus fares, didn't he?"

And there was a scandal about a friar of San Zanipolo, of whom they had asked a fare for the crossing; I know not the truth of it!

Any one wishing to alight pulls the strap; Jehu stops; and, poking his nose to a pigeon-hole place in the roof, takes the silver fare; and, slipping the noose, the door is open to the human "fare."

Those who wish to subdue the world for purpose of salvation, should ever act fully renouncing motives, effectually subduing their senses, rigidly observing particular vows, devotedly serving their preceptors, austerely regulating their fare, diligently studying the Vedas, renouncing action as mean and restraining their hearts.

She set food before him, the plain fare of peasants, but willingly offered, and therefore full of refreshment for the soul as well as for the body.

"Carry her to his table, to view his poor fare, and hear his heavenly discourse.

He probably thinks if he gives us a longer ride, he will be able to charge a proportionately larger fare at the end.

It must be confessed that this gives somewhat the air of a dinner at an hotel; but it has the advantage of enabling the visitors to select their fare, and, as "forewarned is forearmed," to keep a corner, as the children say, for their favourite dishes.

The stores, closing at five o'clock, sent their quota of clerks to swell the mob at the quay, and the "rubberneck wagon," alert to earn fares, took the news of the fray into the country, and hauled in scores of excited provincials, who had vague ideas that la guerre was on.

"If your table afford frugal fare with peace, seek not, in strife, to load it lavishly.

Cayenne-pepper, vinegar, and few home-made pickles, are also usually produced to relish the simple fare, which, served up twice a day, forms, with tea-water and the soopie, or dram of Cape brandy, the amount of their luxuries.

Each family, furthermore, had its garden, fowl house and pigsty; every Christmas the master distributed among them coffee, molasses, tobacco, calico and "Sunday tricks" to the value of from a thousand to fifteen hundred dollars; and every man might rive boards in the swamp on Sundays to buy more supplies, or hunt and fish in leisure times to vary his family's fare.

No one minded the cold water and hard bread which for the first time formed the company's fare that night.

110 Verbs to Use for the Word  fares