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Page "Places in the Heart" ¶ 31
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She and leans
She leans on his shoulder while he pauses from his work to look up at her.
She leans forward to restrain the Christ Child as he plays roughly with a lamb, the sign of his own impending sacrifice.
She leans out the window with a gun, ready to shoot, much to William's surprise.
She faints, and Shockeye leans over her body ...
She leans on a table and while she's admiring an egg, she starts to sing.
She passes the flutes to the Twin Brother, he begins to play and when she leans towards the cage for a closer look at him, he leans forward to steal a brief kiss.
She is approached by a man in a car who leans out of his window and plays with her hair.

She and on
She lay there, making no effort to get back on her feet.
She began it deliberately, so that none of her words would be lost on him.
She jerked the coat back on and squeezed it around her again, but not soon enough.
She went on:
She placed her palms, fingers outspread, on the desk in an odd gesture as if to say, `` Now, what next ''??
She set the dipper on the edge of the deck, leaving it for him to stretch after it while she looked on scornfully.
She was sitting on the edge of the bed again, back in the same position where the snake had found her.
She munched little ginger cakes called mulatto's belly and kept her green, somewhat hypnotic eyes fixed on a light-colored male who was prancing wildly with a 5-foot king snake wrapped around his bronze neck.
She was nude to the waist and her tumbled abundance of black hair did not conceal the knife slashes on her back.
She remained squatting on her heels all the time we were there ; ;
She read everything else she could get her hands on, including an article ( she thinks it was in the Atlantic Monthly ) by Mark Twain on `` White Slavery ''.
She wrote in her journal, `` I have not heard the least profane language since I have been on board the vessel.
She kept the dolls on the Lincoln bed.
She would often go up on the roof to see the attendant take down the flag in the evening.
She opened the boxes with a tear in her eye and a sad smile on her face.
She had to clean the glass on the display cases in the butcher shop, help her brother scrub the cutting tables with wire brushes, mop the floors, put down new sawdust on the floors and help check the outgoing orders.
She smoothed the covers on Scotty's bed and picked things up from the floor.
She had even steeled herself to keep Juanita upstairs in the nurse's room off the empty nursery, although the girl tried to insist on moving back to the quarters to spare Kate remembrance of the baby's death.
She came to the ballroom and stood on the two carpeted steps that led down to it.
She was still laughing when I grabbed her and started rolling her on the bed.
She was told by the manservant who opened the door that his lordship was engaged on work from which he had left strict orders he was not to be disturbed.
She signed the letters quickly, stamped them, and placed them on the hall table for Raphael to mail in town.

She and banker
She studied at Northlands School in Argentina and worked as an investment banker before graduating with a degree in Economics from the Universidad Católica Argentina in 1995.
She married Stephen M. DuBrul, Jr., an investment banker who served the Ford administration, in 1994.
She was previously married to banker Thomas Troubridge ; they separated in 1973, divorced in 1977, and had their marriage annulled by the Roman Catholic Church a year later, two months before her marriage to Prince Michael.
She was born on February 19, 1920 in Boston, Massachusetts to Alexander Lynde Cochrane, an investment banker.
She was Julia Thuillier, the daughter of an impoverished Swiss banker who had an unsuccessful business at Banbury and had gone to Spain, leaving his family at Bath.
She married secondly, banker Neil Balfour ( born 1944 ), on 23 September 1969 in London ; they had one son, Nicholas Augustus Balfour.
She then headed back to India, fortified with a $ 10, 000 grant from a Mr. Schell, a Manhattan banker, in memory of his wife.
She then worked as an investment banker with Bache & Co. and, at age 25, became a member of the New York Stock Exchange.
She was born Florence Kling, the daughter of Amos Kling, a prominent Marion, Ohio banker, and Louisa Bouton Kling.
She chose, with her uncle's approval, Henry Elliott Johnston, a Baltimore banker.
She defeated investment banker Jim Neal of Chapel Hill, podiatrist Howard Staley of Chatham County, Lexington truck driver Duskin Lassiter, and Lumberton attorney Marcus Williams in the May 2008 Democratic primary.
She soon became romantically involved with a customer at the restaurant, Goro Omiya, a professor and banker who aspired to become a member of the Diet of Japan ( Japanese parliament ).
She was tutored at home and completed her education at a finishing school with the “… expectation that one day she would become a fine wife and mother for some young man of equal or greater social standing than the Averells .” Mary ’ s father, William J. Averell was a successful New York banker and president of the Ogdensburg and Lake Champlain Railroad.
She married wealthy investment banker and prominent Democratic Party fundraiser Wilbur Ross, Jr. in December 1995 ; he filed for divorce in November 1998.
She married her childhood friend, the banker William Karl Dick ( 1888 – 1953 ), a vice president of the Manufacturers Trust Company of New York and a part owner and director of the Brooklyn Times.
She married the banker Thomas Coutts in 1815 and enlarged the house and grounds by buying adjacent properties.
She was born Marie-Laure Henriette Anne Bischoffsheim, the only child of Marie-Thérèse de Chevigné, a French aristocrat, and Maurice Bischoffsheim, a Paris banker of German Jewish and American Quaker descent.
She married Clifton Maloney, an investment banker, in 1976.
She was a banker prior to entering political life.
She later married Baron de Chollet, a Swiss banker.
She had become a successful city banker nicknamed The Ice Queen.
She attended Connecticut College and met Thomas Lenox Kempner, a banker.
She was the daughter of Ellen Ryne and John C. Tallman, a well-known banker and business man of Bridgeport, Ohio.
She was the daughter of James Hill, corn merchant and banker, and Caroline Southwood Smith, the daughter of Dr Thomas Southwood Smith, the pioneer of sanitary reform.

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