The Sto-lu men show a
sparse beard, the Band-lu none; and there is little hair upon the bodies of their women.
She was hidden from him by the back of her deck-chair; but he had the view of the owner of the thin, aged legs seated on the skylight, his clean-shaved cheek, his thin compressed mouth with a hollow in each corner, the
sparse grey locks escaping from under the tweed cap, and curling slightly on the collar of the coat.
A
sparse population and want make every man his own valet, cook, butcher and soldier, and the habit of supplying his own needs educates the body to wonderful performances.
Tulliver felt that she ought to be affected, but she was a woman of
sparse tears, stout and healthy; she couldn't cry so much as her sister Pullet did, and had often felt her deficiency at funerals.
Late in the afternoon he followed a stream, milky with lime, which ran through
sparse patches of rush-grass.
His hair,
sparse and unkempt of growth, was as indeterminate and colorless as his complexion.
On the following morning, the horses were turned loose at the peep of day; to slake their thirst, if possible, from the dew collected on the
sparse grass, here and there springing up among dry sand-banks.
The pen falters when it attempts to treat of the excellence thereof; the sober vocabulary, the
sparse epithet of this narrative, are inadequate to the task; and pompous terms, jewelled, exotic phrases rise to the excited fancy.
Pepper raised his stick and silently indicated a shrub, bearing among
sparse leaves a voluminous purple blossom; and at a rickety canter the last stage of the way was accomplished.
The large towns, the
sparse hamlets, the wide landscape of the Cevennes, are for his books what the Rhineland is to those delightful authors, Messrs.
Old Marrow-Bone even had a bit of
sparse and straggly white beard that seemed identical with the whiskers of the old man.
Not more than fifty, thatched with a
sparse growth of iron-gray hair, he looked several times the age of Dowsett.