He saw the blaze of the fire, Kloo- kooch cooking, and Grey Beaver squatting on his hams and mumbling a chunk of raw
tallow. There was fresh meat in camp!
I got in late and was shown to my room on the ground floor by an apologetic night-clerk with a
tallow candle, which he considerately left with me.
Each new feature only brought out the whole figure in all its force and vigor, as it had suddenly come to him from the spot of
tallow. He was carefully finishing the figure when the cards were brought him.
The beautiful candle is extinguished and I have henceforth, only a wretched
tallow dip which smokes in my nose.
de la S-, the most Scandinavian- looking of Provencal squires, fair, and six feet high, as became a descendant of sea-roving Northmen, authoritative, incisive, wittily scornful, with a comedy in three acts in his pocket, and in his breast a heart blighted by a hopeless passion for his beautiful cousin, married to a wealthy hide and
tallow merchant.
By the light of a
tallow candle which had been placed on one end of a rough table a man was reading something written in a book.
two inches of sallow, sorrowful, consumptive
tallow candle, that
Were you never in the larder, where cheeses lie on the shelves, and hams hang from above; where one dances about on
tallow candles: that place where one enters lean, and comes out again fat and portly?"
From these, in a narrow and a dirty street devoted to such callings, Mr Wegg selects one dark shop-window with a
tallow candle dimly burning in it, surrounded by a muddle of objects vaguely resembling pieces of leather and dry stick, but among which nothing is resolvable into anything distinct, save the candle itself in its old tin candlestick, and two preserved frogs fighting a small- sword duel.
While grandmother and I washed the dishes and grandfather read his paper upstairs, Jake and Otto sat on the long bench behind the stove, `easing' their inside boots, or rubbing mutton
tallow into their cracked hands.
We got an old tin lantern, and a butcher-knife with- out any handle, and a bran-new Barlow knife worth two bits in any store, and a lot of
tallow candles, and a tin candlestick, and a gourd, and a tin cup, and a ratty old bedquilt off the bed, and a reticule with needles and pins and beeswax and buttons and thread and all such truck in it, and a hatchet and some nails, and a fishline as thick as my little finger with some mon- strous hooks on it, and a roll of buckskin, and a leather dog-collar, and a horseshoe, and some vials of medicine that didn't have no label on them; and just as we was leaving I found a tolerable good curry-comb, and Jim he found a ratty old fiddle-bow, and a wooden leg.
About night we landed at one of them little Missouri towns high up toward Iowa, and had supper at the tavern, and got a room upstairs with a cot and a double bed in it, but I dumped my bag under a deal table in the dark hall while we was moving along it to bed, single file, me last, and the landlord in the lead with a
tallow candle.