"Randy" Quotes from Famous Books
... That there Shiloh colt o' yours, an' this here lady hoss, an' that old mule ... anyone can see as how they's always been handled nice an' easy. They ain't got no spite 'gainst nobody as wants to rub 'em down an' give 'em a feed. But some hosses what git brung in here—they's white-eyed an' randy, does you give 'em a straight stare. For that there's always a reason. Mostly you can see what it is when you look good an' steady at th' men who was ... — Rebel Spurs • Andre Norton
... thAc hoop'd—a niver wAck'd; Naw houzen there war handy; Zed one o'm, "Nif you like, my bways, "We'll ha a little randy!" ... — The Dialect of the West of England Particularly Somersetshire • James Jennings
... bit; you don't know how randy she feels, put your hand on her, dear, just play with the little button, as we have one of ... — Forbidden Fruit • Anonymous
... answered the look on the two faces; "nothin' ain't the matter of Sammy. He's jest married—that little Huldy Frew 'at's been waitin' on table at Aunt Randy Card's ho-tel. You know, Aunt Cornely, she is a mighty pretty little trick—and there ain't nothin' bad about the gal. I jest knowed you and Pap 'ud feel mighty hurt over Sammy doin' you-all like you was cruel to him—like ... — Southern Lights and Shadows • Edited by William Dean Howells & Henry Mills Alden
... Party (late Home Rulers), and the Rado-Toro Democratic Party (led by Lord Randy Chapel-Mountain), whose hair was beginning to get silvery-grey, and his long moustache to match, did not even oppose the bill, and it passed. Never did a legislative enactment work such improvement among the masses as this ... — Scottish Football Reminiscences and Sketches • David Drummond Bone
... dighted aye her e'en sae blue, An' bann'd the cruel randy, And weel I wat, her willin' ... — Poems And Songs Of Robert Burns • Robert Burns
... Randy Churchill side by side in the one album! Lord bless me, John Marsh, the Ulster people took great pride in Parnell, even the bitterest Orangeman among them, because he was a man, an' not a gas-bag like Dan O'Connell. Of course, he was a Protestant!... But he couldn't keep from nuzzlin' over a woman ... — Changing Winds - A Novel • St. John G. Ervine |