• The doctors were explaining things, earnestly and patiently, but Titania was having trouble following along.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • The Beastie, whose nature was to comfort, tried to go to her, but Titania held it back.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • The glamour had slipped as Titania was about to strike, and the woman had seen her true face.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • When they were ready, they all looked to Titania, who nodded her permission.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • Six flats are in the block in Titania Close, Colchester, and residents have young children and one a newborn baby.

    BBC: Colchester binmen 'blame EU law for missed collections'

  • He looked at Titania with an odd combination of pleading and pity.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • Its king and queen, Oberon and Titania, are hardly a happy couple.

    CNN: Flockhart in her element: slap-happy with the Bard

  • Oberon said, and Titania asked if they could now take him home.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • Titania moved from her chair to the bed, and took his hand.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • He looked around the room, as if for more food, and when he opened his mouth wide Titania thought he was going to shout or cry.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • Titania had a hard time keeping track of all the mortal names, except for Beadle and Blork, but those were distinctive names, and actually rather faerielike.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • The same spell sustained the impression that Titania worked as a hairdresser, and that Oberon owned an organic orchard, and that their names were Trudy and Bob.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • He was always crying these days, and it seemed rather showy to Titania, who thought she suffered more deeply in her silence than he did in his sobs.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • One evening, Dr. Beadle came in alone, Blorkless, and sat down on the bed, where the boy was sweating and sleeping, dreaming, Titania could tell, of something unpleasant.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • Titania protested, and threatened to get the nurse, and even held the call button in her hand, almost pressing it while the boy shoved steak into his mouth and Oberon laughed.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • She did not hear exactly what Titania was saying.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • They were all looking to Titania to speak, but it was Oberon who finally broke the silence, announcing from the back of the room that the Beastie had died of its grief.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • Titania laughed, and it seemed to her in that moment that she had two hearts in her, each pouring out an equivalent feeling toward the prancing figures, and she thought, My men.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • Titania sat on the bed with the boy.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • It was nothing that Titania did on purpose.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • Titania sighed, wanting to run from the boy and his anxious, unhappy hunger, which had seemed to her, as the day dragged on, to represent, and then to become, a hunger for something besides food.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • Oberon shouted at him, but by the time Titania entered the room, warned by Radish that Oberon was about to beat the changeling, Oberon had joined him in the game, putting a toy shovel in his teeth.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • One morning, the whole team showed up: Beadle and Blork and the junior-junior doctors whose names Titania could never remember and Alice and the nurse and another two or three mortals whose function, if it was something besides just skulking about, she never did discover.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • V. pole usually accompanied him, but these seemed not to bother him at all, so Titania tried not to let them bother her, either, though she was pushing the pole, and had to stoop now and then to adjust his mask when it slid over his chin.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • Titania could not conceive of the way they were made, except as distillations of sadness and heartbreak and despair, since that was how she made her own poisons, shaking drops of terror out of a wren captured in her fist, or sucking with a silver straw at the tears of a dog.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

  • Titania wanted to kiss him and hold him, of course, but it occurred to her that there were other things she could do right then instead: shrink him down enough to carry him around in her mouth, or make him a hump on her back, or chain him to her, foot to foot.

    NEWYORKER: A Tiny Feast

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