This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
28747 | MADNESS? |
29076 | How came the writer to fall into this defect of taste? |
29076 | How comes that fallacy to be here? |
29076 | What could be more absurd, more narrow and narrowing, more mischievously misleading as to the whole purport and significance of history? |
29076 | What is done in our systems of training to teach people how to judge what facts prove? |
29076 | When the prizes of the year are all distributed, and the address is at an end, we perhaps ask ourselves, Well, and what then? |
7257 | But is he gone, or going? |
7257 | But is it true? |
7257 | But, it may be said, why not throw all restrictions aside and admit everybody, as at White House receptions? |
7257 | Can you talk freely about that? |
7257 | How can it, therefore, be either at peace or war with anybody, or co- operate with anybody? |
7257 | How do we discover which of any two nations is the purer in its life or in its aims? |
7257 | How many of the English hinds who stood rooted in the soil at Waterloo could read and write? |
7257 | If Mr. Lowell were writing the"Biglow Papers"now, would"Uncle S."serve his purpose as he did during the war? |
7257 | If they want to go, he always said, why do n''t you let''em go? |
7257 | In short, we can hardly go one step into the controversy without coming on the old question, What are luxuries and what necessities? |
7257 | Is not this because our old friend John is now only a survival, a tradition of the past? |
7257 | Is the time coming when we shall have to regard him too as a survival, and admit that the rude Englishman is a creature of the past? |
7257 | Is this true? |
7257 | Now what is the cause of this disheartening state of things? |
7257 | Now, what are the agencies which operate in producing the frame of mind which makes people ready to go to war on small provocation? |
7257 | Now, why a public benefit? |
7257 | The boarder, of course, looks down on this man, but when both are on the road or on the piazza of the hotel how are they to be distinguished? |
7257 | What is the use of fighting about the meaning of a word in the dictionary? |
7257 | What, then, is it in Mill''s philosophical writings that has given him this eminence as a thinker? |
7257 | Why can the United States not have a comic paper of their own? |
7257 | Why does he run and shout and weep, and ask people to give him a trifle, only a trifle, for all he possesses and let him go? |
7257 | Why is he pale and trembling? |
7257 | Why was this? |
7257 | Would it be endured for an instant?" |
7257 | and, is not any judgment we form about it likely to be very defective, owing to the inevitable incompleteness of our premises? |
25937 | If you have done, will you leave the house, or shall my servants turn you out? 25937 ''Do n''t,"replied that functionary;"I hope you''ve forgot nothink? |
25937 | ''"Is that all, sir?" |
25937 | ''"Will you redeem the bond?" |
25937 | ''And Dickens, with all_ his_ genius, but whose Men and Women act and talk already after a more obsolete fashion than Shakespeare''s?'' |
25937 | ''How much of this behaviour goes on daily in respectable society, think you? |
25937 | ''I wonder shall History ever pull off her periwig and cease to be court- ridden? |
25937 | Assuming that sixty years ago a Secretary of State was much the same sort of man that he is to- day, what are we to think of this spirited colloquy? |
25937 | Before he could turn to run again a second horseman was on him, and with a grim"Hyun-- Would you?" |
25937 | But is it a genuine delineation of the man himself, of his motives, of the working of his mind in speech and action? |
25937 | But what''s the use? |
25937 | Do you know what a scene it was? |
25937 | In which category are we to place the letters of Keats, including those that have been very recently unearthed by diligent literary excavation? |
25937 | Is it some yet imperial hope That with such change can calmly cope? |
25937 | Is such minute matter- of- fact copying a virtue in the novelist? |
25937 | Is this actually a true account of English thought? |
25937 | London,? 1850. |
25937 | Miss''Melia''s gownds-- have you got them-- as the lady''s maid was to have''ad? |
25937 | Or dread of death alone? |
25937 | Shall we see something of France and England besides Versailles and Windsor? |
25937 | The force which is shaping the future, is it with the Ritualists or with the undogmatical disciples of a purely moral creed? |
25937 | They are mainly irresponsible creatures: how could they be otherwise, when everything depends on the sword, and a woman can not wield it? |
25937 | Turn out this fellow; do you hear me?"'' |
25937 | What has been the effect of this altered situation upon the writer of history at the present time? |
25937 | What has been the upshot and consequence of this Turkish system? |
25937 | What if the extra allowances have really no attraction? |
25937 | What should we all be if we had not one another to check us and to be learned from? |
25937 | What these crimes were he does not say; and how many of us could answer the question off- hand? |
25937 | What will Europe say when you shed torrents of blood on a point of form?'' |
25937 | What, then, are the conclusions which we may draw from this brief survey of the more prominent and typical Indian novels? |
25937 | When his friends urge him to study for the purpose of rising in the service, civil or military, he asks:''What then? |
25937 | Why have these verses made such an effect that they are familiar to all of us, and fresh as when they were first read? |
25937 | Why shall History go on kneeling to the end of time? |
25937 | how vexest thou this man?'' |
25937 | or is it not rather a defect arising out of a misunderstanding of the principles of his art? |
28197 | And may we not appeal also to our brethren of the South-- and ask their fair consideration of the two propositions I have suggested? 28197 Where, I ask, is the good ship Virginia, in the array of the national fleet? |
28197 | And what is the result? |
28197 | And who are we, we may be permitted to ask, to whose hands this charge has been committed? |
28197 | And, gentlemen, would he not as likely give to those who_ could not_ tell? |
28197 | Does the preaching such language to slaves tend to pacification? |
28197 | Gentlemen, did he not give Mr. King one, because he thought that he_ would not_ mention it? |
28197 | If so, does not this libel of itself afford sufficient evidence of malice, without resorting to the matter of other pamphlets not charged? |
28197 | In other words, to see what legal inferences of additional evidence such inscriptions afford? |
28197 | Is it unreasonable to suppose that he was deterred by the warning? |
28197 | It was also asked why the person who gave the bundle to him in New York was not brought to testify in his favor? |
28197 | May not any man be subjected to be treated as a felon, upon the instigation of private malice, or party animosity, or religious rancor? |
28197 | May we not appeal to the experience of eleven years, to show that the work in which we are engaged can be conducted without excitement or alarm? |
28197 | May we not claim at least this merit for our labors:--that they are safe? |
28197 | Now if but one of fifty was given out, is it not as probable that he did not desire to publish them, as that he did? |
28197 | Ought not this to join all hearts, and call forth renewed exertions from those whose labors have thus far been crowned with unexpected success? |
28197 | Shall it be said that we are not liable to the same vicissitudes that have overtaken other nations? |
28197 | The loan to Mr. King was the only instance proved of distribution, and could that be considered malicious? |
28197 | Then why resort to them? |
28197 | There are two questions in this case: are the libels charged criminal?--are they proved to have been published by the traverser? |
28197 | What does he propose for the slave? |
28197 | What is the natural result, if some means are not applied to prevent it? |
28197 | What is the next consequence? |
28197 | What proof could this appropriation or adoption afford of a malicious intent in their publication? |
28197 | What was the case? |
28197 | Why did he not? |
28197 | Why do not his counsel advise it? |
28197 | Why does not this_ persecuted_ man bring his action for false imprisonment? |
28197 | Witness or one of the magistrates asked Crandall"whether he was aware of the nature of the pamphlets when he left New York?" |
28197 | _ Judge Morsell._ Did Crandall make any remark, when you took the pamphlet? |
28197 | _ Question by Key._ Which of the pamphlets did you find at the office, and which at the house? |
28197 | _ Thruston, J._ Would the amalgamation occur after our throats are cut, Mr. Jeffers? |
28197 | what, indeed, but the frightful wickedness and cruelty which are its actual fruits?" |
29277 | And have you seen it? |
29277 | And pray how has the Church dealt with the war? |
29277 | And why is he dead,said the mother to me,"and where is he?" |
29277 | Better? |
29277 | But do you know what I did? |
29277 | Can it be lawful to handle the sword,asked Tertullian,"when the Lord Himself has declared that he who uses the sword shall perish by it?" |
29277 | Can you deny,she asks,"that nothing exists for you but that which you allow to enter your mind?" |
29277 | Can you tell me,said a charming but agitated old lady from Bath one day,"of a hotel where there are no foreigners?" |
29277 | Did you grasp what I said? |
29277 | Do you believe you have a brain? |
29277 | How can people be so blind? |
29277 | I mean, do you believe there is real progress-- that we are better than we used to be? |
29277 | Lor a bun, ma pettit fille, eh? |
29277 | What is the good of all your struggle and your agitation? |
29277 | A confused series of faces flash through my mind-- Abraham, Tolstoy, Jesus Christ? |
29277 | And what is the British Empire? |
29277 | And, if not, is it not time we found other guardians and promoters of high conduct? |
29277 | Are nations made by war and conquest? |
29277 | Are peoples amalgamated by oppressive legislation? |
29277 | Are we not all goats before the gaze of more finely organized creatures? |
29277 | But is it done? |
29277 | But is it true? |
29277 | Can anything be more soul- satisfying than a community of those who think alike, who feel alike, and who work for the same end? |
29277 | Can anything be more sweeping? |
29277 | Can anything be more untrue? |
29277 | Did kind Fates design it as a guarantee of peace and stability? |
29277 | Do not the civilizations of the past with their perfection of knowledge and art mock our faith in the permanency of human achievement? |
29277 | Do political alliances between States create international unities? |
29277 | Does he feel and remember? |
29277 | Does he know? |
29277 | Education-- can any one deny the overwhelming need of proper concentration on its possibilities? |
29277 | Have I the right to believe that the landscape was designed for him-- the cretin, and the irony for me-- the chance visitor?" |
29277 | Have they had, or used, a particle of moral influence throughout the whole bloody business? |
29277 | Here I must check myself: what does"educated"mean? |
29277 | His ways may be crotchety and his temper irritable-- what does it matter so long as he is carrying out his appointed task in the cosmic order? |
29277 | How could it be otherwise? |
29277 | How do you respect life and the teaching of Jesus Christ? |
29277 | I again quote Mr. McCabe: What did the clergy do to prevent the conflict? |
29277 | If these things are possible, we are told, why not here, now, anywhere, in broad daylight? |
29277 | In which country did they denounce the preparations for the conflict, or the incentives of the conflict? |
29277 | Is any one great outside Germany? |
29277 | Is any one so dense as not to perceive the all- pervading importance of the guidance we give to the young?" |
29277 | Is it, then, all a matter of change and recurrence? |
29277 | Is life then really still worth living? |
29277 | Is the human soul more remote and inscrutable? |
29277 | Is there an eternal gulf of silence between us?" |
29277 | Love, marriage, procreation, can not these be purged from the base and degrading obsessions of sex? |
29277 | Supposing all humanity could be withdrawn, every precious brand snatched from the burning and the whole made into a vast monastery? |
29277 | Surely this is better than the strife and the sordid cares of the camp; surely one may walk apart and enjoy the fruits of tranquillity? |
29277 | The war has made it paramount, and only second in importance to the crucial query: Do they live? |
29277 | This explains why, Churches and missionary effort notwithstanding, we have always savages, cannibals, and barbarians( and Prussian militarists?) |
29277 | To be able to read and write, and say"Hear, hear"at public meetings? |
29277 | To have a pretty idea of the positions of Huxley and Haeckel by which to confound the poor old Bible? |
29277 | Was not France invigorated by the wild Northmen who overran her territories and settled wherever they found settlement advantageous? |
29277 | We do not want Leslie Stephen''s reminder of metaphysical riddles,"Where does Mont Blanc end and where do I begin?" |
29277 | Were we, then, really so bad that"this visitation"was needed to save us from voluntary sterility( by imposing compulsory?) |
29277 | What could be the significance of this mysterious contrast? |
29277 | What guarantee is there that his voice would not be drowned in the general clamour of the truth- mongers of the marketplace? |
29277 | What have they done since it began to confine the conflict within civilized limits? |
29277 | What have they done to prevent the conflict? |
29277 | What is a crank? |
29277 | What is the exact relation of religion to civilization? |
29277 | What was the sense of this irony in a solitude? |
29277 | What, then, is this mysterious power which seems to master the Old World, whilst it is mastered by the New World? |
29277 | Who can deny that nations have been made by conquest? |
29277 | Who can deny that reformers are more interesting than preservers? |
29277 | Who says God must only be worshipped in creeds and churches? |
29277 | Who says we are prisoners of darkness? |
29277 | Who says we are puppets of the devil? |
29277 | Why do they climb? |
29277 | Why have their intellectual giants failed to impress upon mankind the folly of war? |
29277 | Why mystifying circles, cabinets, and subdued light? |
29277 | Why should a new world- teacher be more successful? |
29277 | and the other delinquencies enumerated by the Dean? |
29277 | net._ What is the true Shaw? |
29277 | rude, bare, and high, Ghastly, and scarred, and riven.--Is this the scene Where the old Earthquake- dæmon taught her young Ruin? |
1486 | And so,begins our author,"you wish to know, my dear Theophilus, WHERE I LOCATE GOD? |
1486 | Need we fear,asks Mr. Greg,"that the world would stagnate under such a change? |
1486 | What are you, where did you come from, and whither are you bound? |
1486 | Again and again the critical reader feels prompted to ask, How do you know all this? |
1486 | And who can realize this so vividly as the scientific philosopher? |
1486 | And who would not give ten times as much for one which Van Dyck or Tintoretto might have painted in a few hours? |
1486 | Are we now prepared for the completing of the contrast? |
1486 | But does this motion of nerve- molecules now produce a thought or state of consciousness? |
1486 | But how inferred? |
1486 | But now we have to ask, How much does this inconceivability signify? |
1486 | Can anything be more perplexing than this seemingly frightful expenditure of the very life and essence of the system? |
1486 | Can we adduce any proof of the possibility of such a world? |
1486 | Can we, by searching our experiences, find any reason for adopting such an hypothesis? |
1486 | Come and behold thy Rome that is lamenting, Widowed, alone, and day and night exclaims''My Caesar, why hast thou forsaken me?'' |
1486 | Confess that they had been foiled, and create a panic in the army by the news that their dreaded enemy was at liberty? |
1486 | Does the collective man of our time need some such friendly warning? |
1486 | For aerolites, it seems, are somehow fired down upon our planet both from Mars and from Venus; and aerolites sometimes contain vegetable matter(?). |
1486 | How is this turmoil of modern existence impressing itself upon the physical constitutions of modern men and women? |
1486 | In the career of the world is life an end, or a means toward an end, or only an incidental phenomenon in which we can discover no meaning? |
1486 | Is there not a certain sense in which all modern handiwork is hastily and imperfectly done? |
1486 | Is this a fancy which our reason scorns? |
1486 | Is this a mere set of phrases, suited to some imaginary want of the literary critic, but answering to nothing real? |
1486 | Need we guard ourselves against the misconstruction of being held to recommend a life of complacent and inglorious inaction? |
1486 | Now what, in the theories or in the practice of the Jewish disciples of Jesus, could have moved Paul to such fanatic behaviour? |
1486 | Obviously we have pre- existed; how are we to account for Mozart''s precocity save by supposing his pre- existence? |
1486 | Or if we can not, does our failure raise the slightest presumption that such a world is impossible? |
1486 | Or is it a real contrast, worthy of the attention and analysis of the historical inquirer? |
1486 | Or why did not Pierre du Lis cause it to be proclaimed that the English were liars, his sister being safely housed in Metz? |
1486 | Or, on the other hand, supposing we can find no such reason, would the total failure of experimental evidence justify us in rejecting it? |
1486 | Postulating, then, that Jeanne escaped from Rouen between the 24th and the 28th, how shall we explain what happened immediately afterward? |
1486 | Rightly considered, the question between vocal and instrumental music amounts to this, What does music express? |
1486 | The Byzantine historians were furiously angry with the Saracens; why did they, one and all, neglect to mention such an outrageous piece of vandalism? |
1486 | The four inner planets being nearly alike in size(?) |
1486 | The hypothesis being framed in such a way, the question is, What has philosophy to say to it? |
1486 | The question was sure to arise, Whence came this pneuma or spiritual quality? |
1486 | To begin with common household arts, does not every one know that old things are more durable than new things? |
1486 | To what culpable negligence was it due that such a dire calamity was not foreseen, and at least partially warded off? |
1486 | Tradition still remained Ebionitish; dogma had become decidedly Gnostic; how were the two to be moulded into harmony with each other? |
1486 | Unto which one should he leave it? |
1486 | Vien, crudel, vieni, e vedi la pressura De''tuoi gentili, e cure lor magagne, E vedrai Santafior com''e oscura[ secura?]. |
1486 | Vieni a veder la tua Roma che piagne, Vedova e sola, e di e notte chiama: Cesare mio, perche non m''accompagne? |
1486 | What more is needed to complete the disgusting picture? |
1486 | What then must he copy? |
1486 | When could she have done this? |
1486 | Who that has once heard the wail of unutterable despair sounding in the line"Ahi, dura terra, perche non t''apristi?" |
1486 | Why are we inclined to laugh as we read this? |
1486 | Why did they not parade their knowledge, to the manifest discomfiture of La Tremouille and his company? |
1486 | Why is a diamond any more chargeable with"grossness"than a cubic centimetre of hydrogen? |
1486 | Why should matter be pronounced respectable in the inverse ratio of its density or ponderability? |
1486 | Why should not the universe bury its dead out of sight?" |
1486 | Why should the luminiferous ether, or any primordial medium in which it may have been generated, be regarded as in any way"spiritual"? |
1486 | Why this contradiction? |
1486 | Yet who cares for Denner''s portraits? |
1486 | and how is it that we every one hear them in our own tongue wherein we were born?" |
1486 | can rest satisfied with the interpretation"Ah, obdurate earth, wherefore didst thou not open?" |
1486 | come and behold the oppression Of thy nobility, and cure their wounds, And thou shalt see how safe[?] |
1486 | or why, out of two or three conflicting accounts, do you quietly adopt some particular one, as if its superior authority were self- evident? |
50004 | ), just when does it so appear and whence comes its life? |
50004 | About which of the poisoned cells does the flame of life still flicker? |
50004 | An old campaigner inquired,"Can those fellows get well?" |
50004 | And if so, in what does it consist? |
50004 | And is then death a matter of hours? |
50004 | And what must become of the simple credulous faith of the zealot who believes in the actual and absolute resurrection, at some later date? |
50004 | And where may he find one in which incentives are so small? |
50004 | And who shall say that it does not suffer when rudely handled? |
50004 | Are the lessons of the South African, the Spanish- American and the Russo- Japanese wars to be forgotten almost before they have been recited? |
50004 | Are we prepared to- day to give adequate care and attention to our soldiers and sailors were war in sight? |
50004 | At what instant did the floral murder occur? |
50004 | But if protoplasm be alive in any proper sense, as it would appear( else where draw the line? |
50004 | But then, is not every disturbance of relations"ruthless,"because it follows inexorable habits of Nature? |
50004 | But what is it that suddenly checks all concerted and interdependent activity? |
50004 | But when non- existent, then what? |
50004 | By the way, I wonder how many of you recall, or are familiar with, the beginnings of the Red Cross movement? |
50004 | Can such a concept prevail among physicists? |
50004 | Can we consent even to entertain in this direction the notion of what is so vaguely called"the soul?" |
50004 | Could anyone more worthily win a Victorian Cross, or any other emblem of courage and heroism? |
50004 | Do not the dead deserve all praise and respect, and the survivors all commendation? |
50004 | Do these then constitute life, and their suppression or abolition death? |
50004 | Do you suppose that if Napoleon had saved as many lives as he lost he would have figured in history with his present lustre? |
50004 | Does life inhere in any particular cell? |
50004 | Does not the sensitive plant evince a contact sensibility almost equal to that of the conjunctiva? |
50004 | Does this complicate the study of death? |
50004 | During the South African campaign the papers recorded( but how few read of it?) |
50004 | During the interval is he alive or dead, or is there an intermediate period of absolutely suspended animation? |
50004 | Have we yet that absolute knowledge of right and wrong which can enable us to pass final judgment on men of the past, their motives and actions? |
50004 | Here is raised the great question,--Did Bruno adopt Calvinism? |
50004 | How many of us could resist the persuasiveness of the rack when it came to modifying our beliefs? |
50004 | How then shall I do it justice? |
50004 | If so what about the condition of trance, or of absolute imbecility, congenital or induced? |
50004 | If so what is it? |
50004 | If so, does the dead come to life? |
50004 | If so, then why may we not believe, with Binet, in the psychic life of micro- organisms? |
50004 | In the leukocytes? |
50004 | In the neurons? |
50004 | In what do its life and its death consist? |
50004 | Is protoplasm alive? |
50004 | Is such a thing conceivable? |
50004 | Is there a vital principle? |
50004 | Is there inspiration in the pagan emperor''s address to his soul-- those Latin verses which Pope has so beautifully translated? |
50004 | Its actual life is apparently aroused by purely thermic and chemical( electrionic?) |
50004 | Moreover, in what way shall we regard the division of one ameboid cell into two, equally alive and complete? |
50004 | One may ask just here, how is this matter concerned with thanatology? |
50004 | Only if one of these really were, as it still claims to be,_ infallible_, then what has become of its infallibility? |
50004 | Or are_ we_ impure that we do_ not_ so regard it?" |
50004 | Or does something or some controlling agency suddenly leave the body? |
50004 | Or if heresy be held still a crime then what shall we say of the Church''s ethics? |
50004 | Or is it inherent in the ion, and was Bion correct when he said"electricity is life?" |
50004 | Or, again, how can a decapitated frog go on living for hours? |
50004 | The Jewish accounts of creation stated that God walked the earth, and why not in human form? |
50004 | The passage need not be quoted here, but deserves to be read by everyone interested in the subject, as who should not be? |
50004 | Then what extracts or extractives might be prepared from other parts of the body, pituitary, adrenals, bone- marrow, etc.? |
50004 | This being the case, where shall we, where can_ we_ stop? |
50004 | To what distance does the influence of the jettatore extend, and whether it operates more to the side, front or back? |
50004 | Was not this equal to any instance of valor under the excitement or the stress of battle and cannonade? |
50004 | Were atoms alive they would suffer with every fresh chemical change, and who knows but that they do? |
50004 | Were they impure thus to regard it? |
50004 | What is death? |
50004 | What shall be said of Bruno as a philosopher? |
50004 | What shall be said of his persecutors and prosecutors? |
50004 | What shall we see next?" |
50004 | What wonder that the marvels revealed in one department should have incited work along parallel lines in the other? |
50004 | What words in general ought one to repeat to escape the evil eye?" |
50004 | When dies the flower? |
50004 | When does it actually occur? |
50004 | When the floral stem was snapped what else snapped with it? |
50004 | Where may one look for a profession which shall afford greater opportunities? |
50004 | Where then, again, is the vital principle? |
50004 | Whether monks are more powerful than others? |
50004 | Who built those pyramids, and why? |
50004 | Who originated the system of pictorial writing which we call the hieroglyphic? |
50004 | Who planned those wonderful temples now either in ruins, as in upper Egypt, or buried beneath the desert sands, as in lower Egypt? |
50004 | Why also should not the founder of a religion be the son of God and of a virgin? |
50004 | Yet, what is the result? |
50004 | how should the mitral valves prevent the regurgitation of air and not of blood?" |
15249 | Quis mihi tribuat, ut sim iuxta menses pristinos, secundum dies, quibus Deus custodiebat me? 15249 ''Is not the life more than meat, and the body than raiment?'' 15249 ''What( he asks) can increase their peace who believe and trust in the Son of God? 15249 ... Their present domination is but a passing episode in the Church''s history.... May not history repeat itself? 15249 And is not this the cause of our failure to win the masses? 15249 And is organised Catholicism an exception to this rule? 15249 And may it not be that some touch of heroic self- abnegation is necessary before we can have a soul which death can not touch? 15249 And on what principles are such liberties taken with our authorities? 15249 And what has been the record of the''socialists''in the struggle for national existence in which we have been engaged? 15249 Are they not precisely pouring their new wine into old bottles? 15249 Are we to have no more will after death? 15249 But does Nature care whether we enjoy our lives or not? 15249 But how about the lower class, in whose interests the whole machine is supposed to have been set going? 15249 But if it is put in the form,''Will the same self live again on earth under different conditions?'' 15249 But is not this advantage dearly purchased? 15249 But since reason is put out of court as a witness to truth, on what faculty, or on what evidence, does Newman rely? 15249 But were the Anglo- Saxons justified in expropriating the Britons, and the Spaniards the Aztecs? 15249 But what are the ancient Hebrews, and the Greeks and Romans, to the working- man? 15249 But what is personality? 15249 But what is the Bishop''s seat of authority in doctrine? 15249 But what is the good of this make- believe? 15249 But what kind of Church would it actually be, if his designs were carried out? 15249 Did not even Augustine say,''I want to know God and my own soul; these two things, and no third whatever''? 15249 Do we prefer to pay our way in the world, or to be parasites? 15249 Does this ideal of a free Church in a free State involve disestablishment? 15249 First, is his idea of the Church Christian? 15249 For the things which we formerly have spoken of are but habilitations towards arms; and what is habitation without intention and act?... 15249 For where is the evidence of caprice in the history of the Roman Church? 15249 Further, is our probation over when we die? 15249 Has not every organism got its limits of development, after which it must decay and be content to survive in its progeny? 15249 Have we any reason to hope that this policy is not contrary to the hard laws which Nature imposes on every species in the world? 15249 He who loves not his home and country which he has seen, how shall he love humanity in general which he has not seen? 15249 His bigotry sustained him as a persecutor for a few weeks more; but how if he could himself see what the dying Stephen said that he saw? 15249 If this is true in the history of the individual, is it not probably also true in the history of the Church? 15249 If we could fuse past, present, and future into a_ totum simul_, an''Eternal Now,''would that be eternity? 15249 In a note he explains:''The Church of the Catacombs became the Church of the Vatican; who can tell what the Church of the Vatican may not turn into?'' 15249 In the first place, would such a State escape being devoured by some brutal''expanding''neighbour? 15249 In the second place, would the absence of sharp competition within the group lead to racial degeneration? 15249 Is God''s arm shortened that He should not again out of the very stones raise up seed to Abraham? 15249 Is Newman a safe or a possible guide for Catholics in the twentieth century? 15249 Is earth, when seen with purged vision, not merely the shadow of heaven, but heaven itself? 15249 Is it not because we are the Church of capital rather than of labour? 15249 Is it then the conclusion of the whole matter that eternal life is merely the true reading of temporal life? 15249 Is not Jesus reduced by this criticism to the same level as Theudas or Judas of Galilee? 15249 Is not this a desire which we may prefer as a claim? 15249 Is there any insuperable obstacle to a modification of policy which might give her a new lease of life? 15249 Is tradition a fatal obstacle to reform? 15249 It was not till 1905 that Edouard Le Roy published his''Qu''est- ce qu''un dogme?'' 15249 Juvenal speaks of the folly of_ propter vitam vivendi perdere causas_; and who would care to live in such a world? 15249 Marcus Aurelius exhorted himself--''The poet says, Dear city of Cecrops; shall not I pay, Dear city of God?'' 15249 May not Catholicism, like Judaism, have to die in order that it may live again in a greater and grander form? 15249 May not the working man, who has no leaning to dissent, unless it be the''corybantic Christianity''of the Salvation Army, be brought into the Church? 15249 Perhaps he only says to himself,''Who dies if England lives?'' 15249 Quando splendebat lucerna eius super caput meum, et ad lumen eius ambulabam in tenebris? |
15249 | Shall we add a drop to the ocean, or grains to the sand of the sea? |
15249 | The question which we now ask when the authenticity of an Epistle is doubted is, Do we find the same man? |
15249 | The reasons for this condemnation are thus summed up by a distinguished ecclesiastic of that Church[81]:''Why has the Pope condemned the Modernists? |
15249 | These considerations are of primary importance when we try to answer the questions: To what extent is the Roman Church fettered by her own past? |
15249 | We dined as a rule on each other; What matter? |
15249 | We will quote a few characteristic sentences:''Are we to set to work to revive St. Paul''s ideal of the life of a Church? |
15249 | What caused the sudden change which so astonished the survivors among his victims? |
15249 | What intermediary can there be, he will ask, between the soul and God? |
15249 | What is the cause of this discontent? |
15249 | What is the criterion by which it is decided that Christ said,''I am a king,''but not''My kingdom is not of this world''? |
15249 | What is to be the fate of that large majority who, so far as we can see, are equally undeserving of heaven and of hell? |
15249 | What more natural than that Peter should see the Master one day while fishing on the lake? |
15249 | What sacredness is there in an organisation? |
15249 | What will be the end of the struggle, and in what condition will it leave the greatest Church in Christendom? |
15249 | What will be the verdict of history on the type of Catholicism which Newman represented? |
15249 | What would have happened to France if she had stood alone in this war? |
15249 | When Christ said that those who are willing to lose their souls shall save them, is not this what He meant? |
15249 | Where is the prophetic spirit in the Church to- day? |
15249 | Where, then, is the ultimate Court of Appeal? |
15249 | Which was right, from the point of view of Catholic interests and policy? |
15249 | Who then are the friends of this_ curieux fétiche_, as Quinet called democracy? |
15249 | Why else should he have used a number of technical terms which his readers would recognise at once as belonging to the mysteries? |
15249 | Why must the resurrection have been only a subjective hallucination in the minds of the disciples? |
15249 | Why then should we not bring theory into harmony with practice?'' |
15249 | Would not that be a welcome liberation? |
15249 | [ 44] But who are the laity? |
15249 | and, if this is the true account, what sentiment can we feel, when we read His tragic story, but compassion tinged with contempt? |
15249 | not, Do we find the same system? |
15249 | who shall deliver me from this body of death?'' |
28649 | But, Holy Father,I said,"you speak as if some great danger threatened Rome-- is there any[ real?] |
28649 | Death, where is thy sting? 28649 Is it true,"I said,"that political prisoners are included in that Amnesty?" |
28649 | And Lord Stratford de Redcliffe, do you think he will be employed again? |
28649 | And how, I asked, could it be otherwise? |
28649 | Are the wishes of the Lombards, Tuscans, etc., really ascertainable, while their countries are occupied by French and Sardinian armies? |
28649 | But is such a declaration at the present moment called for by anything that has happened? |
28649 | But tell me,_ caro mio Russell_, if you are a prophet, how all this war and fuss is to end?" |
28649 | But who is to be the Judge on the trial? |
28649 | Can Russia have secretly declared her readiness to accept the"Neutralisation"? |
28649 | Can this not be obtained by means less subversive of the whole character of our Constitution? |
28649 | Could you_ not_ come a little in August when the Prince and Princess of Prussia have left us? |
28649 | Dans quelle position allons- nous nous trouver? |
28649 | Did Lord Clarendon think of himself as the head of the new combination? |
28649 | For_ what_ has not my beloved and perfect Albert done? |
28649 | Grave, where is thy victory?" |
28649 | Has Lord Aberdeen any idea who could have written it? |
28649 | Has Lord Derby heard that a Russian Fleet is expected soon to appear in the Black Sea? |
28649 | Has Lord John ever contemplated the probability of Austria not being abandoned a second time by Germany, when attacked by France? |
28649 | Has he at present any idea of the extent of the feeling that exists against him?'' |
28649 | Has this draft been brought before the Cabinet? |
28649 | Have these consequences been considered and brought distinctly before Parliament? |
28649 | He laughed very much, and said:''I am not at all surprised at that, but whom will he get to serve under him? |
28649 | His inquiry of the Governor''s lady, who never hired any servant but a convict, whether she employed in her nursery"Thieves or Murderers?" |
28649 | How are England and France to bring it to a termination single- handed? |
28649 | How can this be accounted for? |
28649 | How can we propose to join Russia, whom we know to be pledged to France? |
28649 | How far are these advanced? |
28649 | How is this impression to be avoided? |
28649 | How much Militia has been and will be embodied? |
28649 | How much serviceable ammunition is there both of Artillery and small arms in the country? |
28649 | I asked,"But can you stop it?" |
28649 | I suppose you have read Monsieur About''s book about Rome[63]? |
28649 | I trust, dearest Uncle, you are quite well now-- and that affairs will not prevent you from coming to see us next month? |
28649 | Is M. de Persigny or the Emperor Napoleon''s opinion to be the guide, as they just now proposed to us? |
28649 | Is the Memorandum for the Queen to keep? |
28649 | Likewise does Lord Aberdeen think that a morning visit to the Duchess of Aumale to enquire after her health would be imprudent? |
28649 | Lord Palmerston started up and asked:"Does that mean Reform?" |
28649 | Mais dans quel but allons- nous demander à nos deux pays de nouveaux sacrifices d''hommes et d''argent? |
28649 | May I beg to remind you to make enquiries,_ quietly_, about the young Prince of Orange[23]--as to his education,_ entourage_, and disposition? |
28649 | May I beg you to return it me, as her letters are very valuable to me?... |
28649 | May I therefore beg them to be sent? |
28649 | Now the Congress is then postponed, but what is to be done with Italy? |
28649 | Now what is it that Lord Palmerston has approved? |
28649 | On the other hand, would the position of a Secretary of State be compatible with his being President of a Council? |
28649 | Or would you prefer coming in October, when we return from Scotland? |
28649 | Perhaps Lord Palmerston would circulate this letter amongst the members of the Committee who agreed upon the proposed scheme? |
28649 | Perhaps a pension should be awarded to him? |
28649 | The Emperor''s opinion at least, the Queen hopes, will_ not_ be printed or generally circulated? |
28649 | The French say,"Sommes- nous moins que les Italiens pour avoir un peu de liberté?" |
28649 | The Polish and Hungarian Revolutions( perhaps the Russian) and the assistance which may be( nobly?) |
28649 | The Princess fell asleep on a chair, I on a sofa, and the rest walked up and down the room asking one another, How long will it last? |
28649 | The first and chief question was, What was Lord John Russell''s position? |
28649 | There may be Artillery in Canada, but is it horsed? |
28649 | Was poor dear Grandpapa''s death- bed such a sad one? |
28649 | What control can the Cabinet hope to exercise on the Foreign Affairs under these circumstances?... |
28649 | What had England to do with Savoy? |
28649 | What is the Naval Force at home? |
28649 | What is the force of Artillery left in the country in men and horses? |
28649 | What is_ really_ the matter with the King of Naples[18]? |
28649 | What reason could Austria put forward and justify to Prussia and Germany, for going to war at this moment? |
28649 | What should Europe then do under these circumstances? |
28649 | What store of muskets are there_ here?_ When will the new ones be ready? |
28649 | What store of muskets are there_ here?_ When will the new ones be ready? |
28649 | What would Lord Aberdeen wish her to do farther, and what does he think can be done in the way of contradiction? |
28649 | What would then be our alternative? |
28649 | What_ are_ the Austrians about? |
28649 | When does Philip go to Italy? |
28649 | Where is moreover the application of the principle of public competition to stop, if once established? |
28649 | Where will the Reserves for India be to be found? |
28649 | Who can say it is impossible that our own shores may be threatened by powers now in alliance with us? |
28649 | Who is to judge of those interests? |
28649 | Will the Medals now be soon ready? |
28649 | You ask me if Louis Oporto[35] is grown? |
28649 | [ 61] Is it necessary to be in a hurry about it? |
28649 | [ Pageheading: DEBATE ON THE ADDRESS]_ Mr Disraeli to Queen Victoria._ HOUSE OF COMMONS[? |
28649 | [ Pageheading: ENGLAND AND NAPLES]_ Queen Victoria to Lord John Russell._[_ Undated._? |
28649 | [ Pageheading: LORD CLARENDON''S INSTRUCTIONS]_ Queen Victoria to Viscount Palmerston._ BUCKINGHAM PALACE,[_? |
28649 | [ Pageheading: THE VICTORIA CROSS]_ Queen Victoria to Lord Panmure._[_ Undated,_? |
28649 | _ Earl Granville to Queen Victoria._[_ Undated._? |
28649 | _ Earl Granville to Queen Victoria._[_ Undated._? |
28649 | _ Queen Victoria to the Earl of Aberdeen._ BUCKINGHAM PALACE,_ 2nd February(? |
28649 | _ What_ have you heard?... |
28649 | _ What_ is the cause of this, sudden determination? |
28649 | _ When_ will the medals be ready for distribution? |
28649 | and in Batteries? |
28649 | and must not those offices which are to be exempted from it necessarily degrade the persons appointed to them in public estimation? |
28649 | and what expectation has Lord John Russell of succeeding in framing such a measure as would remove that ground of objection to the Reform Bill? |
28649 | cause for apprehension?" |
30208 | Did you get any? |
30208 | Do you think it divinely inspired? |
30208 | How much? |
30208 | What did you do with that dollar I gave you last week? |
30208 | What did you do with that? |
30208 | What did you do with the meat? |
30208 | What did you do with this money? |
30208 | What else did you find upon the dead man? |
30208 | What for? |
30208 | Why? |
30208 | A minister asks me,"Did you read the bible?" |
30208 | A tyrant father will have liars for his children; do you know that? |
30208 | After all, can you get, beyond, above or below appearances? |
30208 | And the church says"Do n''t?" |
30208 | And then was asked the question:"Will a free people tax themselves to pay a nation''s debt?" |
30208 | And what does that mean? |
30208 | And what more did these men say? |
30208 | And what more did they say? |
30208 | And what more? |
30208 | And why did they do this? |
30208 | Are the clergy, as a class, better, kinder and more generous to their families-- to their fellow- men-- than doctors, lawyers, merchants and farmers? |
30208 | Are the theologians welcomers of new truths? |
30208 | Are they investigators? |
30208 | Are they noted for their candor? |
30208 | Are you not more than glad that in 1776 was announced the sublime principle that political power resides with the people? |
30208 | Are you really familiar with chemistry, and can you account for the loves and hatreds of the atoms? |
30208 | But what was the voice of one man against the terrible cry of ignorant, infatuated, superstitious and malevolent millions? |
30208 | Can the believing father in heaven be happy with his unbelieving children in hell? |
30208 | Can the loving wife in heaven be happy with her unbelieving husband in hell?" |
30208 | Can you account for molecular action? |
30208 | Can you explain it better than you can the production of thought? |
30208 | Can you have a thought that was not suggested to you by what you call matter? |
30208 | Can you think even of anything without a material basis? |
30208 | Did he leave them in a beautiful home, surrounded by civilization, in the repose of law, in the security of a great and powerful republic? |
30208 | Did the church abolish slavery? |
30208 | Do they pull forward, or do they hold back? |
30208 | Do they treat an opponent with common fairness? |
30208 | Do you know I dislike this man unspeakably? |
30208 | Do you know another thing? |
30208 | Do you know what force is? |
30208 | Do you understand this? |
30208 | Does a belief in ghosts and unreasonable things necessarily make people honest? |
30208 | Does all this do any good? |
30208 | Does not the credit system in morals breed extravagance in sin? |
30208 | Does the banker loan money to a man because he is a Methodist or Baptist? |
30208 | Does the merchant give credit to a man because he belongs to a church? |
30208 | For what purpose do you get up? |
30208 | Has the church raised its voice against war? |
30208 | Have the churches the confidence of mankind? |
30208 | Have you the slightest conception of what it really is? |
30208 | Honor bright, is not that the better and grander story? |
30208 | How could he disprove it? |
30208 | How could he show that he did not cause the storm? |
30208 | How did they come to say this? |
30208 | How would you feel then? |
30208 | How? |
30208 | I ask you to- night, do the theories and doctrines of the theologians satisfy the heart or brain of the Nineteenth Century? |
30208 | I asked:"What are they?" |
30208 | If I have no right to think, why have I a brain? |
30208 | If that course had been pursued, would the human ears, in your judgment, ever have been enriched with the divine symphonies of Beethoven? |
30208 | If we can convert the heathen, why not convert those nearest home? |
30208 | In mercy? |
30208 | Is it a source of joy to think that perdition is the destination of nearly all of the children of men? |
30208 | Is it possible for you to conceive of the creation of an atom? |
30208 | Is it possible to imagine the annihilation of a single atom? |
30208 | Is it the non- producing thief, sitting on a throne, surrounded by vermin? |
30208 | Is it worth while to quarrel about original sin-- when there is so much copy? |
30208 | Is science indebted to the church for a solitary fact? |
30208 | Is there any reason that our farmers should not be prosperous and happy men? |
30208 | Is there not something in matter that forever eludes? |
30208 | Men began to inquire by what right a crowned robber made them work for him? |
30208 | No prospective fathers or mothers- in- law; no prying and gossiping neighbors; nobody to say,"Young man, how do you expect to support her?" |
30208 | Now, admitting that I live in Turkey, and have no chance to get any office unless I am on the side of the Koran, what should I say? |
30208 | Now, if the world is round, how are the people on the other side going to see Christ when he comes? |
30208 | Of what use are all the improvements in farming? |
30208 | Of what use is all the improved machinery unless it tends to give the farmer a little more leisure? |
30208 | Others asked by what right does a robed hypocrite rule my thought? |
30208 | Our country is filled with the idle and unemployed, and the great question asking for an answer is: What shall be done with these men? |
30208 | Seven long years of war-- fighting for what? |
30208 | Should I make a clean breast and say, that upon my honor I do not believe it? |
30208 | Should I not give the real transcript of my mind? |
30208 | Should I tell you my real thought? |
30208 | Standing here amid the sacred memories of the first, on the golden threshold of the second, I ask, Will the second century be as grand as the first? |
30208 | That our fathers then made up their minds nevermore to be colonists and subjects, but that they would be free and independent citizens of America? |
30208 | The priest said, and the king said, where is this spirit of investigation to stop? |
30208 | Then who shall say what shall be done with what is produced except the producer? |
30208 | There is another question still:--Will all the wounds of war be healed? |
30208 | There they were, of every sort, and color, and kind, and how was it that they came together? |
30208 | They said:"We saved the Nation''s life, and what is life without honor?" |
30208 | To feed the cattle? |
30208 | To save his life? |
30208 | Was that honest? |
30208 | What can we do without them? |
30208 | What church is an asylum for a persecuted truth? |
30208 | What did the soldier leave when he went? |
30208 | What do I mean by liberty? |
30208 | What else were they fighting for? |
30208 | What else were they fighting for? |
30208 | What for? |
30208 | What great reform has been inaugurated by the church? |
30208 | What has made the difference? |
30208 | What has made this country? |
30208 | What is harvesting now, compared with what it was in the old time? |
30208 | What is matter? |
30208 | What kind of children do you expect to have with a beggar and a coward for their mother? |
30208 | What more did they do? |
30208 | What more? |
30208 | What ought I to answer? |
30208 | What right has he to assassinate the joy of life? |
30208 | What right has he to murder the sunshine of a day? |
30208 | What shall these men do? |
30208 | What should I do? |
30208 | What should I reply? |
30208 | What was the old idea? |
30208 | What would have become of the people five hundred years ago if they had followed strictly the advice of the doctors? |
30208 | What would the people have been, if at any age of the world they had followed implicitly the direction of the church? |
30208 | What would we be without labor? |
30208 | What would we have been if we had remained colonists and subjects? |
30208 | What would we have been to- day? |
30208 | When a man loses confidence in Moses, must the people lose confidence in him? |
30208 | When you rise at four and work till dark what is life worth? |
30208 | Where did he get it? |
30208 | Where did that doctrine of eternal punishment for men and women and children come from? |
30208 | Why is it that we have all degrees of intelligence, from orthodoxy to genius, if it was intended that all should think and feel alike? |
30208 | Why not be honest with these children? |
30208 | Why not convert those we can get at? |
30208 | Why not convert those who have the immense advantage of the example of the average pioneer? |
30208 | Why not feed them more the night before? |
30208 | Why should we enslave ourselves? |
30208 | Why should we forge fetters for our own hands? |
30208 | Why should we sacrifice a real world that we have, for one we know not of? |
30208 | Why? |
30208 | Will a certificate of good standing in any church be taken as collateral security for one dollar? |
30208 | Will you take the word of a church member, or his note, or his oath, simply because he is a church member? |
30208 | You ask my opinion about anything; I examine it honestly, and when my mind is made up, what should I tell you? |
30208 | had you not better ascertain what matter really is? |
20023 | [ 32] Is n''t this very good? 20023 ''The Mistress of the Robes and the Ladies of the Bedchamber?'' 20023 ''You are aware we may have a majority against us?'' 20023 ''You would like us then to make the attempt?'' 20023 ''_ You_ wish it?'' 20023 ... Pray, dear Uncle, have you read Sir R. Peel''s two speeches? 20023 2nd, If you know what sort of people are about poor little Queen Isabel, and if she is being_ well_ or_ ill_ brought up?... 20023 And do you know what sort of people are about poor little Queen Isabel? 20023 And what will be the effect of all this? 20023 And you would get the Nemours to come? 20023 And you would persuade the dear Queen[64] to come for a little while with Clémentine? 20023 Are there any news of Joinville''s proceedings at Rio? 20023 But tell me, dearest Uncle, if these reports are true? 20023 By the by, have you read Custine''s[82] book on Russia? 20023 Can you imagine her with_ two boys_? 20023 Can your Majesty inform Lord Melbourne what is the arrangement respecting King Leopold''s children? 20023 Could n''t you suggest this to the King and Thiers, as of yourself? 20023 Could not Sir T. Cartwright be sent there, and Sir Edward Disbrowe go to Stockholm? 20023 Could they not be got rid of in time? 20023 Did Lord Melbourne go to Lady R. Grosvenor''s party or did he go home? 20023 Did her brother appear in_ einer Allonge- Perücke_?... 20023 Did the dinner go off well at Lady Elizabeth H. Vere''s, and were there many people there? 20023 Did you know what Pozzo said to somebody here about him? 20023 Do you know Mendizabal? 20023 Even if the Chambers were to be sitting-- such a little_ Ausflug_ of ten days only could really not be a great inconvenience? 20023 First of all,_ have_ you heard of his arrival at Rio? 20023 Has Bertie not learned some more words and sentences during your absence?... 20023 Have you read his other,_ Paris und Algier_? 20023 He said,What is it?" |
20023 | How is Lord Melbourne this morning? |
20023 | How long do you stay? |
20023 | How long does Aunt Julia stay with you? |
20023 | Hélène is sole guardian, is she not?... |
20023 | I asked Lord M.,''Must they resign directly, the next day, after the division( if they intended resigning)?'' |
20023 | I hope you approve?'' |
20023 | I hope, dear Uncle, you received my last letter( quite a packet) for Albert, on the 5th or 6th? |
20023 | I own I was not a little surprised to find that you are probably the godmother; or is the little boy only to be named after you? |
20023 | I replied,"Who told you this?" |
20023 | I should like to know what harm the Coburg family has done to England? |
20023 | I should wish to stay with you, and what would poor Ernest[9] say if I were to leave him so long? |
20023 | I suppose I_ may_ send for Aunt Charlotte''s bust, for which I am most grateful-- and say I have your authority to do so? |
20023 | I think that_ great_ violence and striving such a pity, on both sides, do n''t you, dear Uncle? |
20023 | If therefore, dearest Uncle, it suits you and Aunt Louise, would you come about the end of August, and stay with me as long as you can? |
20023 | Indeed, how is business to go on at all if such vexatious opposition prevails? |
20023 | Is it by instigation from him personally, or does he only know of it without being a party to it? |
20023 | Is it possible?--can it be true? |
20023 | Is it very warm in Italy? |
20023 | Is not this perfection? |
20023 | Is the Mayor to accompany the Prince in the same carriage? |
20023 | Is this not touching? |
20023 | Leopold must be great fun with his Aunt Marie;[33] does he still say"_ pas beau frère!_"or is he more reconciled to his brother? |
20023 | Lord Melbourne said,"You are for standing out, then?" |
20023 | Lord Melbourne said:"There you had the better of him, and what did he say?" |
20023 | May I ask you to give my affectionate respects to the King of Prussia, and my love to your Mamma? |
20023 | Melbourne has asked me to enquire of you whether you know Lord Grosvenor? |
20023 | Now if dearest Louise would meet us there then, and perhaps come back with us here for a little while_ then_? |
20023 | Page 146: changed''anxety''to''anxiety''- old typo? |
20023 | Peel?] |
20023 | Pray has the Duchess of Braganza[10] written to you or Aunt Louise since Ferdinand''s marriage? |
20023 | Pray, dear Uncle, does he know such a thing as that he has got an Aunt and Cousin on the other side of the water? |
20023 | Pray, dear Uncle, is the report of the King of Naples''marriage to the Archduchess Theresa true? |
20023 | Pray, dear Uncle, may I ask you a silly question?--is not the Queen of Spain[8] rather clever? |
20023 | Pray, dearest Uncle, will not and ought not Paris to be Duke of Orleans now? |
20023 | Secondly, if the Donna Francesca pleases, is he empowered_ at once to make the demand_, or must he write home first? |
20023 | Shall Surrey invite her, or Lord Palmerston? |
20023 | Should not the Lord Lieutenant( Lord Warwick) have notice? |
20023 | Suppose, however, he could_ not_ be, and the Nemours could not come_ then_, would the King not kindly allow them to come later? |
20023 | Tatane[101] is not your favourite, is he? |
20023 | The Queen is ashamed to say it, but she has forgotten_ when_ she appointed the Judge Advocate; when will the Cabinet be over? |
20023 | The Queen wishes to know if she ought to say anything to the Duchess, of the noble manner in which her Government mean to stand by her? |
20023 | The following were the questions and the answers:--_ Q._ What were the toasts at the theatrical dinner last night? |
20023 | The law may be perfect, but how is it that whenever a case for its application arises, it proves to be of no avail? |
20023 | The second is the contemplation-- what state will the Queen be placed in by such a catastrophe? |
20023 | The_ dénouement_ of the Oriental affair is most fortunate, is it not? |
20023 | They are: 1st, What you think of the Queen Christina of Spain, what opinion_ you_ have of her, as one can not believe_ reports_? |
20023 | They say,"They did so to us; why should we not do so to them?" |
20023 | Was it yourself, or came it from your Mother? |
20023 | Was not his father drowned at Spithead or Portsmouth? |
20023 | We are then to expect your arrival either on the Tuesday or Wednesday? |
20023 | What do you say to poor Christina''s departure? |
20023 | What is the value of Cardinal Wolsey''s cap, for instance? |
20023 | What is this but admitting that they looked to a movement in the country which they have not been able to create? |
20023 | When did he get home? |
20023 | Where then is"_ La France outragée_"? |
20023 | Who has made the little copy which you sent me, and who the original? |
20023 | Who is their singing- master? |
20023 | Who made the letter? |
20023 | Who will replace Mr Bulwer at Paris? |
20023 | Why should not Princess Alexandrine of Bavaria do? |
20023 | Will your Royal Highness have the goodness to mention this to Her Majesty?... |
20023 | You know her, and what do you think of her? |
20023 | You will kindly let our good old Grandmother[63] come there to see her dear Albert_ once again_ before she dies, would n''t you? |
20023 | Your speech interested me very much; it is very fine indeed; you wrote it yourself, did you not? |
20023 | [ 18] Might I ask what is the very pretty seal with which the letter I got from you yesterday was closed? |
20023 | [ Pageheading: PEEL AND PRINCE ALBERT]_ Sir Robert Peel to the Prince Albert._ WHITEHALL,_ 15th February(?) |
20023 | _ Qu''en dites- vous_, is not this flattering?... |
20023 | _ Qu''en pensez- vous?_ Then for_ Tatane_[66]--a Princess of Saxony would be extremely_ passlich_. |
20023 | _ Queen Victoria to Viscount Melbourne._ Does Lord Melbourne_ really_ mean J. Russell''s_ marriage_? |
20023 | and from Thursday to Friday? |
20023 | and then she added,"Come again-- will you, before you leave this country again?" |
20023 | and to whom? |
20023 | wherefore arm when there is_ no_ enemy? |
20023 | wherefore raise the war- cry? |
6570 | And what would you do if you were in a strange place and you were called a d-- d liar? |
6570 | Eikon Basilikewas doing infinite mischief to the cause of the Commonwealth, and how could it have been met except by a critical reply? |
6570 | So you''re Abe Lincoln? |
6570 | Then why does he take it? |
6570 | Then why does he want the seat? |
6570 | WHAT IS CULPABLE LUXURY? |
6570 | When Adam delved and Eve span, where was then the gentleman? |
6570 | Why, what has the slave done? |
6570 | Would you believe that I am so bloody? |
6570 | --Will Jahveh be pleased with thousands of rams, With ten thousands of rivers of oil? |
6570 | Above all what constitutes the holiness? |
6570 | After all, what is a machine but a perfect tool? |
6570 | And after all, without God or spirit, what is"Humanity"? |
6570 | And what assurance of this can materialism or any non theological system give? |
6570 | And what became of the Roman art of war till it was revived by Gustavus Adolphus? |
6570 | But a necessity of what sort? |
6570 | But are these attempts to revive the past very successful anywhere? |
6570 | But for Gustavus himself, was it good to die glorious and stainless, but before his hour? |
6570 | But how came military discipline to be so specially cultivated by the Romans? |
6570 | But how can we invest with a collective personality the fleeting generations of mankind? |
6570 | But the sources of this fabulous prosperity, are they inexhaustible? |
6570 | But what are these five senses? |
6570 | But what is to prevent the withdrawal of the traditional sanction from producing its natural effect upon the morality of the mass of mankind? |
6570 | But what resemblance did the feudal militia bear to the legionaries? |
6570 | But what was the motive power in the case of Rome? |
6570 | But where has Hampden spoken of himself as"seeking the Lord about militia or ship- money?" |
6570 | But where in the whole history of Roman conquest will you find a more ruthless conqueror? |
6570 | But who can point out the man of whom a character in Scott is a mere portrait? |
6570 | But will this banish the thought of ultimate annihilation? |
6570 | Can a greater platitude be conceived than railing at a statesman of antiquity for having been a rhetorician? |
6570 | Did he not learn rhetoric from the same master as Cicero? |
6570 | Did not Mr. Peabody give his glass of champagne to a man in need? |
6570 | Do not the anti- metaphysicists themselves unconsciously metaphysicize? |
6570 | Does any one doubt it? |
6570 | Does he fancy a seat in the British House of Commons, the best club in London, as it has been truly called? |
6570 | Even as we are, sensual pleasure palls; so does the merely intellectual: but can the same be said of the happiness of virtue and affection? |
6570 | Even if they had, would they have done right in giving way? |
6570 | Fed upon such food daily, what will the mind of a nation be? |
6570 | For this religion are the service and worship of Humanity likely to be a real equivalent in any respect, as motive power, as restraint, or as comfort? |
6570 | Has he, it was asked, any political knowledge or capacity, any interest in public affairs, any ambition? |
6570 | Have we really come to this, that the world has no longer any good reason for believing in a God or a life beyond the grave? |
6570 | Have you asked for any advance to be made to you for this rock?" |
6570 | How can the most unselfish motive exist if there is nothing to be moved? |
6570 | How could the Catholic majority be restrained from legislation which the Protestant minority would deem oppressive? |
6570 | How did the peasantry exist, what was their condition in those days when wheat was at a hundred, or even a hundred and thirty shillings? |
6570 | How will Mr. Greg keep up the palaces, parks, and studs, when he has taken away the retinues of servants? |
6570 | How will he escape the reproach of having done what was criminal and pernicious? |
6570 | I say probably, and, after all, how can we presume to speak with certainty of a situation so distant from us in time, and so imperfectly recorded? |
6570 | If a man taxes me with having squandered fifty dollars on a repast is it an irrefutable retort to tell him that he has spent fifty cents? |
6570 | Is an artist a worse painter of the human body from being a good anatomist? |
6570 | Is it not that very margin of profit of which_ The Times_ speaks so lightly, which, being accumulated, has created the wealth of England? |
6570 | Is not this an army pretty well disciplined, though its object is not bloodshed? |
6570 | Is there any apology for them at all but one essentially Christian? |
6570 | Jack being as strong as two of him was going to"whip him badly,"when Abe interposed,"Well Jack, what did you say to the man?" |
6570 | Let the unit be a complex phenomenon, an organism or whatever name science may give it, what multiple of it will be a rational object of worship? |
6570 | May not our revived mediaevalism be regarded as a mistake by the generation that follows us? |
6570 | Might we not have done just as well without Puritanism? |
6570 | Mr. Brassey would linger behind, allowing the others to go on, and then commence the following conversation:"What is your price for this cutting?" |
6570 | Must we not a little doubt the consistency of his policy and even his insight when we find him after all this enacting sumptuary laws? |
6570 | Need it be said that Scott is thoroughly ideal as well as thoroughly real? |
6570 | Not to speak of artists and art, what does landed wealth do for popular education? |
6570 | Now is the worship of Humanity or Cosmic Emotion really a substitute for religion? |
6570 | Now what conditions would be most favourable to this critical effort, so fraught with momentous consequences to humanity? |
6570 | Now, what will they think of their honest Abe when he appoints this man to be his familiar adviser?" |
6570 | Shall I come before him with burnt offerings, With the sacrifice of calves of a year old? |
6570 | Shall I give my first- born for my transgression, The fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?'' |
6570 | Suppose spiritual life necessarily implies the expectation of a Future State, has physical science anything to say against that expectation? |
6570 | The educated nations, or Mexico and Spain? |
6570 | The pair might have used Falkland to lure by the pledge of his high character the leaders of the Parliament into the acceptance of a treaty? |
6570 | Then how came Rome to be the foundress and the great source of law? |
6570 | Then why should he be a worse painter of nature generally, because he knows her secrets, or because they are being explored in his time? |
6570 | They have pervaded the country from New England to Louisiana; they are neither peculiar to the eternal(?) |
6570 | To happiness Art lends intensity and elevation; but in affliction, in ruin, in the wreck of affection how much can Phidias and Raphael do for you? |
6570 | Was it a necessity created by an upward effort, by an elevation of humanity, or by degradation and decline? |
6570 | Was not Caesar himself a rhetorician? |
6570 | Was not Pericles a rhetorician? |
6570 | We have been rebuked in the words of Frederick to his grenadiers--"Do you want to live for ever?" |
6570 | What caused the Empire of Rome to be so durable? |
6570 | What empire then can we imagine which would have done less harm or more good than the Roman? |
6570 | What enabled it to perform services so important in preparing the way for a higher civilization? |
6570 | What gives it so high an organization? |
6570 | What if instead of gaining he is really losing in manhood and real independence? |
6570 | What if the very opposite theory to that of the she- wolf and her foster- children should be true? |
6570 | What is science but truth, and why should not truth and beauty live together? |
6570 | What is the bond of unity between all these species and wherein consists the obligation to mutual love and help? |
6570 | What is the special character of the Roman legends, so far as they relate to war? |
6570 | What made it so tolerable, and even in some cases beneficent to her subjects? |
6570 | What parallel can there be between an enormous and a very moderate expenditure or between prodigious luxury and ordinary comfort? |
6570 | What, politically speaking, are the special attributes of an island? |
6570 | When did it command such means and appliances of pleasure, such satisfaction for every appetite and every fancy, as it commands now? |
6570 | When did it command such means and appliances of pleasure, such satisfaction for every appetite and every fancy, as it commands now? |
6570 | When did it rear such enchanted palaces of luxury as it is rearing in England at the present day? |
6570 | When did it rear such enchanted palaces of luxury as it is rearing in England at the present day? |
6570 | Whence, but from industry and commerce, could the population and the wealth have come? |
6570 | Wherein does the special unity or the special bond consist? |
6570 | Which nations do the great works? |
6570 | Who are these sublime artists in poetry that are pinnacled so high above the"frays"and"brawls"of vulgar humanity? |
6570 | Who knows what the meaning of the original statue was? |
6570 | Who knows whether the statue which we possess is a real counterpart of the original? |
6570 | Who would think of framing such a constitution, say, for one of the rural districts of France? |
6570 | Why have not these last comers as good a claim to existence as the first? |
6570 | Why is real life to be abandoned by every man of feeling and imagination and given over to the men of manoeuvre and compromise? |
6570 | Why is the aggregate holy? |
6570 | Why should a man forfeit that peace when he is doing with his whole soul that which he conscientiously believes to be his highest duty? |
6570 | Why should he not? |
6570 | Why should it be arrested there? |
6570 | Why should it not continue its upward course and arrive at a development which might be designated as spiritual life? |
6570 | Why then did he not with Newman and the rest accept the logical conclusions of his premises and go to the place to which his principles belonged? |
6570 | Why then should it be assumed that their account of the universe, or of our relations to it, is exhaustive and final? |
6570 | Will that do for you?" |
6570 | With our eyes fixed on the"Descent,"newly disclosed to us, may we not be losing sight of the_ Ascent_ of man? |
6570 | Without a self, how can there be self- sacrifice? |
6570 | Would he render moonlight better if he believed the moon was a green cheese? |
6570 | gave his assent to the Reform Bill, the Duke, who knew his own nickname, cried"Who''s Silly Billy now?" |
23100 | And to whom, sir, am I indebted? |
23100 | Does not a garment veil in some measure that which it clothes? 23100 Had not your Royal Highness better shut your mouth?" |
23100 | How was that done? |
23100 | In your own conscience, now? |
23100 | What now? |
23100 | Whiles it remained, was it not thine own? 23100 Why do you not make way for a gentleman?"--"Eh?" |
23100 | You do n''t mean that this always happens? |
23100 | ''Well, Mrs. Flamsteed,''says he,''does old Poke- the- Stars understand gravitation yet?'' |
23100 | ( Prove= probe?). |
23100 | ( if it then exist)"Pray gentlemen, is it not time for the coal to be exhausted?" |
23100 | --"Did you not know that air, earth, and water, have long been known to be no elements at all, but compounds?" |
23100 | --"Is not God the author of your reason? |
23100 | --"Well, now, let us examine the list; let me see; now,--now,--now,--come!--here''s Gauss[671]--_who''s Gauss_?" |
23100 | --"What are{ 10} they?" |
23100 | --"What do you mean, sir? |
23100 | --"Yes, why do you not move? |
23100 | --''What are they?'' |
23100 | 14 have said to this? |
23100 | A doubt comes over him: would Mrs. De M., in the event of her being mistaken, give him the very earliest information? |
23100 | A- t- il oublié qu''on y a vu fréquemment les noms des Boyle, des Newton, des Halley, des De Moivres, des Hans Sloane, etc.? |
23100 | After all, what does his book prove except that a forty- fifth part of a very useful review is not free from mistakes? |
23100 | And how many instances will it require to establish a law? |
23100 | And is it not often very well known, by style and in other ways, who it was wrote the article? |
23100 | And what has come of it? |
23100 | Arago( to Brünnow)._--Did_ you_ see the assault? |
23100 | Arago._--Did you see the assault? |
23100 | Arago._--How did you know there was any assault at all? |
23100 | Arago._--Prisoner, have you any family? |
23100 | Arago._--Was the prosecutor sober? |
23100 | Are the results of mathematical deduction results of observation? |
23100 | But I may have been a collector, influenced in choice by bias? |
23100 | But all this is conjecture: who knows that I have not hit on the very plan he adopted? |
23100 | But how? |
23100 | But surely there can be but one omniscience? |
23100 | Can he then be the author of anything which is contrary to your reason? |
23100 | De M. Was this T. B. Laurus Joannes Baptista Laurus or Giovanni Battista Lauro( 1581- 1621), the poet and writer? |
23100 | Did he begin with the mistake of Cæsar''s priests? |
23100 | Did the author see this theorem? |
23100 | Did you ever bring a case of this kind before me till now? |
23100 | Did_ Clavius_ show this? |
23100 | Does not this illustrate the law of development, the gradation of families, the transference of species, and so on? |
23100 | Fifty years before, Beaugrand, the king''s secretary, made a fool of himself, and[ so?] |
23100 | Had they forgotten that they once were considered the arbiters of fate, and the prognosticators of man''s destiny? |
23100 | Have you dined, my masters? |
23100 | Have you heard that the King Goes to St. Paul''s? |
23100 | He also wrote an_ Earnest Address to the Methodists_( 1841) and_ The Wealth Question_( 1840?). |
23100 | How came a man who had never heard of Stevinus to be a member of the Brussels Academy? |
23100 | How could I know the Society was one person, who supposed I had arrived at a conclusion and wanted a"_ guiding word_"? |
23100 | How could this apply to Parr, with his handful of private pupils,[395] and no reputation for severity? |
23100 | How is it possible that things so distinct should not be distinguished in their_ number_ as well as in their action? |
23100 | How is this? |
23100 | How many coincidences are required to establish a law of connection? |
23100 | How should people know how to choose? |
23100 | Hyandrus_, both writers being usually accurate?] |
23100 | If reason be a sufficient guide, why should God give you any other? |
23100 | In three of the evangelists[ Greek: Su legeis] is the answer to"Art thou a king?" |
23100 | Is it this? |
23100 | Is not that very light concealment?" |
23100 | Is the celebrated business of Troughton& Simms, also in Fleet Street, a lineal descendant of that of Wright? |
23100 | Is there any one whose name can not be twisted into either praise or satire? |
23100 | Is this a pre- established harmony, or a chain of coincidences? |
23100 | Is this more correct than Oronce Fine, which the translator of De Thou uses? |
23100 | It puzzled me like anything; In fact, it puzzled me worse: Is n''t schoolman''s logic hard enough, Without being in Sibyl''s verse? |
23100 | It''s_ half- and- half_, the gentleman means; Do n''t you see he talks of_ score_? |
23100 | Many will say, Is not all this, though perfectly correct, well known to be matter of form? |
23100 | May any one alter the works of the dead at his own discretion? |
23100 | More curious than his quadrature is his name; what are we to make of it? |
23100 | Must a man have but one wife? |
23100 | My two colloquials burst into a fit of laughter; about what? |
23100 | Nay, may not a man have a new wife while the old one is living? |
23100 | Now I''ll read it into English, And then you''ll answer me this: If it is n''t good logic all the world round, I should like to know what is? |
23100 | Now is this not the notion of things to which the bias of a practised lawyer might lead him? |
23100 | Now what do my paradoxers say? |
23100 | Now what if this should be a minor segment of a higher law? |
23100 | Now, candid reader!--or uncandid either!--which most deserves to be laughed at? |
23100 | Of this unpunctuating paradoxer I shall give an account in his own way: he would not stop for any one; why should I stop for him? |
23100 | On which course would they feel most safe in giving their account to the God of truth? |
23100 | One man may construct such a system-- Bishop Wilkins has done it-- but where is the man who will learn it? |
23100 | Or perhaps so many eyes open in the firmament make you lose your aim when you shoot the arrow? |
23100 | Or than Horonce Phine, which older writers give? |
23100 | Quis ergo casus aut Deus Meam quadravit aream? |
23100 | Secretary?" |
23100 | So the Doctor broke out with"Do you know what country you come from? |
23100 | Some of the houses which Jack built were destroyed by the fortune of war in 1745, at Edinburgh: who will say the rebels did no good whatever? |
23100 | Suppose a number of gold- fishes in a glass bowl,--you understand? |
23100 | Surely this is a misprint;_ eight_ volumes on the theory of parallels? |
23100 | Tell me that Simson pre- existed in any other way than as editor of some pre- existent Euclid? |
23100 | That question is, A lie, is it_ malum in se_, without reference to meaning and circumstances? |
23100 | The only question is, has the selection been fairly made? |
23100 | The translation says:"But wherein consists the divine honor due to Christ? |
23100 | There was now a little alarm: where could the Doctor have got to? |
23100 | True enough: but why did Fox find such followers and not Muggleton? |
23100 | Wait, says the judge, until the facts are determined: did the prisoner take the goods with felonious intent? |
23100 | Was it because Ezekiel''s temple had fifteen steps? |
23100 | Was it because Jacob''s ladder has been supposed to have had fifteen steps? |
23100 | Was it because Paul strove fifteen days against Peter, proving that he was a doctor both of the Old and New Testament? |
23100 | Was it because fifteen is seven and eight, typifying the Old Testament Sabbath, and the New Testament day of the resurrection following? |
23100 | Was it because fifteen years were added to the life of Hezekiah? |
23100 | Was it because the feast of unleavened bread was on the fifteenth day of the month? |
23100 | Was it because the prophet Hosea bought a lady{ 57} for fifteen pieces of silver? |
23100 | Was it because the scene of the Ascension was fifteen stadia from Jerusalem? |
23100 | Was it because the stone- masons and porters employed in Solomon''s temple amounted to fifteen myriads? |
23100 | Was it because the waters of the Deluge rose fifteen cubits above the mountains?--or because they lasted fifteen decades of days? |
23100 | Was it because, according to Micah, seven shepherds and eight chiefs should waste the Assyrians? |
23100 | Was it not the infernal march of intellect, which, after having turned the earth topsy- turvy, was now disturbing the very universe? |
23100 | Was she quite sure? |
23100 | Was the collected edition really published? |
23100 | What accident or god can then Have quadrated mine area?" |
23100 | What are large collections of facts for? |
23100 | What does the prosecutor know about the matter? |
23100 | What had lost them that proud position? |
23100 | What had they to do with any private arrangements between him and the general equations of the system? |
23100 | What if, by constantly thinking of ourselves as descended from primeval monkeys, we should-- if it be true-- actually_ get our tails again_? |
23100 | What is a man to do who is asked whether he wrote an article? |
23100 | What is to be done? |
23100 | What may be the use of such a book as this? |
23100 | What sort of man was Zachary? |
23100 | What would_ Judge_ Z.--as he now is-- say to the extreme case beginning somewhere between six planks and a bit of rope? |
23100 | When did we three meet before? |
23100 | When the Royal Society of London, and the Academy of Sciences of Paris, shall have read this memorandum, how will they appear? |
23100 | Who can doubt that if Bacon had written this it must have been wrong? |
23100 | Who can laugh with effect at six times nothing is nothing, as false or unintelligible? |
23100 | Who cares for villains, or barbarians, or helots? |
23100 | Who ever heard of my asking the legislature to fine blundering circle- squarers? |
23100 | Who ever heard of such a thing?" |
23100 | Who shall contradict Jacob Marcelis? |
23100 | Who would undertake to throw tail eight times running? |
23100 | Why did not Mr. Murray suppress Lord Byron''s_ parody_ on the Ten Commandments? |
23100 | [ 271]"Where the devil, Master Ludovico, did you pick up such a collection?" |
23100 | [ 550] The first edition of the anonymous[ Greek: Haireseôn anastasis]( by Vicars?) |
23100 | [ 682] Was this Whewell, who was at Trinity from 1812 to 1816 and became a fellow in 1817? |
23100 | [ 820] Price_ 2d._ Is there sufficient proof of the existence of God? |
23100 | and after it was sold, was it( the purchase- money) not in thine own power?" |
23100 | did the defendant give what amounts to a warranty? |
23100 | have been seen frequently? |
23100 | if it be not a sufficient guide, why has he given you_ that_?" |
23100 | is there not sad stuff? |
23100 | knowest thou not Who would be wise, himself must make him so?" |
23100 | leaving to the followers of the old school the comfortable option of placing the letters thus: TRUE? |
23100 | that must be a delusion; what can the circle have to do with the numbers alive at the end of a given time?" |
23100 | what are you about? |
23100 | what do you mean? |
29440 | How much? |
29440 | Well,answers Luther,"what harm will a cassock do the man? |
29440 | What''s this? |
29440 | ''A woman well known in the parish,''says M''Leod,''happening to traverse the Strath the year after the burning, was asked, on her return, What news? |
29440 | ''Ah,''rejoined the true Mr. Clark,''did I not say it would be so? |
29440 | ''If the salt has lost its savour, wherewithal shall it be salted?'' |
29440 | ''Keeping its Sabbaths? |
29440 | ''What is your version of it?'' |
29440 | ''What mean you by the_ Church_?'' |
29440 | -----{ 6}_ What ought the General Assembly to do at the present Crisis?_( 1833.) |
29440 | 14- 17, and by each of the other evangelists?'' |
29440 | A.?" |
29440 | And are we not justified in applying to English Churchmen the rule which would be at once applied to Jewish priests? |
29440 | And can it possibly be held that the shame and guilt of such an arrangement can be obviated by the votes of Synods or Assemblies? |
29440 | And how did these Scotchmen meet with the grand doctrine which it embodied? |
29440 | And was it not the_ great_ sea, asks the boy, that was so vastly broad, and so profoundly deep? |
29440 | And what, thinks our reader, was the result? |
29440 | And where were that father and mother? |
29440 | And where, it may be asked, was the one tenant of the island for whose sake so many others had been removed? |
29440 | And who but the patriot is equal to these things? |
29440 | And who does not know that to be a poor, unsolid fiction,--a weak and hollow sham? |
29440 | And why permit it to continue? |
29440 | And yet who can now doubt that the calculations of Chalmers were in reality the true ones? |
29440 | And, pray, what objections can be urged against so liberal and large- minded a scheme? |
29440 | Are they doing other, to use a very old illustration, than merely milking rams, leaving their admirers and followers to hold the pail? |
29440 | Britain at once recognises the Provisional Government; but what are the great despotisms of the Continent to do? |
29440 | But does Knox on that account refuse God''s moiety? |
29440 | But how is its power to be directed? |
29440 | But how is the demand to be effectually made? |
29440 | But how, it may be asked, has this result taken place? |
29440 | But in whom does theology find an illustrator? |
29440 | But is it easy, think you, to mature such thoughts as Butler matured? |
29440 | But is not this understating the case on the Episcopal side? |
29440 | But then, has he not loyally engaged to support the Establishment? |
29440 | But to what, we ask, did it lead, assisted, of course, by other arguments of a similar character, in the body with whom it originated? |
29440 | But what of daring Franklin? |
29440 | But what would be the effects of so happy a change? |
29440 | But what would her votes succeed in achieving? |
29440 | But where is the evidence of an intrinsic holiness in these buildings? |
29440 | Can it be possible, however, that the shrewd English really differ from us in our estimate? |
29440 | Can there be nothing done for Sutherland through an already existing political agency? |
29440 | Could there be an allusion of more classical beauty, or more finely charged with typical truth? |
29440 | Do we regret that the Government of a country such as ours should be practically irreligious in its character? |
29440 | Earth''s limits-- think you here they are? |
29440 | For what purpose, do we say? |
29440 | For what, we again ask, can be expected for £ 10 or £ 13? |
29440 | For who can say What the Omnipotent Eternal One, That made the world, hath purposed?'' |
29440 | Give both worth and importance to the same individual, and what are the terms employed in describing him? |
29440 | Has the reader ever seen Quarles''_ Emblems_, or Flavel''s_ Husbandry and Navigation Spiritualized_? |
29440 | Have any of them given to the world even tar- water? |
29440 | Here has the Almighty fixed His bar, Forbidding glance beyond? |
29440 | How are we to account for a hostility so determined, and that can stoop so low? |
29440 | How bring it to bear upon the Duke of Sutherland? |
29440 | How did they fare? |
29440 | How is it only a moiety of these bodies that is represented? |
29440 | How is it that these German metaphysicians exhibit their vigour exclusively in walking one way? |
29440 | How is the battle of religious freedom to be best fought in behalf of the oppressed people of Sutherland? |
29440 | How, we ask, was that result produced? |
29440 | How? |
29440 | I tolerate your Independency-- your Episcopacy-- your Presbyterianism: you are a Baptist, but I tolerate you?'' |
29440 | If nature could be made her own limner, if by some magic art the reflection could be fixed upon the mirror, could the picture be other than true? |
29440 | If the Church had not taken upon herself the education of the people in those ages, who else was there to teach them? |
29440 | In what age or what country was there ever a man so''left by faction?'' |
29440 | Is he desirous to influence the decisions of the Supreme Civil Court in behalf of his party? |
29440 | Is he wishful to propitiate the English Government? |
29440 | Is it easy, think you, to convey in language exquisite as that of Robert Hall, sentiments as refined and imagery as classic as his? |
29440 | Is it easy, think you, to produce a philosophic poem, the most sublime and expansive of any age or country? |
29440 | Is it not somewhat necessary that the breath of public opinion should be let in on this remote country? |
29440 | Is it possible that they mean by it the receiving of certain pecuniary endowments as a price for rendering a divided allegiance to the Son of God? |
29440 | It might in some degree relieve the Free Church Scheme from financial difficulty; but would it do nothing more? |
29440 | May not ministers and people be eventually worn out in this way? |
29440 | May we crave leave to direct the attention of the reader for a very few minutes to the grounds on which we decide? |
29440 | Mr. Cumming no intention of settling our disputes, by giving us a new history of the Church? |
29440 | Nay, what, save perhaps in the northern burghs, would be her share in such a scheme over Scotland generally? |
29440 | Or could not Mr. Robertson of Ellon have been great on the article Beza? |
29440 | Or where else could Councillor---- refer with such prodigious effect to Dr. Chalmers''s bloody- minded scheme of''_ executing_ the heathen?'' |
29440 | Our great poet formed a correcter estimate:"What though on hamely fare we dine, Wear hodden grey, and a''that? |
29440 | Should not portraits of the same individual, if all perfect likenesses of him, be all perfectly like one another? |
29440 | Should we, however, do no violence by such a provision, we have heard it asked, to the conscientious convictions of the schoolmaster? |
29440 | Stands it on any surer ground than the baptism of bells, the sacrifice of the mass, or the five spurious sacraments? |
29440 | The first gap had been made in our immediate party, and who of us could tell whether she herself was not to be the next? |
29440 | The grand question which in the course of Providence had at length arisen was,''How is our sinking country to be educated?'' |
29440 | Think you, did Maclaurin''s well- known_ Sermon on the Cross_ cost him little trouble? |
29440 | Was the doctrine that the king can do no wrong a Scottish doctrine at the time of the Revolution, or was it not? |
29440 | Was there no exertion demanded of them to save the credit of the Earl of Aberdeen''s learned clergy? |
29440 | Were there not a hundred thousand that took the pledge? |
29440 | What can be finer, for instance, than his remarks on the poetry of Dr. Thomas Brown, or what more thoroughly removed from commonplace? |
29440 | What do we infer from the fact? |
29440 | What has Sir Walter done for Scotland, to deserve so gorgeous a monument? |
29440 | What is a_ sound religious education_? |
29440 | What is ex- Chancellor Brougham now? |
29440 | What is the descriptive term applied to him now? |
29440 | What moral influence does the advocate of popular education, and the indignant denouncer of the iniquities of the slave- trade, exert? |
29440 | What party trusts to him? |
29440 | What price would some early edition of his works bear, with his likeness in calotype fronting the title? |
29440 | What section of the community does he represent? |
29440 | What think you, Allister, of the catechist''s note?'' |
29440 | What, for instance, could be quieter or more modest, in its first stages, than the invention of James Watt? |
29440 | What, then, in its official meaning, does it in reality express? |
29440 | What, then, should be the course taken by the promoters of public schools, in accordance with the principles enunciated by Dr Chalmers? |
29440 | What, thought we, if this, after all, be but a trick of a similar character? |
29440 | What, we have been accustomed to ask, are their trophies in the practical? |
29440 | When was J. J. Rousseau himself given to the turning of periods? |
29440 | When, asks the reader, did these most atrocious threats appear in the_ Witness_? |
29440 | Where are Brougham''s disciples? |
29440 | Where are their Lockes, Humes, and Adam Smiths? |
29440 | Where are their works of a practical character, powerful enough to give law to the species? |
29440 | Where else could some of our Edinburgh worthies bring themselves so prominently before the eyes of the country? |
29440 | Where is that authority? |
29440 | Where is the proof that the rite of consecration is a rite according to the mind of God? |
29440 | Where, we ask, are we to look for the forces that are to assist us in fighting this battle of statutory security? |
29440 | Why has Dr. Bryce thus left the field to the fanatics? |
29440 | Why should not the sentiments of every voter in Scotland be taken on this same Sabbath question now? |
29440 | Will not the professors of every variety of religious faith answer the question differently? |
29440 | Would it not be a somewhat curious matter to find that this doctrine is one which has in reality not entered Scotland at all? |
29440 | and can it be held by any one that knows Scotland, that they are n''t worth over- head a shilling a year to the railway? |
29440 | had he nothing to insert on missions? |
29440 | have the churches of Scotland also perished? |
29440 | or that, with an intelligent laity to judge in the matter, the''end of this order''can be other than unhappy? |
29440 | or the not less noble sermon of Sir Matthew Hale, on_ Christ and Him crucified_? |
29440 | or what is there to prevent us from taking the sentiments of every voter in Scotland on the Popish endowment question by and by? |
29440 | said the shaggy king of the forest in reply,''but was the sculptor a lion? |
29440 | what more obtrusive or noisy, on the contrary, than the invention of Mr. Henson? |
16510 | But are children to be allowed to surfeit themselves? 16510 But why trouble ourselves about any_ curriculum_ at all?" |
16510 | How is this plan to be carried out when a petty theft has been committed? 16510 Why should I any longer waste time and money, and temper? |
16510 | ***** And now, from this uniformity of procedure, may we not infer some fundamental necessity whence it results? |
16510 | ***** And now, what is the_ function_ of music? |
16510 | ***** Have we not here, then, the guiding principle of moral education? |
16510 | *****"But what has all this to do with_ The Origin and Function of Music_?" |
16510 | *****"But what is to be done in cases of more serious misconduct?" |
16510 | --an irascibility foretelling endless future squabbles? |
16510 | 1"---- 24 And what are the results of this"astounding regimen,"as Sir John Forbes terms it? |
16510 | After fifty years of discussion, experiment, and comparison of results, may we not expect a few steps towards the goal to be already made good? |
16510 | All have their disguises on; and how can there be sympathy between masks? |
16510 | And again, do we not find among different classes of the same nation, differences that have like implications? |
16510 | And however admirable the result might be, considered individually, would it not be self- defeating in so far as society and posterity are concerned? |
16510 | And if by any system of culture an ideal human being could be produced, is it not doubtful whether he would be fit for the world as it now is? |
16510 | And is it not folly to expect any other issue? |
16510 | And is not Nature perpetually thrusting this method upon us, if we had but the wit to see it, and the humility to adopt it? |
16510 | And must not the neglect of its embryology lead to a misunderstanding of the principles of its evolution and of its existing organisation? |
16510 | And on what does efficiency in the production, preparation, and distribution of commodities depend? |
16510 | And the volume you are reading-- are not its leaves fabricated by one machine and covered with these words by another? |
16510 | And then the culture of the intellect-- is not this, too, mismanaged in a similar manner? |
16510 | And then the science of life-- Biology: does not this, too, bear fundamentally on these processes of indirect self- preservation? |
16510 | And what is the nature of the mental process by which numbers are found capable of having their relations expressed algebraically? |
16510 | And which of the processes of representation gives it most delight? |
16510 | And will he not, spite his irritation, recognise more or less clearly the justice of the arrangement? |
16510 | Are children doomed to a monotonous dietary, or a dietary that is deficient in nutritiveness? |
16510 | Are the phenomena_ measurable_? |
16510 | Are there not such things as a constitutional conservatism, and a constitutional tendency to change? |
16510 | Are they forbidden vociferous play, or( being too ill- clothed to bear exposure) are they kept indoors in cold weather? |
16510 | As a final test by which to judge any plan of culture, should come the question,--Does it create a pleasurable excitement in the pupils? |
16510 | But how came the transition from those uncertain perceptions of equality which the unaided senses give, to the certain ones with which science deals? |
16510 | But where are her grounds for so thinking? |
16510 | But why do they facilitate the mental actions? |
16510 | But, during after- dinner conversations, or at other times of like intercourse, who hears anything said about the rearing of children? |
16510 | CONTENTS PAGE_ Introduction_ by Charles W. Eliot vii PART I EDUCATION: INTELLECTUAL, MORAL, AND PHYSICAL WHAT KNOWLEDGE IS OF MOST WORTH? |
16510 | Can any one believe that the method which answers so well in the first and the last divisions of life, will not answer in the intermediate division? |
16510 | Can we consider these two series of coincidences as accidental and unmeaning? |
16510 | Do not these various evidences endorse our argument respecting the feeding of children? |
16510 | Do they not establish the position that, where energy as well as growth has to be maintained, it can only be done by high feeding? |
16510 | Does not the induction lie on the surface? |
16510 | Does not the universality of the_ law_ imply a universal_ cause_? |
16510 | Does the child like this or that kind of teaching?--does he take to it? |
16510 | For by what observations must the Chaldeans have discovered this cycle? |
16510 | For under what conditions only were the foregoing developments possible? |
16510 | For what are the natural consequences, say, of a theft? |
16510 | For, leaving out only some very small classes, what are all men employed in? |
16510 | Has music any effect beyond the immediate pleasure it produces? |
16510 | Has not science, too, its embryology? |
16510 | Has she some secret understanding with the boy''s stomach-- some_ clairvoyant_ power enabling her to discern the needs of his body? |
16510 | Have not women even a greater regard for appearances than men? |
16510 | Have we not here, then, adequate data for a theory of music? |
16510 | He answered the question"what knowledge is of most worth?" |
16510 | How are you likely to have agreeable converse with the gentleman who is fuming internally because he is not placed next to the hostess? |
16510 | How can she calculate the result of such a combination of causes? |
16510 | How do these statements tally with his doctrine? |
16510 | How many conquests does the blue- stocking make through her extensive knowledge of history? |
16510 | How, then, are musical effects to be explained? |
16510 | If not, how can she safely decide? |
16510 | If, then, its origin is not that above alleged, what is its origin? |
16510 | In reply to the question--"Of what use is it?" |
16510 | Is it decided that a boy shall be clothed in some flimsy short dress, and be allowed to go playing about with limbs reddened by cold? |
16510 | Is it not a rational inquiry-- What are the indirect benefits which accrue from music, in addition to the direct pleasure it gives? |
16510 | Is it not an increasing conformity to the methods of Nature? |
16510 | Is it not obvious, on the contrary, that one method must be pursued throughout? |
16510 | Is it not, indeed, an absurd and almost a sacrilegious belief, that the more a man studies Nature the less he reveres it? |
16510 | Is it that a girl has none of the promptings to vociferous play by which boys are impelled? |
16510 | Is it that each may be trusted by self- instruction to fit himself, or herself, for the office of parent? |
16510 | Is it that past over- feeding, alike of adults and children, was less injurious than the under- feeding to which we have adverted as now so general? |
16510 | Is it that the constitution of a girl differs so entirely from that of a boy as not to need these active exercises? |
16510 | Is it that the deficient clothing which this delusive hardening- theory has encouraged, is to blame? |
16510 | Is it that the discharge of it is easy? |
16510 | Is it that the greater or less discouragement of juvenile sports, in deference to a false refinement is the cause? |
16510 | Is it that this responsibility is but a remote contingency? |
16510 | Is not science a growth? |
16510 | Is not the government of the solar system by a force varying inversely as the square of the distance, a simpler conception than any that preceded it? |
16510 | Is not the inference obvious? |
16510 | Is there not a class which clings to the old in all things; and another class so in love with progress as often to mistake novelty for improvement? |
16510 | Is there not in the harsh tones in which a father bids his children be quiet, evidence of a deficient fellow- feeling with them? |
16510 | It is true that I may save the child from a burn; but what then? |
16510 | LONDON,_ May 1861_ SPENCER''S ESSAYS PART I-- ON EDUCATION WHAT KNOWLEDGE IS OF MOST WORTH? |
16510 | Listen to the ordinary speeches--"How_ dare_ you disobey me?" |
16510 | May we not rationally seek for some all- pervading principle which determines this all- pervading process of things? |
16510 | May we not suspect, however, that this exception is apparent only? |
16510 | Meanwhile, may we not advantageously take stock of our progress? |
16510 | Must not the child reason from the evidence he has got? |
16510 | Must we not infer that the system so beneficent in its effects during infancy and maturity, will be equally beneficent throughout youth? |
16510 | Must we not rather conclude that some necessary relationship obtains between them? |
16510 | ON THE PHYSIOLOGY OF LAUGHTER[1] Why do we smile when a child puts on a man''s hat? |
16510 | Once more, the question-- How is the expressiveness of music to be otherwise accounted for? |
16510 | Or shall we not rather tolerate in our boys those feelings which make them free men, and modify our methods accordingly? |
16510 | Otherwise, it might have been needful to dwell on the incongruities of the arrangements-- to ask how motion can be treated of before space? |
16510 | Shall they be suffered to take their fill of dainties and make themselves ill, as they certainly will do?" |
16510 | Shall we therefore repress, or neglect to aid, these efforts at self- culture? |
16510 | Shall we, therefore, wish that our boys had the manageableness of German ones, and with it the submissiveness and political serfdom of adult Germans? |
16510 | Shall, we, then, respond to the extra wants of the growing child by giving an adequate quantity of food as good as that of adults? |
16510 | Should not the prospective deprivations control a child''s conduct also? |
16510 | The essay on"What Knowledge is of Most Worth?" |
16510 | The question which we contend is of such transcendent moment, is, not whether such or such knowledge is of worth but what is its_ relative_ worth? |
16510 | We have introduced these facts before replying to the question--"What is to be done with the graver offences?" |
16510 | We should probably learn much if we in every case asked-- Where is all the nervous energy gone? |
16510 | Well, is it not clear that the like must be true concerning all things that undergo development? |
16510 | What are the ends for which a man requires food? |
16510 | What are the results? |
16510 | What boots it to have attained wealth, if the wealth is accompanied by ceaseless ailments? |
16510 | What can be more inevitable than the disastrous results we see hourly arising? |
16510 | What can be more manifest than the desire of children for intellectual sympathy? |
16510 | What chance is there of getting any genuine response from the lady who is thinking of your stupidity in taking her in to dinner on the wrong arm? |
16510 | What follows? |
16510 | What is it that we aim to do? |
16510 | What is it that we want? |
16510 | What is that the child first tries to represent? |
16510 | What is the consequence? |
16510 | What is the meaning of this? |
16510 | What is the usual plea put in for giving and attending these tedious assemblies? |
16510 | What is the value of this parental judgment, set up as an alternative regulator? |
16510 | What is the worth of distinction, if it has brought hypochondria with it? |
16510 | What man ever fell in love with a woman because she understood Italian? |
16510 | What now is the common characteristic of these several changes? |
16510 | What now is the mental process by which classification is effected? |
16510 | What reason have we to suppose that the sciences admit of a_ linear_ arrangement? |
16510 | What should we think of their sincerity? |
16510 | What then does it do? |
16510 | What value should we put upon their praises? |
16510 | What were the laws made use of by Newton in working out his grand discovery? |
16510 | What, now, is the secret of this perpetual miscarriage and disappointment? |
16510 | When to"Oliver asking for more,"the mamma or governess says"No,"on what data does she proceed? |
16510 | Whence then has arisen the supposition? |
16510 | Where can be seen an intenser delight than that of children picking up new flowers and watching new insects; or hoarding pebbles and shells? |
16510 | Where is our warrant for assuming that there is some_ succession_ in which they can be placed? |
16510 | Where is the Edwin who was brought to Angelina''s feet by her German? |
16510 | While, conversely, has not the anger of an admired and cherished friend been regarded by him as a serious misfortune, long and keenly regretted? |
16510 | Who has not repeatedly seen a child slapped by nurse or parent for a fretfulness probably resulting from bodily derangement? |
16510 | Who then shall say that the reform of our system of observances is unimportant? |
16510 | Who, on calling to mind the occasions of his highest social enjoyments, does not find them to have been wholly informal, perhaps impromptu? |
16510 | Why a_ series_? |
16510 | Why should I pay five shillings a time for the privilege of being bored?" |
16510 | Why should he not spit on the drawing- room carpet, and stretch his heels up to the mantle- shelf? |
16510 | Why this astounding difference? |
16510 | Why, then, does she suppose that her boy will do otherwise? |
16510 | Why? |
16510 | Why? |
16510 | Will he not feel that the evil is one of his own producing? |
16510 | Will he not while paying this penalty be continuously conscious of the connection between it and its cause? |
16510 | Will it be contended that these tastes are any measures of value in the things that gratify them? |
16510 | With a small and fastidious appetite, an imperfect digestion, and an enfeebled circulation, how can the developing body flourish? |
16510 | Would not the daily mishaps be sources of far more anger than now? |
16510 | Would there not be chronic ill- temper on both sides? |
16510 | Your clothing-- plain, figured, or printed-- is it not wholly woven, nay, perhaps even sewed, by machinery? |
16510 | [ 1]"But does not this prove too much?" |
16510 | and does not this evidence seem to warrant his conclusion? |
16510 | and that too, even in so simple a thing as learning the properties of objects? |
16510 | and to a great extent make life a failure and a burden instead of a benefaction and a pleasure? |
16510 | and will there not consequently arise in them even a stronger check to whatever is rough or boisterous? |
16510 | how came you here?" |
16510 | how polarity can be dealt with without involving points and lines? |
16510 | how there can be rotation without matter to rotate? |
16510 | may be supplemented by the question-- How is the genesis of music to be otherwise accounted for? |
16510 | or shall we encourage and guide them as normal exercises of the perceptions and the powers of manipulation? |
16510 | or what induces us to laugh on reading that the corpulent Gibbon was unable to rise from his knees after making a tender declaration? |
16510 | or when a lie has been told? |
16510 | or when some younger brother or sister has been ill- used?" |
26408 | And some they said-- What are you at? 26408 Did they calculate in florins In the name of common sense,?" |
26408 | Nihilne te nocturnum praesidium Palati,... nihil horum ora voltusque moverunt? |
26408 | Now, why has not the question of_ crossing the square_ been as celebrated as that of_ squaring the circle_? 26408 Quamdiu etiam furor iste tuus nos eludet?" |
26408 | Treason does never prosper: what''s the reason? 26408 What do you think of that stop?" |
26408 | What would be the consequence if this test- signing absurdity were to grow? 26408 What would be the present We should hardly believe all expression for four- pence? |
26408 | [ 285] How then comes the history of astronomy among the paradoxes? 26408 ( 1850?) 26408 ( Does the night watch of the Palatium,... do the faces and expressions of all these men fail to move you?) 26408 ( How long will this your madness baffle us?) 26408 ( How long, O Catiline, will you abuse our patience?) 26408 --Well, and has he not justification? |
26408 | --"Who''s Kitty?" |
26408 | .004166, and so on_ ad Mr. Lowe''s humor, nevertheless infinitum_( a laugh); for a have his impressions on this half- penny? |
26408 | .0125; for a several persons who have not penny? |
26408 | 17.... And now a word: is ridicule the right thing in so solemn a matter as the discussion of Holy Writ? |
26408 | 8d.? |
26408 | ARE ATOMS WORLDS? |
26408 | An attempt to assign the square roots of negative powers; or what is[ sqrt]-1? |
26408 | And how is this? |
26408 | And some-- What are you arter?" |
26408 | And then how comes it? |
26408 | And what is the reason that you will not candidly acknowledge to him as you have to others that he has squared the circle shall I tell you? |
26408 | And where will he be himself? |
26408 | And who built it? |
26408 | And why not? |
26408 | And why should the faults of so good a writer be recorded in such a list as the present? |
26408 | And why? |
26408 | And will they not then get into_ professional rule_, pique, pride, and prejudice, as the others did? |
26408 | Are they caused by spirits? |
26408 | As asked of Wilkins''s universal language, Where is the second man to come from? |
26408 | But I was made slightly uncomfortable: how could the war go on after this armistice? |
26408 | But how? |
26408 | But what are we to do with our old poets? |
26408 | But what does this mean? |
26408 | China? |
26408 | Could I ever make it understood that the truce only extended to the double Vahu and things thereunto relating? |
26408 | Covetousness overcomes all men, and all men overcome covetousness? |
26408 | Did I discuss Holy Writ? |
26408 | Did I not know that for every inch I wrote back he would return an ell? |
26408 | Did I speak in Italics? |
26408 | Did he not know he could n''t see? |
26408 | Do I ever speak in Italics?" |
26408 | Do the Members of the House think they have all the forms to themselves? |
26408 | Does he deny this? |
26408 | Does he think that he would get more notice if you were to print him in your journal? |
26408 | Does not this satisfy you that you can not have proved a property of that special figure-- a circle? |
26408 | Does this hint that his mode of proof, namely, assuming the thing to be proved, was a design to entrap the unwary? |
26408 | Does value make interest? |
26408 | E. What do you mean? |
26408 | E. What for? |
26408 | For the present I cut and run: a Catiline, pursued by a chorus of Ciceros, with_ Quousque tandem? |
26408 | For what chance is there of opening the eyes of candid Protestants to the other marks of the Church, if they are capable of keeping them shut to this? |
26408 | H. Do you mean that any doctrine or ordinance which was solemnly practised by the[ Greek: ekklêsia] is binding upon you and me? |
26408 | H. Have you a couple of hours to spare? |
26408 | Has he been put under{ 38} restriction? |
26408 | Have you a right_ always_ to say what you believe_ can not always_ be true, because you think it was once_ always_ true? |
26408 | He went one day to meet Wordsworth at dinner; when he came home I said,''Well, how did the young poet get on with the old one?'' |
26408 | How came he such a goose to be? |
26408 | How comes the word to take this form?) |
26408 | How could this be, if there were nothing colored to reflect? |
26408 | How does he know this_ impossibility_? |
26408 | How is it possible that the figure of greatest area should have any one length in its circuit unlike in form to any other part of the same length? |
26408 | How is that? |
26408 | How then comes Cocker to be the impersonation of Arithmetic? |
26408 | I have been asked by more than one-- do your orthodox never fall into mistake, nor rise into absurdity? |
26408 | I have no patience with these men: what can the Moon''s node of the Queen''s reign possibly have to do with the ratio in question? |
26408 | I must quote this myself: if I do not, some one else will, and then where am I? |
26408 | I remember that, when I first read about Sam Johnson''s little bit of exclusiveness, I said to myself:"Teacher? |
26408 | I say with the doll''s dressmaker-- such a job makes me feel like a puppet''s tailor myself--"He ought to have a little pepper? |
26408 | I think the young man''s tricks and manners make a claim upon his friends for a little pepper?" |
26408 | I winnow him; and if nothing but chaff results, whose fault is that? |
26408 | I_ have_ made myself a public scavenger; and why not? |
26408 | If Peter Piper picked a peck of pepper, Where is the peck of pepper Peter Piper picked? |
26408 | If Religion and Philosophy be the two poles of a battery, whose is the battery Religion and Philosophy have been made the poles of? |
26408 | If all the mind_ we_ know be from nerve- tissue, how does it appear that mind in other planets may not be another thing? |
26408 | If these parties be what I contend they are, then ridicule is made for them: if not, for what or for whom? |
26408 | If x- y= xy, firstly, what is the arithmetical value of xy? |
26408 | If you want to laugh at a person, and he will not give occasion, whose fault is it that you are obliged to make it? |
26408 | In one thing he excites our curiosity: what is meant by demonstrating''geometrically_ and_ mathematically?''" |
26408 | In the course of his argument, he asked,"What does Kitty say?" |
26408 | Is he to burn, all scalding hot, Me and my wife, and am I not To job him out a tooth?" |
26408 | Is it anything but a corruption of the obsolete word_ tetchy_ of the same meaning? |
26408 | Is it possible that Mr. Smith, because he signs himself Nauticus, means to deny his own very regular, legible, and peculiar hand? |
26408 | Is it_ impossible_ that a finite quantity, rarefied_ ad infinitum_, may be an Omnipotent? |
26408 | Is the change in the relation of the wires any presumption of a removal of the managers? |
26408 | Is the mud never to be collected into a heap? |
26408 | It is answer enough to ask-- Who knows that it is not? |
26408 | It is clear enough that he would rather be handled in this way than not handled at all, or why does he go on writing? |
26408 | Let the British Association fuss; What are theirs to the feats to be wrought by us? |
26408 | Let us translate--"It was a night of lovely Nictoary, High rose in cloudless blue the( what, in the name of all that is absurd?)." |
26408 | Milner''s sophism is glaring: but why should Dr. Milner be wiser than St. Augustine, one of his teachers? |
26408 | Must Isaac''s book be the nest of a mare? |
26408 | Nay, when we come to_ possibilities_, does not his own system give a queer one? |
26408 | Not a doubt about it: but how does he himself come off? |
26408 | Now what''ll you stand if I puts you up to it? |
26408 | Now why should he not form his opinion upon an abstract mathematical question? |
26408 | Now, able to understand it; for, how am I to pay you? |
26408 | Now, what is the fact? |
26408 | Ought the moon to be taught by the laws of space To turn half round without right- about- face? |
26408 | Quamdiu nos? |
26408 | Quære, what is this word? |
26408 | Shall we insist on the French pronouncing_ Newton_ without that final_ tong_ which they never fail to give him? |
26408 | Supposing the fact to have been true in old time, which is a very spicy supposition, how does that excuse the present practice? |
26408 | Teacher? |
26408 | That a banker should square the circle is very credible: but how could a City man come by the notion that a thousand pounds could be got for it? |
26408 | That change What does divided by the might appear very easy to decimal of a pound mean? |
26408 | That the stoppage is_ not_ a fact, because nature abhors a vacuum? |
26408 | The echoes of the moon- controversy reached Benares in 1857, in which year was there published a pamphlet"Does the Moon Rotate?" |
26408 | The mystery of being; or are ultimate atoms inhabited worlds? |
26408 | The question is one both of evidence and speculation;--Are the facts{ 56} true? |
26408 | The question: Are there any commensurable relations between a circle and other Geometrical figures? |
26408 | The resultant was David the king c e x[ c= r?] |
26408 | These two things balance; and we are just where we were: but you should answer our arguments, for whom, I ask? |
26408 | These were followed by Briso,[114] Antipho,[ two circle- squarers; where is Euclid?] |
26408 | They asked for explanation: what does the satirist make the schoolmen say? |
26408 | Trust him for having the last word: and what matters it whether he crow the unanswerable sooner or later? |
26408 | Was his confounding two mean proportionals with one mean proportional found twice over a trick of the same intent? |
26408 | We know pretty well who handled the instrument: has he resigned or been[77] turned out? |
26408 | What answered; but how is this to would be the present be done seriously? |
26408 | What can I say now? |
26408 | What chance had Parliamentary Reform when the House of Commons thanked the Manchester sabre- men? |
26408 | What greater blunder can be made by a writer on ancient astronomy than giving Eudoxus the Copernican system? |
26408 | What if the real Junius should be some person not yet named? |
26408 | What is one to do about these names? |
26408 | What need to say anything to readers of Newton against a book from which I quoted that revolution by gravitation is_ demonstrably_ impossible? |
26408 | What obligation have I to admit that they belong to our world? |
26408 | What other could tackle my squad of paradoxers? |
26408 | What other would undertake the job?] |
26408 | What shall I do To make James Smith? |
26408 | What stares us in the face at the beginning of the paragraph to which the author refers? |
26408 | What would biography have been if Boswell had not shown how to write a life? |
26408 | What would have to be all calculations will be done? |
26408 | What''s that? |
26408 | Where else can the battle be fought but where the armies are arrayed? |
26408 | Where is this to stop? |
26408 | Where would he have been if it had not been for Boswell and Thrale, and their imitators? |
26408 | Where''s permission to perplex your ready- reckoner? |
26408 | Which is most satirical, Mr. Weddle or myself? |
26408 | Which of the two is he speaking of?] |
26408 | Who can say how much of it is to be laid at the door of the University of Cambridge, for not taking care of the elements of arithmetical thought? |
26408 | Who can touch me at sweeping round a paradoxer? |
26408 | Who ever blamed the pig for intruding himself into the cabin when the door was left open? |
26408 | Who is ignorant that a perpetual annuity at five per cent is worth only twenty years''purchase? |
26408 | Who would study his columns? |
26408 | Whom did you speak of? |
26408 | Why did we have anything to do with such a testy person? |
26408 | Why does he not try a little grain of sense? |
26408 | Why has Copernicus never been denominated Fundamentus or Fundator? |
26408 | Why was it built? |
26408 | Will the round come square? |
26408 | Would it not be well, also, that Professor De Morgan should favour us with a little reasoning? |
26408 | Would not they-- if they could-- submit Some overwhelming proofs of it? |
26408 | Would others? |
26408 | Would reason convince this kind of reasoner? |
26408 | You might have found"a hole in Smith''s circle"( have you seen a pamphlet bearing this title? |
26408 | You must then ask your mystic whether things deferred for 1800 years were shortly to come to pass, etc.? |
26408 | [ 101]"What are you laughing at?" |
26408 | [ 182]"A tog is a tog,"said Jansen.--"Yes,"replied another,"we all know a dog is a dog; but the question is-- Is_ this_ dog{ 88} a dog?" |
26408 | [ 361]"Et cela n''est il pas beau d''être assuré de son fait quand on se bat contre quelqu''un? |
26408 | [ 361]"Is it not fine to be sure of one''s action when entering in a combat with another? |
26408 | [ 392]"What are you doing? |
26408 | [ 669] The first sentences of the first oration of Cicero against Catiline:"Quo usque tandem abutere, Catilina, patientia nostra?" |
26408 | [ Is food for ridicule the right thing? |
26408 | _ By Greek Power._ G= 6 L= 30 A= 1 D= 4 S= 200 T= 300 O= 70 N= 50 E= 5---- 666 And what then[ swastika]? |
26408 | _ Master._ Is it all one to say, God made the earth, and the earth made God? |
26408 | _ Quid agitur? |
26408 | _ Un sot trouve toujours un plus sot qui l''admire_:[247] who can he be in this case? |
26408 | and if not, why? |
26408 | at the banker''s, though you knew the book only showed 30,000l.? |
26408 | but did not the schoolman do the same? |
26408 | but how? |
26408 | but if you''re upset on the railroad, where are you?" |
26408 | chapters tallying, and verses so nearly: is the versification rightly managed? |
26408 | do you mean that_ ten to the florin is a cent a piece_ must be called decimal reckoning?" |
26408 | expression for a farthing? |
26408 | go into a pound?'' |
26408 | have the Spirit breathed into them and live.... Have I any other feeling towards you except that of peace and goodwill? |
26408 | how can it be objected to a system that people do not use it before it is introduced? |
26408 | is divided in four equal parts, what is each part? |
26408 | is it D apostrophe? |
26408 | just a few grains? |
26408 | less than half- a- crown, has Suppose he owed another man a such a high faith in the penny, how was he to pay him? |
26408 | never pass from hand into general circulation to hand? |
26408 | quoi? |
26408 | secondly, what is the angle of which xy represents the circular measure?" |
26408 | sterner stuff of his fellow Was he to pay him in mils? |
26408 | surely I remember One who is often called_ teacher_, but never_ minister_ or_ clergyman_: have not the dissenters got the best of it?" |
26408 | this to be uttered in earnest, Why, 0.166( a laugh); for if we had not known{ 177} that threepence? |
26408 | what can the name have to do with the sound? |
26408 | what do you find in Terence? |
26408 | what''s the matter? |
26408 | when I say,''Nicole, bring me my slippers,''is that prose?" |
26408 | will go into 1l.?'' |
26408 | would make it useless? |
26408 | { 134} quarantine?) |
26408 | { 354} Shall the earth stand still? |
16858 | About a half mile? |
16858 | Ai n''t you got no mama and papa? |
16858 | And mama was born in Scotland? |
16858 | And you had a king at the head of your armies? |
16858 | Boss, ai n''t you got three cents? |
16858 | Come out, you imp, what are you doing under there? |
16858 | David, what''s that in thy hand? |
16858 | Has he any money, and is he a member of the church? |
16858 | Have you a Christian man with the train? |
16858 | Have you no mother? |
16858 | How deep do you own into the earth? |
16858 | How do you make that out? |
16858 | How far do you own eastward? |
16858 | How far do you own toward the west? |
16858 | How old are you, sir? |
16858 | Know what? 16858 My little lad, what''s that you have?" |
16858 | My purse is light, but what of that? 16858 No, boss, what''s de matter?" |
16858 | Shamgar, what''s that in thy hand? |
16858 | Sir, are you a Christian? |
16858 | That is well so far, but may we ask what sacrifice would this home be willing to make for the republic if its flag were in peril? |
16858 | That''s a good job,said the Judge;"why did n''t I think of that?" |
16858 | What are you doing with that sign? |
16858 | What did you do, Pat? |
16858 | What do you mean by getting so close to me? 16858 What''s the nationality of that gintleman, anyway?" |
16858 | What''s the trouble? |
16858 | Where are you going, all by your little self, anyway? |
16858 | Who are you? |
16858 | Who are your neighbors? |
16858 | Why, my child, he has no trade, no money, and very little education; what are you going to do for a living? |
16858 | Wo n''t you ask God to hold that train? 16858 Yes, dear; why do you ask?" |
16858 | You never used liquor? |
16858 | A Chicago editor quoted the statement and asked:"Is it possible education breeds in woman a distaste for matrimony and home life?" |
16858 | A friend called to see him and said:"Jim, what have you to say after this misfortune?" |
16858 | A friend said to me, during the great depression:"Do n''t you think it will be over soon?" |
16858 | A little boy in Chicago said:"Papa, you were born in England?" |
16858 | A man riding along a highway said to a farmer by the wayside:"How far to Baltimore?" |
16858 | A physician came and as he bent over to examine the heart, the tramp said:"Was the little one saved?" |
16858 | A visiting lady after service said:"Doctor, have you any more of the breed of that dog? |
16858 | Again a half- drunk Union soldier rode up to our gate and said:"Who lives here?" |
16858 | Am I putting too much stress upon the humanity side of national life? |
16858 | An old woman suffering from rheumatism was asked by a friend:"Did you ever try electricity?" |
16858 | And what was the fare to slumberland? |
16858 | Another question was:"Who was Abraham Lincoln?" |
16858 | Are they bankers or leading business men? |
16858 | As they neared the poor fellow, one said to the other:"Did you ever see such an appeal for a drink? |
16858 | Before I close would you like to have me point you to greatness? |
16858 | Boys, are you poor? |
16858 | Boys, can you stand the test? |
16858 | Boys, have any of you done this within the past month, or six months? |
16858 | Bring me the Bible and what do I find? |
16858 | But how many are there who regret they ever put the bottle to their lips? |
16858 | But suppose when the occasion comes, instead of inspiration one has indigestion, then what? |
16858 | But what do you think? |
16858 | But, who is the government? |
16858 | Ca n''t we be just as earnest and eloquent in dealing out the truth?" |
16858 | Call me a tramp, do you? |
16858 | Can the man obey the doctor? |
16858 | Can we save the cities of this republic? |
16858 | Can you afford to wrap up your hopes of happiness in him and to him swear away your young life and love? |
16858 | Cromwell said:"What good are they doing as silver apostles? |
16858 | Did I say too much when I said the preacher would eat the turkey? |
16858 | Did Solomon know what he was talking about when he gave it that detestable name? |
16858 | Did he go to a better? |
16858 | Did he settle it? |
16858 | Did he settle it? |
16858 | Did that settle it? |
16858 | Did you sign it for him to sell to other fathers''sons and not yours?'' |
16858 | Do n''t you see you have put mud on my dress from your shoes? |
16858 | Do n''t you think if alcoholic liquor had been intended as a beverage for mankind, the great Creator would have made a few springs of it somewhere? |
16858 | Do our brothers stumble over strong drink? |
16858 | Do you ask has the platform any blemishes? |
16858 | Do you ask what we are to do with the Philippine Islands? |
16858 | Do you know half the failures of life come from misfits of occupation? |
16858 | Do you know how to do things? |
16858 | Do you know what that means, a match struck in the dark? |
16858 | Do you realize what it means when an American home is destroyed by drink? |
16858 | Do you say that no such ignominious possibility hangs over any boy in this audience? |
16858 | Do you say you can drink or let it alone? |
16858 | Do you tell me money is the great question of this country, tariff the great question? |
16858 | Does he let them stand? |
16858 | Does it deceive and mock? |
16858 | Does some young man in this audience say,"I can quit if I please?" |
16858 | Does strong drink make our brother to offend? |
16858 | Finally a very beautiful, blue- eyed, charming young lady said:"Since you do not dance, may I engage you for a promenade around the ball room?" |
16858 | Go to the churches; are they crowded with men? |
16858 | Go to the gambling halls; are they crowded with women? |
16858 | Go to the jails and penitentiaries; are they full of women? |
16858 | Go to the saloons; are they frequented by women? |
16858 | Going to the house I said to my wife:"Where is Charlie?" |
16858 | Going to the parlor I said:"What are you doing here?" |
16858 | Going to the spot from whence came the voice and bending over the prostrate form of a dying soldier, the chaplain asked:"What can I do for you?" |
16858 | Good for strength? |
16858 | Have men all the intelligence? |
16858 | Have men all the virtue? |
16858 | Have mightier than we fallen through strong drink? |
16858 | Have some of you had sorrows you could not harmonize with the logic of life? |
16858 | Have you a trade? |
16858 | Have you ever considered how it is baited to resist the forces of evil? |
16858 | He answered:''No, father, but you signed that man''s petition to set up the saloon; whom did you expect him to sell to? |
16858 | He asks,"Is not this my wife?" |
16858 | He further said:"Will I ever drink again? |
16858 | He immediately addressed the man who had the monkey:"Sir, is that gintleman in the cage paying his fare? |
16858 | How does regulation regulate? |
16858 | How would you have enjoyed being with the majority at the time of the flood? |
16858 | I admit you can drink but are you sure you can let it alone? |
16858 | I am frequently asked:"What do you recall as the best introduction you ever had?" |
16858 | I am often asked:"Where do you find the most appreciative audiences?" |
16858 | I answer by asking: What becomes of the men the saloons put out of business? |
16858 | I called to mother; she came running, and taking the chicken from him said:"Do n''t you know to eat solid food will kill you?" |
16858 | I said,"Judge, the question is, which is the more attractive, the works of nature or the works of art? |
16858 | I said:"This is a trying time with me, wo n''t you take a stroll along the beach and let me be alone today?" |
16858 | I said:"Yes, but what are you going to do with it?" |
16858 | I staggered to the colt, held the halter rein and when the tooth was removed my uncle, looking at me, said:"What''s the matter with you? |
16858 | I''m sorry''bout the mud, you''ll''scuse me, wo n''t you, good lady?" |
16858 | If I had life to live over would I do any better than I have done? |
16858 | If it''s good for strength, why not give it to the ox, the mule and the horse?" |
16858 | If we enter that young man''s home what do we find? |
16858 | If you are going to California tomorrow, which way would you start, east or west? |
16858 | If you can_ now_, are you sure you can two years hence? |
16858 | If you merchants could take in eighty thousand dollars, could n''t you pay out six thousand and not get hurt? |
16858 | Is alcoholic liquor as a beverage hurtful and wrong? |
16858 | Is dat de chile I loved and laid wake wif so many nights and cooked so many sweet things for? |
16858 | Is it a counterfeit business? |
16858 | Is it any wonder the saloons hide behind green blinds or stained glass windows? |
16858 | Is our country in danger?" |
16858 | Is that true? |
16858 | Is the drinker weak? |
16858 | Is wine a mocker? |
16858 | Is you got a knife? |
16858 | Is you got a little girl like me?" |
16858 | Judge, will you please let me kiss my little sister before you take her from me?" |
16858 | Just then my uncle called:"George, where are you?" |
16858 | Mr. Spurgeon called lecturing an art, and why not? |
16858 | My answer is: how much more would they drink if we had not done what has been done? |
16858 | My brother, what''s that in thy hand? |
16858 | My reply was:"Are minorities always wrong or hopeless? |
16858 | Nearing the old man he said:"Uncle, would you loan me three cents to cross the ferry?" |
16858 | Now and then I am asked:"What will become of the men who are engaged in the liquor business if the country goes dry? |
16858 | Now if public sentiment has made such a mistake in the allotment of virtues, why may it not have made a greater mistake in the allotment of spheres? |
16858 | On leaving the platform an old miner said:"How do you stand on the money question? |
16858 | On one occasion the question for debate was:"Which is the more attractive, the works of nature or the works of art?" |
16858 | On our way to the hotel I said:"Were you not frightened when we started down that mountain?" |
16858 | One night when he was sleeping drunk in one room, his old mother in another said:"Oh God, is my cup of sorrow not yet full?" |
16858 | One who had heard me many times said:"Why do you do better at Ocean Grove than anywhere else I hear you?" |
16858 | Seated one day in front of a hotel in London, a bootblack halted before him and said:"Mister, will you have a shine?" |
16858 | Seeing the Yankee farmer at the front gate she rode up, dismounted and said:"Sir, will you please tell me, is this the way to Wareham?" |
16858 | Several years ago my brother said to me:"Are you going West soon, as far as Kansas City?" |
16858 | She had a baby in her arms, and I said:''Madam, what are you crying about?'' |
16858 | She said:"Is n''t this a grand sight?" |
16858 | Some years ago when out on a little coast ride for pleasure,( if that''s what you call it) I said to the captain:"How long till we reach the shore?" |
16858 | Students of history are asking,"Will the fate of Rome be repeated in the history of this republic?" |
16858 | The Judge said:"Pat, how many times have you been before this court?" |
16858 | The boy went but soon returned with his rosy cheeks cleansed, saying:"Sir, how do you like the job?" |
16858 | The buyer looked the horse over and said:"Young man, what is your price?" |
16858 | The drunkard with help arose and said:"Where am I? |
16858 | The friend asked:"What does she do with so much money?" |
16858 | The great jurist hailed the boy, saying,"Boy, have you a string?" |
16858 | The judge rapped for order in the court and repeated the question,"Are you guilty or innocent of the charge?" |
16858 | The lad had never seen a monkey and as they played their pranks about the cage he said:"Father, did God make monkeys?" |
16858 | The little six- year old boy of the home said:"Mother, did you say little brother came from heaven?" |
16858 | The man sinking into a chair said:''O God, am I never to see my home again?''" |
16858 | The old woman broke the silence, saying:"Is dat my chile? |
16858 | The superintendent said:"Will you help me lift this on to the track?" |
16858 | The teacher of his class said to him:"James, who was the strongest man of whom we have any account?" |
16858 | The three entered the saloon, the glasses were filled and the tramp took his and draining it, said:"Young men, I''m very thirsty, may I have another?" |
16858 | They say to me:"What steps did you take?" |
16858 | To a woman who could speak English I said:"How do you like this country?" |
16858 | To say,"Of all my father''s family I love myself the best, If Providence takes care of me, who cares what takes the rest?" |
16858 | Turning to the guide he said:"Who are these?" |
16858 | Was n''t I in good condition for the trip? |
16858 | Was strong drink recommended as a stimulant? |
16858 | Was there ever a word of more weight in its application? |
16858 | What about intelligence? |
16858 | What about this inhuman denial of the right to order meat, drink, clothing and home life? |
16858 | What are the consequences? |
16858 | What are these little traits in human character? |
16858 | What are you going to do about it?" |
16858 | What becomes of their families? |
16858 | What does this fellowship imply? |
16858 | What makes the drunkard? |
16858 | What makes the saloon? |
16858 | What management would allow a horse to be thus handicapped? |
16858 | What may the young before me expect in the next fifty years? |
16858 | What supplies the drink? |
16858 | What was done to revive him and renew his strength? |
16858 | What was it? |
16858 | What will become of their families?" |
16858 | What would have become of the ship? |
16858 | What''s the matter?" |
16858 | When I answered, he asked:"Can your mother get supper for fourteen soldiers in thirty minutes?" |
16858 | When I asked;"What''s your trouble?" |
16858 | When brought before the court an austere judge said:"Who claims this child?" |
16858 | When he said:"Going down the mountain to where we came from,"I said,"What will we hold to?" |
16858 | When the father replied:"Yes,"the boy said:"Well, do n''t you guess God laughed when he made the first monkey?" |
16858 | When they admitted they had, I said to my son:''Did I ever set such an example for you to follow?'' |
16858 | When they tired of the confinement, the older boy said:"Mother, can we go out for a walk?" |
16858 | Where is the man who would be so inconsiderate as to thus hinder a horse? |
16858 | Which is the safer, moderation or total- abstinence? |
16858 | While taking my supper my hostess said:"Would you know smallpox if you were to see the symptoms?" |
16858 | Who are the license voters? |
16858 | Who is my neighbor? |
16858 | Who makes the law? |
16858 | Who makes the legislator? |
16858 | Who would have thought an Emperor of Germany would ever"go back"on beer? |
16858 | Whom did Daniel Webster leave his seat in the Senate that he might hear his eloquence? |
16858 | Why do you ask that?" |
16858 | Why is this? |
16858 | Why was it better? |
16858 | Why will he eat when he knows it means death? |
16858 | Will he eat it? |
16858 | Wo n''t you take her now?" |
16858 | Young man, start wrong and end right? |
16858 | Young man, which way are you going? |
16858 | Young man, will you tamper and trifle with strong drink? |
16858 | Young men, did Luke Howard go to a better hotel? |
16858 | Young men, why was it a tree that had withstood the storms of ages, should, before such a little gust of wind bow its head and die? |
16858 | Young people, do you know you live in a testing world, a world in which all buds and blossoms are tested? |
16858 | who runs this house?" |
5637 | And what if he had willed thee to burne our Temples? |
5637 | But what if he had done it? |
5637 | For, what love is this of friendship? 5637 Hast thou hope of being released for gold or for silver, or for any gifts of wealth, or through battle and fighting?" |
5637 | Owl of Cwm Cawlwyd, here is an embassy from Arthur; knowest thou aught of Mabon the son of Modron, who was taken after three nights from his mother? |
5637 | The speach that intendeth truth must be plaine and unpollisht: Who speaketh elaborately, but he that meanes to speake unfavourably? |
5637 | What would he think of me and the manner in which I am going to speak of him to the public? |
5637 | What, all things? |
5637 | --cur amplius addere quaeris Rursum quod pereat male, et ingratum occidat omne? |
5637 | 100 Or is it a reason against the hypothesis that so much time would have been lost to me? |
5637 | 16 But of what kind of moral education was a people so raw, so incapable of abstract thoughts, and so entirely in their childhood capable? |
5637 | 18 But, it will be asked, to what purpose was this education of so rude a people, a people with whom God had to begin so entirely from the beginning? |
5637 | 38 The child, sent abroad, saw other children who knew more, who lived more becomingly, and asked itself, in confusion,"Why do I not know that too? |
5637 | 81 Or, is the human species never to arrive at this highest step of illumination and purity?--Never? |
5637 | 84 This is the aim of human education, and should not the Divine education extend as far? |
5637 | 95 Is this hypothesis so laughable merely because it is the oldest? |
5637 | 97 And once more, why not another time all those steps, to perform which the views of Eternal Rewards so powerfully assist us? |
5637 | 99 Is this a reason against it? |
5637 | Again, if Armorica saw the birth of the Arthurian cycle, how is it that we fail to find there any traces of that brilliant nativity? |
5637 | Alas to men in yeares how small A part of life is left in all? |
5637 | Alloquar? |
5637 | And Aemylius Lepidus with hitting his foot against a doore- seele? |
5637 | And Aufidius with stumbling against the Consull- chamber doore as he was going in thereat? |
5637 | And an Emperour die by the scratch of a combe, whilest he was combing his head? |
5637 | And did he not himself dash into fragments the ignoble cup, so soon as he beheld something worthy the devotion of his life? |
5637 | And if company may solace you, doth not the whole world walke the same path? |
5637 | And in reaching the modern world, how would it be? |
5637 | And in what relation should we be placed with past and future ages if the perfecting of human nature made sach a sacrifice indispensable? |
5637 | And of a farre worse example Speusippus, the Platonian philosopher, and one of our Popes? |
5637 | And teacheth miserie, famine, and sicknesse to laugh? |
5637 | And that this kind of lesson be more easie and naturall than that of Gaza, who will make question? |
5637 | And that which even I must forget now, is that necessarily forgotten for ever? |
5637 | And those that are most injurious can not aske, wherefore I have taken, and why I have not paied? |
5637 | And to say but a small thing, what could have more procrastinated it than the promise of such a miraculous recompense in this life? |
5637 | And what said another? |
5637 | And who appear by his side? |
5637 | And will you know what, in my seeming, the cause is? |
5637 | And would not that physician deserve to be whipped who should wish the plague amongst us that he might put his art into practice?" |
5637 | Are we so free from the evil reflected in their verse as to have a right to condemn their memory? |
5637 | Because the human understanding, before the sophistries of the Schools had dissipated and debilitated it, lighted upon it at once? |
5637 | But can it be true that man has to neglect himself for any end whatever? |
5637 | But from what brutall stupiditie may so grosse a blindnesse come upon him? |
5637 | But has this innovator examined himself to see if these disorders of the moral world wound his reason, or if they do not rather wound his self- love? |
5637 | But have you seene any that hath received hurt thereby? |
5637 | But how can the cultivation of the fine arts remedy, at the same time, these opposite defects, and unite in itself two contradictory qualities? |
5637 | But how will the artist avoid the corruption of his time which encloses him on all hands? |
5637 | But if the pious did not reflect thereupon, who then should reflect? |
5637 | But perhaps the objection has for some time occurred to you, Is not the beautiful degraded by this, that it is made a mere play? |
5637 | But perhaps there is a vicious circle in our previous reasoning? |
5637 | But what shall he doe, if he be urged with sophisticall subtilties about a Sillogisme? |
5637 | But what? |
5637 | But whence have we the conception of God as the supreme good? |
5637 | But why should not every individual man have existed more than once upon this World? |
5637 | But why speak always of authors and writings? |
5637 | But, subject to the influence of a social constitution still barbarous, how can character become ennobled? |
5637 | But, you might object: Is this mediation absolutely indispensable? |
5637 | Can he have been, in one and the self- same life, a sensual Jew and a spiritual Christian? |
5637 | Can he in the self- same life have overtaken both? |
5637 | Can it bind nature in the savage, and set it free in the barbarian? |
5637 | Can nature snatch from us; for any end whatever, the perfection which is prescribed to us by the aim of reason? |
5637 | Can this effect of harmony be attained by the state? |
5637 | Could not truth and duty, one or the other, in themselves and by themselves, find access to the sensuous man? |
5637 | Cur non ut plenus vitae conviva recedis? |
5637 | Did not Horace, doing the honours to himself, say that in war he one day let his shield fall( relicta non bene parmula)? |
5637 | Did you thinke you should never come to the place, where you were still going? |
5637 | Do Christians even now do much better with their slaves? |
5637 | Do I bring away so much from once, that there is nothing to repay the trouble of coming back? |
5637 | Doe not all things move as you doe, or keepe your course? |
5637 | Doe we offer thee any wrong? |
5637 | Doe you thinke they can take any pleasure in it? |
5637 | Does he come back? |
5637 | Does he expect to come back? |
5637 | Does he will riches, how much anxiety, envy, and snares might he not thereby draw upon his shoulders? |
5637 | Does it that of His necessary Reality? |
5637 | Does such a state of beauty in appearance exist, and where? |
5637 | Equalitie is the chiefe ground- worke of equitie, who can complaine to be comprehended where all are contained? |
5637 | For example, is Shakespeare a classic? |
5637 | For what possession has he in it if that which he recognises as the Best does not become the best in his lifetime? |
5637 | For what was to impel it to seek for these better proofs? |
5637 | For why should it extend further? |
5637 | For why should we feare to lose a thing, which being lost, can not be moaned? |
5637 | For, who would give eare unto him, that for it''s end would establish our paine and disturbance? |
5637 | Has he not somewhere said that"the beautiful is the result of happy position? |
5637 | Hast thou not seene one of our late Kings slaine in the middest of his sports? |
5637 | Have I gone too far in this portraiture of our times? |
5637 | Have travelled over in one and the same life? |
5637 | How can two such opposite tendencies exist together in the same being? |
5637 | How can we remove this contradiction? |
5637 | How could they avoid reproducing it in their works? |
5637 | How is a Categorical Imperative Possible? |
5637 | How much more decent were it to see their school- houses and formes strewed with greene boughs and flowers, than with bloudy burchen- twigs? |
5637 | How then shall we re- establish the unity of human nature, a unity that appears completely destroyed by this primitive and radical opposition? |
5637 | I change then the suggestion of self- love into a universal law, and state the question thus: How would it be if my maxim were a universal law? |
5637 | I know it too well; but what lasting influence can be exerted on social life by those who have no real life of their own? |
5637 | I will therefore call this the principle of Autonomy of the will, in contrast with every other which I accordingly reckon as Heteronomy? |
5637 | If two at one instant should require helpe, to which would you run? |
5637 | In what, then, can their worth lie, if it is not to consist in the will and in reference to its expected effect? |
5637 | Inclination can only say:"That is good FOR YOUR INDIVIDUALITY and PRESENT NECESSITY?" |
5637 | Is it not shee that cleereth all stormes of the mind? |
5637 | Is it reason so long to fear a thing of so short time? |
5637 | Is it surprising that natural feeling should not recognise itself in such a copy, and if in the report of the analyst the truth appears as paradox? |
5637 | Is that which is successful in the way of Art with the individual, not to be successful in the way of Nature with the whole? |
5637 | Is there any thing grows not old together with yourselfe? |
5637 | LETTER V. Does the present age, do passing events, present this character? |
5637 | Let him borrow this pleasant counter- craft of Aristippus;"Why shall I unbind that, which being bound doth so much trouble me?" |
5637 | Let the question be, for example: May I when in distress make a promise with the intention not to keep it? |
5637 | Lost?--And how much then should I miss?--Is not a whole Eternity mine? |
5637 | MONTAIGNE WHAT IS A CLASSIC? |
5637 | Man paints himself in his actions, and what is the form depicted in the drama of the present time? |
5637 | Mere curiosity? |
5637 | Moreover, the correspondencie and relation that begetteth these true and mutually perfect amities, why shall it be found in these? |
5637 | Must not God at least have the most perfect conception of Himself, i. e., a conception in which is found everything which is in Him? |
5637 | Must philosophy therefore retire from this field, disappointed in its hopes? |
5637 | Must the contest of blind forces last eternally in the political world, and is social law never to triumph over a hating egotism? |
5637 | My wings, are they not withered stumps? |
5637 | Nay, what would Ariosto say of it himselfe? |
5637 | Nec charus aeque nec superstes, Integer? |
5637 | Now arises the question, how are all these imperatives possible? |
5637 | Nunquam ego te vita frater amabilior, Aspiciam posthac? |
5637 | Omnem crede diem tibi diluxisse supremum, Grata superveniet; quae non sperabitur, hora? |
5637 | On the other hand the question, how the imperative of morality is possible, is undoubtedly one, the only one? |
5637 | On whom, on what, expend the exuberant vitality within them? |
5637 | Or how would you discharge your selfe? |
5637 | Or, because I forget that I have been here already? |
5637 | Ought I not to have been taught and admonished of all this in my father''s house?" |
5637 | Ought he to be blamed because he lost sight of the dignity of human nature, so long as he was concerned in preserving his existence? |
5637 | Quis desiderio sit pudor aut modus, Tam chari capitis? |
5637 | Said Gwrhyr,"Who is it that laments in this house of stone?" |
5637 | Say, knowest thou aught of Mabon the son of Modron, who was taken from his mother when three nights old?" |
5637 | Shal I not change this goodly contexture of things for you? |
5637 | Shall we never be sufficiently firm in our own faith to dare to show fitting reverence for the grand typical figures of an anterior age? |
5637 | Should one commit a matter to your silence, which if the other knew would greatly profit him, what course would you take? |
5637 | Should they crave contrary offices of you, what order would you follow? |
5637 | Since that part of my soule riper fate reft me, Why stay I heere the other part he left me? |
5637 | The fairest Queene, wife to the greatest King of Christendome, was she not lately scene to die by the hands of an executioner? |
5637 | The transgressor? |
5637 | Thee brother, than life dearer, never see? |
5637 | Therefore, a short and conclusive answer can be given to this question-- How far will appearance be permitted in the moral world? |
5637 | Thus compressed between two forces, within and without, could humanity follow any other course than that which it has taken? |
5637 | To which of these does his dignity best respond? |
5637 | WHAT IS A CLASSIC? |
5637 | Was it a defect in them? |
5637 | What can they do with the liberty so painfully won? |
5637 | What does he sing? |
5637 | What else then can freedom of the will be but autonomy, that is the property of the will to be a law to itself? |
5637 | What fondnesse is it to carke and care so much, at that instant and passage from all exemption of paine and care? |
5637 | What is man before beauty liberates him from free pleasure, and the serenity of form tames down the savageness of life? |
5637 | What matter is it, will you say unto me, how and in what manner it is, so long as a man doe not trouble and vex himselfe therewith? |
5637 | What mattered to the world the fate of an unknown peninsula, and the strife waged on its behalf? |
5637 | What may a man expect at a Phisitians hand that discourseth of warre, or of a bare Scholler treating of Princes secret designes? |
5637 | What modesty or measure may I beare, In want and wish of him that was so deare? |
5637 | What part has Armorican Brittany played in the creation or propagation of the legends of the Round Table? |
5637 | What phaenomenon accompanies the initiation of the savage into humanity? |
5637 | What profit shall he not reap, touching this point, reading the lives of our Plutark? |
5637 | What then is it which justifies virtue or the morally good disposition, in making such lofty claims? |
5637 | What would be seen? |
5637 | Whence comes this disadvantageous relation of individuals coupled with great advantages of the race? |
5637 | Whence then is it that we remain still barbarians? |
5637 | Where will you find reason in the fourth book of the AEneid and the transports of Dido? |
5637 | Wherefore shall I study and take care about the mobility and variation of the world? |
5637 | Which is worth more, the imaginative instinct of man, or the narrow orthodoxy that pretends to remain rational, when speaking of things divine? |
5637 | Whilst in all other directions the dominion of forms is extended, must this the most precious of all gifts be abandoned to a formless chance? |
5637 | Who among the moderns could step forth, man against man, and strive with an Athenian for the prize of higher humanity? |
5637 | Who can prove by experience the non- existence of a cause when all that experience tells us is that we do not perceive it? |
5637 | Who shall dare to say where, here on earth, is the boundary between reason and dreaming? |
5637 | Who shall say what in our own times has fermented in the bosom of the most stubborn, the most powerless of nationalities-- Poland? |
5637 | Who would ever enquire of his scholler what he thinketh of Rhetorike, of Grammar, of this or of that sentence of Cicero? |
5637 | Why could the individual Greek be qualified as the type of his time? |
5637 | Why do I not live so too? |
5637 | Why doest thou complaine of me and of destinie? |
5637 | Why fearest thou thy last day? |
5637 | Why like a full- fed guest, Depart you not to rest? |
5637 | Why may not even I have already performed those steps of my perfecting which bring to man only temporal punishments and rewards? |
5637 | Why seeke you more to gaine, what must againe All perish ill, and passe with griefe or paine? |
5637 | Why should I not come back as often as I am capable of acquiring fresh knowledge, fresh expertness? |
5637 | Would he have long life, who guarantees to him that it would not be a long misery? |
5637 | Xiv] To aime why are we ever bold, At many things in so short hold? |
5637 | and another choaked with the kernell of a grape? |
5637 | and does it not contradict the empirical conception of play, which can coexist with the exclusion of all taste, to confine it merely to beauty? |
5637 | and how could he reflect upon a thing after which he did not yearn? |
5637 | and is it not reduced to the level of frivolous objects which have for ages passed under that name? |
5637 | and why can no modern dare to offer himself as such? |
5637 | and why should it not continually seeme unto us, that shee is still ready at hand to take us by the throat? |
5637 | audiero nunquam tua verba loquentem? |
5637 | but it is seldome: I have especially observed this one place:"Ego vero me minus diu senem esse mallem, quam esse senem, antequam essem? |
5637 | but may rather demand, why I doe not quit, and wherefore I doe not give? |
5637 | can be bequeathed unquenchably to the future? |
5637 | creature as thou art, who hath limited the end of thy daies? |
5637 | cur neque deformem adolescentem quisquam amat, neque formosum senem? |
5637 | did ever attaine unto an absolute enjoying of it? |
5637 | eloquence in him: He was a good citizen, of an honest, gentle nature, as are commonly fat and burly men: for so was he: But to speake truly of thim? |
5637 | gastlie, and frowning visage; who hath masked her with so counterfet, pale, and hideous a countenance? |
5637 | he who felt the punishments of his misdeeds, and if he cursed this life, must have so gladly renounced that other existence? |
5637 | how does ours seem to you? |
5637 | how often has uneasiness of the body restrained from excesses into which perfect health would have allowed one to fall? |
5637 | i, p. 22] How did Montaigne conduct himself in his duties as first magistrate of a great city? |
5637 | is it for thee to direct us, or for us to governe thee? |
5637 | of an hog? |
5637 | of quite a special character? |
5637 | or be any thing delighted? |
5637 | reason expressed with brilliance;--soul? |
5637 | reason put in practice;--talent? |
5637 | saw you ever anything so drooping, so changed, and so distracted? |
5637 | what would Montaigne say of such a word coined in his honour? |
5637 | why doth no man love either a deformed young man, or a beautifull old man?" |
5637 | would he at least have health? |
17437 | And what have you done with the ploughs which I gave you? |
17437 | But what have you done with the seed- corn which I gave you? |
17437 | Then why,the shade might ask,"do you not copy an example which you so much admire? |
17437 | ***** Well? |
17437 | --Ah, why is this divine voice now, as of old, Wisdom crying in the streets, and no man regarding her? |
17437 | And are we not-- or ought we not to be in time-- beside that, educated men? |
17437 | And courage? |
17437 | And does the fact of the demon and his doings, being as yet unseen and unknown, make them spiritual, or the harm that he may do, a spiritual harm? |
17437 | And for woman-- What might I not say on that point? |
17437 | And how better? |
17437 | And how did he shape the outside? |
17437 | And how? |
17437 | And if any excellent person of the old school should answer me--"Why make all this fuss about ventilation? |
17437 | And if any parent should be inclined to reply--"Why lay so much stress upon educating a girl in British literature? |
17437 | And if any shall reply-- And what use if I do try? |
17437 | And if any should say to me--"But what has this to do with science? |
17437 | And if it be so in the country: how must it be in towns? |
17437 | And if it were so, what matter? |
17437 | And if they asked me, What then education meant? |
17437 | And if they remind you: must they not have reminded those who shaped them? |
17437 | And if things are not going right, can it be anything but good for him to see that they are not going right? |
17437 | And if we can see that: do you fancy that the man who planned the spire did not see it as clearly as we do; and perhaps more clearly still? |
17437 | And if you say-- Who is sufficient for these things?--Who can answer these questions? |
17437 | And is not that fear of the spiritual world? |
17437 | And is this all which the facts mean? |
17437 | And next, why has it a similar effect on animal life and a lighted candle? |
17437 | And now you are here, how do you get your living? |
17437 | And now-- to end this lecture with more pleasing thoughts-- What becomes of this breath which passes from your lips? |
17437 | And ought a man, in such a piecemeal, foolish, greedy, sinful world as this is, and always has been, to be anything but discontented? |
17437 | And still more, where would be your Host? |
17437 | And that spot, that focus, was, and is still, in every Romish church, the body of God, present upon the altar in the form of bread? |
17437 | And was it sawn asunder merely by the age- long gnawing of the waves? |
17437 | And were these women mere dolls? |
17437 | And what happens? |
17437 | And what shall we do with the rest of the water? |
17437 | And when did each come hither? |
17437 | And why should they try or wish to lift it? |
17437 | And why? |
17437 | And why? |
17437 | And why? |
17437 | And yet, did they exhaust even the few forms of beauty which they saw around them? |
17437 | Are they even to be bought, from most country booksellers? |
17437 | Are we doing right? |
17437 | Are we more educated than were the ancient Greeks? |
17437 | Are you and your children thriving, like decent people who can take care of themselves, or growing pauperised and degraded, and dying out? |
17437 | Are you aware that the great majority of those victims are children? |
17437 | Are you aware, I ask again, of all this? |
17437 | Because the land was more friable originally? |
17437 | Because there was more rain then than now? |
17437 | Bio- geology, then, begins with asking every plant or animal you meet, large or small, not merely-- What is your name? |
17437 | But Himself?--Who can see Him? |
17437 | But again, does that fact really cut off any great space of time from his hundreds of thousands of years? |
17437 | But are they bought? |
17437 | But are we artistically, aesthetically right? |
17437 | But did all the powers of the universe combine to prevent it growing? |
17437 | But do your gymnasia-- your schools and universities, teach your youth nought about all this?" |
17437 | But does the matter end here? |
17437 | But fair Nausicaa must have been-- some will say-- surely a mere child of nature, and an uncultivated person? |
17437 | But has the savage no other faculties, save his five senses and five passions? |
17437 | But how does he conquer them? |
17437 | But if it saves money, why do not the water companies do it? |
17437 | But if the details are copied from vegetable forms, why not the whole? |
17437 | But if there was not water enough in the chalk, are not the Londoners rich enough to bring it from any distance? |
17437 | But if they can do so, how much more can we of the Church of England? |
17437 | But is not that still a hasty assumption? |
17437 | But is there not, besides that law, a law of mutual help? |
17437 | But the face which is beneath that chignon and that hat? |
17437 | But what about the rainfall? |
17437 | But what has that to do with mere fear of the unseen? |
17437 | But what if the fear be not rational, but irrational? |
17437 | But what if the wasp- tribe had no captives? |
17437 | But what if they began to fail? |
17437 | But what shall we do with the water? |
17437 | But what success had they? |
17437 | But where shall we get water enough for all these millions of people? |
17437 | But which child reverences his father most? |
17437 | But why do not people stop such a horrible loss of life? |
17437 | But why do you say we? |
17437 | But why not let some company manage it, as they manage railways, and gas, and other things? |
17437 | But why should we not make dams at once; and save the water? |
17437 | But why? |
17437 | But will not that be a waste? |
17437 | But will they live again, those chilled air- mothers? |
17437 | But will they not waste it then? |
17437 | But wise men, and little children, should look on them with more seeing eyes; and say,"May not these winds be living creatures? |
17437 | But, fear of the unknown? |
17437 | By what road did you come? |
17437 | Can it have been otherwise? |
17437 | Can truth and fact harm any human being? |
17437 | Can you and I do all this? |
17437 | Did not all the powers of the universe also combine to make it grow, if only it had valour and worth wherewith to grow? |
17437 | Did not the rains feed it, the very mortar in the wall give lime to its roots? |
17437 | Do I say that we ought not to save these people, if we can? |
17437 | Do they not see that by the same reasoning good ventilation is necessary everywhere, because people can not remain well without fresh air? |
17437 | Do we not come and go as they? |
17437 | Do you fancy that stems and boughs were never in his mind? |
17437 | Do you not know, from Winchester, that that is true? |
17437 | Do you remember-- though you are hardly old enough-- the cattle- plague? |
17437 | Do you think that the awful shapes and shadows of that forest never haunted his imagination as he built? |
17437 | Does it express our belief? |
17437 | Dost thou not bear the marks of the wounds?" |
17437 | First, what is the difference between the breath you take in and the breath you give out? |
17437 | For is not our life like their life? |
17437 | For then there comes to him the thought-- And are these all the facts? |
17437 | For where would be your images? |
17437 | For who that walks through the by- streets of any great city does not see? |
17437 | From whence did vegetable and animal life crawl back to the land, as it rose again; and cover its mantle of glacial drift with fresh life and verdure? |
17437 | Had not he deserted them? |
17437 | Has he not done so already? |
17437 | Have we not seen them reappear, under fearful forms, in Paris but the other day? |
17437 | He walks by day past a black cavern mouth, and thinks, with a shudder-- Something ugly may live in that ugly hole: what if it jumped out upon me? |
17437 | He-- did I say? |
17437 | How could it be otherwise? |
17437 | How did these three floras get each to its present place? |
17437 | How is it that you have forgotten that lesson?" |
17437 | How would you save that for the poor people who have none? |
17437 | How, then, did the word thrift get to mean parsimony, frugality, the opposite of waste? |
17437 | How, then, shall we get rid of the foul air at the top of the room? |
17437 | I answer-- Who but you, or your pupils after you, if you will but try? |
17437 | I do not speak merely of those who may be engaged in the work of direct teaching; that they ought to be well taught themselves, who can doubt? |
17437 | I know it: but why did they drink, save for the same reason that the fenman drank, and his wife took opium, at least till the fens were drained? |
17437 | I would make them discontented with what they call their education, and say to them-- You call the three Royal R''s education? |
17437 | If a rock falls from the cliff above him, what more natural than to suppose that there is some giant up there who threw it at him? |
17437 | If he thinks that things are going all right, must he not have a most beggarly conception of what going right means? |
17437 | If you could see a battle- field, and men shot down, writhing and dying in hundreds by shell and bullet, would not that seem to you a horrid sight? |
17437 | In that expression lies the answer to our second question: Why does our breath produce a similar effect upon the mouse and the lighted candle? |
17437 | Is it merely harmful; merely waste? |
17437 | Is it not far more important to make our daughters read religious books?" |
17437 | Is it not likely, then, to be afraid of the wrong object? |
17437 | Is not a spire like a growing tree, a tabernacle like a fir- tree, a compound spire like a group of firs? |
17437 | Is not that a joy, a prize, which wealth can not give, nor poverty take away? |
17437 | Is not that a one- sided statement of facts? |
17437 | Is not that an evidence of its personality? |
17437 | Is not that fear of the unseen world? |
17437 | Is not the decrease of drinking among the richer classes certainly due to the increased refinement and variety of their tastes and occupations? |
17437 | Is the best Gothic fit for our worship? |
17437 | Let me ask-- of what period of youth and of manhood does not the same hold true? |
17437 | May it not sleep there all day, and prowl for prey all night? |
17437 | May not their denuding power have been far greater in old times than now? |
17437 | Must, did I say? |
17437 | My boy, are not you and I free citizens; part of the people, the Commons-- as the good old word runs-- of this country? |
17437 | Now, do you know why that was? |
17437 | Now, how is this? |
17437 | Now, if there should come to any thinking man of this tribe, at this epoch, the new thought-- Who made the world? |
17437 | Now, what do these two plants mark? |
17437 | Or are you among the weak, the failing, the dwindling, the doomed? |
17437 | Or by a mighty current? |
17437 | Or by water draining off a vast flat as it was upheaved out of the sea? |
17437 | Or is the coincidence merely fortuitous? |
17437 | Or shall we choose some other style? |
17437 | Or, if a case comes into our parish from outside, why does the fever never spread? |
17437 | Or, if not there, where? |
17437 | Reverence? |
17437 | Shall I be the happier for it? |
17437 | Shall I be the wiser? |
17437 | Shall I solve my own riddle? |
17437 | So I might have said to him, but did not-- And then men pray for rain: My boy, did you ever hear the old Eastern legend about the Gipsies? |
17437 | So, you plant or you animal, are you among the strong, the successful, the multiplying, the colonising? |
17437 | Such cases, doubtless, are far less common than they were fifty years ago: but why? |
17437 | Surely England must be much in want, either of water, or of fuel to heat it with?" |
17437 | Surely that is woman''s calling-- to teach man: and to teach him what? |
17437 | That is Nature''s law: and is it not at first sight a fearful law? |
17437 | The Godlike deeds alone in the lonely chamber? |
17437 | The cusped arch, too, was it actually not intended to imitate vegetation? |
17437 | The heroism which is known only to our Father who seeth in secret? |
17437 | The prince stated that he first took the apparition to be that of the blessed St. Francis; but not seeing the stigmata, he exclaimed,"How? |
17437 | Then where is all the rain and snow gone, which falls on them year by year, but into the chalk itself, and into the greensands, too, below the chalk? |
17437 | Then why do I not do it? |
17437 | Then, have we not heard of the early Christian martyrs? |
17437 | These men mere gladiators? |
17437 | They devoted themselves to hopeless destruction: but why? |
17437 | They have not said,"She did it; but after all, was the deed so very inexcusable?" |
17437 | Thousands, and tens of thousands, of gallons will run under this bridge to- day; and what shall we do with it? |
17437 | Was Theophrastus''s superstitious man so very foolish for pouring oil on every round stone? |
17437 | Was he to go on to the end, die, and no more? |
17437 | Was he to sink into the mere pedant; or, if he could not do that, into the mere court versifier? |
17437 | Was it made by an earthquake? |
17437 | Was its bed sea, or dry land, or under an ice sheet, during the long ages of the glacial epoch? |
17437 | Was not the wasp- king angry with them? |
17437 | We who have both: what might we not do, if we would be true to our advantages, and to ourselves? |
17437 | Were they not the parents of philosophy, science, poetry, the plastic arts? |
17437 | Were those boughs present to the mind of the architect? |
17437 | Were we not, how could we be always warmer than the air outside us? |
17437 | What chain of misreasoning had they in their heads when they hit on that as a device for making the crops grow? |
17437 | What comyn folk is so mighty, and so strong in the felde, as the comyns of England?" |
17437 | What cure is there? |
17437 | What deliverance is there from this mysterious house- fiend, save brute force? |
17437 | What difference is there between a savage''s fear of a demon, and a hunter''s fear of a fall? |
17437 | What does the savage fear? |
17437 | What follows? |
17437 | What has made these old Greek myths live, myths though they be, and fables, and fair dreams? |
17437 | What if intellect, or what is now called intellect, did not make the world, or the smallest wheel or cog of it? |
17437 | What if it be, in plain homely English, blind fear; fear of the unknown, simply because it is unknown? |
17437 | What if the agony and death of slaves did not appease the wasps? |
17437 | What makers or builders more cunning than those wasps of whom his foolish head is full? |
17437 | What need for the soldier and the man of science to fraternise just now? |
17437 | What she will do in her maturity, who dare predict? |
17437 | What site is more delicious and more lovely? |
17437 | What use if I succeed in answering every question which you have propounded to- night? |
17437 | What use, if I do try? |
17437 | What was your last place of abode? |
17437 | What were those Red Men thinking of? |
17437 | What would be the result? |
17437 | What would you do? |
17437 | What, if it seem probably degenerating, are the causes of so great an evil? |
17437 | When, finally, did it dwindle down to the brook which now runs through Wareham town? |
17437 | Where could he have rather wished to find himself? |
17437 | Where did each come from? |
17437 | Where is your vitality? |
17437 | Where is your"Lebensgluckseligkeit,"your enjoyment of superfluous life and power? |
17437 | Where the Straits of Dover are now? |
17437 | Which is the oldest? |
17437 | Who are these who follow us softly over the moor in the autumn eve? |
17437 | Who can make the crooked straight, or number that which is wanting? |
17437 | Who can tell? |
17437 | Who will refuse the name of heroes to these men? |
17437 | Why not? |
17437 | Why not? |
17437 | Why pry into her awful secrets? |
17437 | Why should he? |
17437 | Why should it? |
17437 | Why should this be? |
17437 | Why, then-- to come to practical suggestions-- should there not be opened in every great town in these realms a public school of health? |
17437 | Will any one tell me what harm it has ever done? |
17437 | Will any one tell me whether the heathy flora of the moors, or the thymy flora of the chalk downs, were the earlier inhabitants of these isles? |
17437 | Without Him, what is all your building? |
17437 | You demur? |
17437 | You do not look on dirt as a sign of sanctity?" |
17437 | You do not understand? |
17437 | You must ask-- Was there not land to the south of the Isle of Wight in those ages, and for ages after; and what was its extent and shape? |
17437 | to be hurtful, ruinous to animals as well as to man? |
17437 | { 72}"Nausicaa, wherefore doth thy mother bear Child so forgetful? |
47127 | [ 125][ 125] Is notNum"cognate to"Numen?" |
47127 | [ 12] How are men of this stamp to be affected by any exclamations of pleasure or pain? 47127 ''Where is Num? 47127 ( Query, Noah''s ark?) 47127 ( Query, eight dead kings?) 47127 ( Query, of water?) 47127 (_ vide infra_, p. 332), will not the matter begin to wear a different aspect? 47127 ), and the Roman(?) 47127 ), the Grecian(? 47127 )[]]_ sic._? 47127 170) says:--The stones changed then into men by Deucalion and Pyrrha, are they not their children according to nature? |
47127 | 19), does not this solve all difficulties? |
47127 | 27); and Kashmir and Dongan, gau; Icelandic, ku? |
47127 | 2d, Is there no clue in the name,_ official_ name, of Dank- li- ke? |
47127 | :--"He begins to lift up his eyes, he stares at the tent of heaven, and asks who supports it? |
47127 | Again, why are_ stripes_, in a variety of combination of colour, the characteristic symbol of flags? |
47127 | Am I, then, in contradiction with myself? |
47127 | And who knows if these people are not destined yet to contemplate sights which will be refused to the cavilling genius of Europe? |
47127 | And why does conscience prescribe_ one kind_ of actions and condemn another kind? |
47127 | At what period does Sir J. Lubbock suppose the custom of inheritance through females arose? |
47127 | Besides, if it be allowed that it might apply to Saturn and Janus through the connecting idea of Chronos, how does it apply to_ Bacchus_? |
47127 | But above and beyond it, do we not here also get a glimpse of more celestial light? |
47127 | But are they explicable on any solar theory? |
47127 | But does Mr Max Müller profess to have brought the various legends into harmony? |
47127 | But does not Sir H. Maine himself supply similar testimony? |
47127 | But does this settle the question? |
47127 | But first, how does Mr Hunter account for this bitter feeling? |
47127 | But how can Hercules, who frees Prometheus from the rock, be the same as Prometheus who is bound to the rock? |
47127 | But if in one instance what_ à priori_ reason is there that it should not be so in others? |
47127 | But if natural, it would have been natural from the commencement,_ quid vetat_? |
47127 | But if the human intellect can not prevent or control corruption, can not it disenchant vice of its evil, and so counteract its effects? |
47127 | But if they married out of their tribe, was the property to go with them? |
47127 | But if we have not the memory of mankind, does not mankind possess it? |
47127 | But if"kinship through females"was not discovered by the first children of the first mothers, how was it subsequently discovered? |
47127 | But is not this only when it is regarded from the point of view of"organised constraint? |
47127 | But is there no consciousness of this inferiority in the true negro? |
47127 | But is this so? |
47127 | But may not the old and primitive idea still lurk in the name? |
47127 | But what are these verses from the ends of the earth which are identical? |
47127 | But what are we to say about the alternative name of Enu? |
47127 | But what have we just heard? |
47127 | But what if these four figures should all be accounted for? |
47127 | But what is[ Greek: anthrôpos]?" |
47127 | But what mattered the contravention of treaties in comparison with the scenes which followed? |
47127 | But what portion of mankind do they influence? |
47127 | But what, again, is the force of all this buzzing if it is the mere expression of"pleasure,"or"pain,"of satisfaction or dissatisfaction in the masses? |
47127 | But why a symbol or token at all? |
47127 | But why is darkness called the parent of the sun, and not rather light the parent of darkness? |
47127 | But why not? |
47127 | Can this symbol, common to these three, combine even congruously with any solar or astral legend? |
47127 | Corn=_ As_lek( Kirghish) and Ashlyk(?) |
47127 | Did not France, the great culprit of all, who both cast its own responsibility to the winds and sowed the hurricane, conquer at Solferino? |
47127 | Did not Solferino, after some ten years of delusive prosperity, lead up to Sedan? |
47127 | Did not the English Cabinet summon all the most distinguished jurists to advise them what the law of nations was? |
47127 | Do bodies-- so far as the exterior senses tell us-- return to dust, or to other forms of life? |
47127 | Do not all our difficulties begin exactly where, owing to the complications of modern civilisation, tradition ceases? |
47127 | Does Sir H. Maine deny either of these facts? |
47127 | Does not Nature herself proclaim it, in her contrast of light and darkness? |
47127 | Does not this complete the chain of her connection with Juno? |
47127 | Does not this point to a traditional knowledge of these things? |
47127 | Does not this tradition of the tortoise decide the_ Oriental_ origin of the North American Mandans? |
47127 | Does the key fit the lock? |
47127 | Does tradition give any clue out of this labyrinth? |
47127 | Exteriorly, with the exception of the four images, it differed only in dimensions from the other wigwams, which are thus described? |
47127 | Finally, if man commenced with the knowledge of the devil, how did they proceed on to the idea of God? |
47127 | Had man no control over the domestic animals? |
47127 | Has not the greater intellect ever been on the side of philosophy? |
47127 | Has not_ so_ analogy with eau, augr( Chittral),_ water_? |
47127 | Have we not just seen that Bacchus, according to mythology, travelled from the_ west_ into India? |
47127 | He opens his eyes to the winds, and asks them whence and whither? |
47127 | How come they there? |
47127 | How did the population of those islands get there? |
47127 | How long will these Gentile sentiments remain in force? |
47127 | How many thousand years did it take to transform Lucifer into Satan? |
47127 | How many years, then, may we suppose that it took the Chinese to progress from the black state of the Egyptian? |
47127 | How then did they advance to the knowledge of the God of purity and love, or even of"the Great Spirit"of the Indians? |
47127 | How then, supposing the Roman element to have become predominant, did it come to contemn the Latin element and the law of the Latins? |
47127 | How was the succession to be regulated? |
47127 | How, then, did the others come to know nothing of baskets? |
47127 | How, then, do we find traces of the latter custom so prevalent? |
47127 | If Ana is Adam, and Hoa Noah, why should not Enu, in another point of view, be Enoch? |
47127 | If by his own mental vigour he can out of the primitive idea of evil generate the idea of good-- what may we not expect? |
47127 | If not from tradition, then from reflection? |
47127 | If some race in the countries where tin was procured, where is it now? |
47127 | If we do reason on that supposition, where is the discovery?" |
47127 | In Mexico also there was"that remarkable league, which indeed has no parallel in history(?) |
47127 | In the first marriage contract recorded,_ i.e._ of Isaac and Rebecca? |
47127 | In the midst of this struggle for existence, what is there in the greatest happiness principle to bind the individual to abnegation? |
47127 | Is it a forced paraphrase to construe this to mean-- The rainbow is the sign that the world shall stand? |
47127 | Is it merely accidental that the metaphor is not reversed? |
47127 | Is it not another way of affirming the position which I maintain against Sir John Lubbock? |
47127 | Is mankind without memory, without tradition?... |
47127 | Is not the Japanese god Amida= Adima, or perhaps to Adamon--_i.e._, confused in relationship to Hoang- ti or Noah? |
47127 | Is not this a reminiscence of the communications of the Almighty to man through Noah? |
47127 | Is not this everywhere also the mark of the Turanian race? |
47127 | Is there any other key producible? |
47127 | Is there any phrase which the human mind could invent in which it could be more adequately defined? |
47127 | Is there anything which makes it probable that they came? |
47127 | Is there no new conception of virtue with which to allure mankind? |
47127 | Is there, however, any instance known to us? |
47127 | It is perfectly congruous with the tradition of Noah; but who will tell us its appropriate solar or astral application? |
47127 | It is simply this,"How did the savage come by the knowledge of fire?" |
47127 | It is so_ now_, because of the traditional sentiments and principles which still retain their force-- but how long will it continue? |
47127 | It is, to use a French phrase,''in the air,''"[ Is not Sir H. Maine here hunting for a phrase which shall not imply that it is in tradition?] |
47127 | It may appear to us a natural emblem, but it is not so from association of ideas with the scriptural dove and olive branch? |
47127 | Might they not have anticipated the discovery if they had duly trusted tradition? |
47127 | No second decalogue which will attract by its novelty, or convince by logical cogency and force? |
47127 | Now is this tradition of morals identical with utilitarian precept? |
47127 | Now, is it improbable that the Latin''ferrum''and the English''iron''spring indirectly from the same Celtic root? |
47127 | On any theory of growth or development how could he("the lowest savage") have got the idea? |
47127 | On the other hand, I ask, in those ages when men were supposed to live exclusively on acorns, was not flesh meat eaten,--were there no hunters? |
47127 | Query-- Can this be"the ark or big canoe"in the Mandan celebration? |
47127 | Query-- is our word barge a corruption of baris? |
47127 | Quoi, tout entier? |
47127 | Supposing the primitive knowledge, is not pottery one of the arts which would be most likely to be lost in a migration across the seas? |
47127 | The question which I ask is, how does it account for these old notions of morality obtaining among mankind? |
47127 | The_ white flag_ is our own symbol; but what is the white flag but the development and refinement of the staff and white wool? |
47127 | This leads me to the final question, When was this custom instituted? |
47127 | Thus shone out Môt[ the luminous vault of heaven? |
47127 | To Austria? |
47127 | To England? |
47127 | To Europe? |
47127 | To despise this treasure, what is it but to despise life, and that which constitutes its connection, its unity, its light, as we have just seen?... |
47127 | To whom would they trace back more naturally than to Adam? |
47127 | Was it not this,''Is this act conformable to the law of nations, or is it not?'' |
47127 | Was it the waters''fathomless abyss?" |
47127 | Was it the whole descent of Ham, or only the posterity of Chanaan? |
47127 | We ask why did they capture wives? |
47127 | Were we not all one, and with one country, when we were first created? |
47127 | What are men if you take away the notion of right and wrong but"the flies of a summer?" |
47127 | What are the most brilliant of our chemical discoveries compared with the invention of fire and the metals? |
47127 | What became of those old traditions? |
47127 | What do we find at the commencement? |
47127 | What does the reader guess the meaning to be? |
47127 | What else will account for the different recognitions of philosophy and religion-- priests and sophists? |
47127 | What else would have prevented mankind from resorting in their difficulties to where the greatest intellect was found? |
47127 | What has been the result to France of its Italian policy? |
47127 | What if we shall find works similar of those to Yao or Yu, ascribed to the original founders in Egypt and Cashmere? |
47127 | What is it? |
47127 | What more natural than to associate the Almighty with the heaven where He dwelt? |
47127 | What, then, was the Amphictyonic Council? |
47127 | What, then, was this idea, unless the traditional idea? |
47127 | When it thundered, a Bonzi, whose head was adorned with consecrated leaves[ Query, the olive or willow?] |
47127 | When or where has monotheism been more explicitly declared? |
47127 | When the most sacred of all treaties were thus trampled upon, how would they have the others respected? |
47127 | When the news of the affair of the_ Trent_ reached England, what was the first question that every one asked? |
47127 | When will there be? |
47127 | Whence comes it that in the primitive language of every ancient people, we find words which necessarily suppose a knowledge foreign to these people? |
47127 | Where have they taken the still more singular epithet of''philomate''( liking or thirsting for blood), given to this same earth in a tragedy? |
47127 | Where, then, may we ask, is the monotheism,"the glory of the Semitic race,"to be found, if not in the time of David? |
47127 | Who again will say what ideas are traditional in different minds? |
47127 | Who taught them to call fever the"purifier,"or the"expiator"? |
47127 | Who upholds this evidence now? |
47127 | Who will say what facts are traditional in different localities? |
47127 | Why do we obey conscience or feel pain in disobeying it? |
47127 | Why more than a simple gesture of salutation? |
47127 | Why should he postpone his certain and immediate gratification to the remote advantage of others, or of distant and contingent advantage to himself? |
47127 | Why should this have been? |
47127 | Why then the indefinite lapse of time? |
47127 | Why this diversity of theories of the Creation if these people brought their traditions of the Deluge from the land of inspiration? |
47127 | Will any Englishman maintain the proposition that victory is always on the side of the big battalions? |
47127 | Will this not tend to identify their institution with that epoch? |
47127 | Will you find in European history twelve years so fruitful in pledges and perjuries?" |
47127 | Would the enchained eagle ask for a balloon to raise himself into the air? |
47127 | Yet why should force adequate to its purpose seek to cloak itself in the forms of law? |
47127 | You allow it? |
47127 | You assume that there is a uniformity in progress, but may not there be the same uniformity in the processes of degradation? |
47127 | Zelophahad had left no sons, but only daughters, and what was to become of the property? |
47127 | [ 13]"Utiles esse autem opiniones has quis neget, quum intelligat quam multa firmentur jure jurando, quantæ salutis sint f[oe]derum religiones? |
47127 | [ 142] I conclude by asking why this should be? |
47127 | [ 232] And why should it not have been so? |
47127 | [ 303] A feeling of disappointment necessarily supervened, and it was asked, if not a federation, what was it? |
47127 | [ 349]"Does the faith of treaties, the right of treaties, still exist? |
47127 | [ Query, a reference to the peacock? |
47127 | [_ Query_, What is the nature of the evidence that they have survived, and have not degenerated?] |
47127 | [_ Query_--apportioned by_ the eighth_?] |
47127 | _ Vide supra_, 197, Cabiri? |
47127 | _ sic._'':''? |
47127 | _ sic._? |
47127 | and I may add, how came it about that their ideas of justice were inseparably connected with the notions of morality? |
47127 | and are they not in Asia, as in Africa, in a state of subjugation or dependence? |
47127 | and is there not the presumption that they have lost it through degeneracy? |
47127 | and their worship of trees and worn stones worship of memorials of the Deluge? |
47127 | and why not a contrary legend founded on this surmise? |
47127 | and, also, is his instance to the point? |
47127 | are not these conflicts in primitive life always with the Turanian race? |
47127 | dit Cicéron, qui le refute; et qui font au pontife le droit des mers, le droit des eaux, ou d''autres droits semblables?" |
47127 | he replies, useful to whom? |
47127 | in order to wean his people from the corruption into which the whole Egyptian ceremonial had sunk? |
47127 | or is it simply taken, with a slight alteration by Eusebius, to the fourteenth and fifteenth dynasties( 435)? |
47127 | or the primitive Adam into the Adam feeling shame, and conscious of decay, want, and the doom of death? |
47127 | or the word[ Greek: kakos] to that which is morally good? |
47127 | p. 262 which are thus described[?] |
47127 | psalm, in the expression,"ante faciem frigoris ejus quis sustinebit"? |
47127 | quam multos divini supplicii metus a scelere revocaverit? |
47127 | quamque sancta sit societas civium inter ipsos diis immortalibus interpositis tum judicibus tum testibus?" |
47127 | says, that the question which first suggested itself to him was--"To what Sothic cycle are these 443 years or xv generations said to belong?" |
47127 | unless the symbol embodied some idea which conveyed a pledge over and above? |
47127 | what conceal''d? |
47127 | what shall I say to them? |
47127 | what shelter''d? |
47127 | why the progressive advance of the idea through successive generations of mankind? |
47127 | you believe in the Deluge?" |
20755 | ''"Herr Doctor, is not the master of the ceremonies in Prussia the brother of the Margrave?"'' |
20755 | ''"How can I do that?" |
20755 | ''"Why do you abuse monks in your books?" |
20755 | ''"Why should I?" |
20755 | ''A monk''s holy obedience,''Erasmus wrote afterwards,''consists in-- what? |
20755 | ''And are you happy, Fox?'' |
20755 | ''And what is that?'' |
20755 | ''And what would you know, oh, my daughter?'' |
20755 | ''And where is poor Tom?'' |
20755 | ''And you really do n''t find it a bore, living like this? |
20755 | ''Are ye all unhappy?'' |
20755 | ''But I mean,''persisted the Cat,''do you feel improved, as the men call it? |
20755 | ''But what in the world is the good of thinking about it, if you ca n''t, oh Owl?'' |
20755 | ''But what is my duty, Blackbird?'' |
20755 | ''But, Bee, what is your duty?'' |
20755 | ''Ca n''t they tell you there?'' |
20755 | ''Come again, will it?'' |
20755 | ''Did n''t they? |
20755 | ''Do ye reprove words?'' |
20755 | ''Do you feel any better for it, Dog, after you have been standing on your legs?'' |
20755 | ''Do you mean to say you ca n''t?'' |
20755 | ''Doctor,''she said to him one day,''how is it that under Popery we prayed so often and so earnestly, and now our prayers are cold and seldom?'' |
20755 | ''Hear you,''said the abbot one day,''of the Pope''s holiness and the congregation of bishops, abbots, and princes gathered to the council at Mantua? |
20755 | ''How d''ye do? |
20755 | ''I beg your pardon,''said the Cat,''it is n''t curiosity-- what are you doing?'' |
20755 | ''If ye are, then what am I? |
20755 | ''Is my friend''s soul out?'' |
20755 | ''Man,''says Leibnitz,''is composed of mind and body; but what is mind and what is body, and what is the nature of their union? |
20755 | ''Ox,''she said,''what is the way to be happy?'' |
20755 | ''Quite sure?'' |
20755 | ''They say they do, do they?'' |
20755 | ''Was it God the Lord who formed the substance of their bodies? |
20755 | ''Well, but Fox, I mean do you improve? |
20755 | ''Well, but how are we to find out?'' |
20755 | ''What did you sit on Pallas''s shoulder for? |
20755 | ''What do I know?'' |
20755 | ''What do they say of me?'' |
20755 | ''What is history,''said Napoleon,''but a fiction agreed upon?'' |
20755 | ''What is it? |
20755 | ''What is your duty?'' |
20755 | ''What merit can there be in such a poor caitiff as man? |
20755 | ''What religion, madam? |
20755 | ''Where are your manners? |
20755 | ''Where,''he cries,''shall wisdom be found, and where is the place of understanding? |
20755 | ''Who get justice from the men unless they can force it? |
20755 | ''Who told you to do it?'' |
20755 | ''Who? |
20755 | ''Why did Nature make me like geese, then?'' |
20755 | ''Why do they do that? |
20755 | ''Why, what would you have me do with you?'' |
20755 | ''Why,''the eloquent Protestant would say,''should I pin my faith upon the Church? |
20755 | ''Will his own eye see his own fall? |
20755 | ''You are a very wise Cat,''answered her companion;''but what good is it knowing all this?'' |
20755 | ***** And, after all, what are these victims? |
20755 | After all, it may be said, what is it in man''s nature which is really admirable? |
20755 | Among the many voices, what is a young man to conclude? |
20755 | And a world which would submit to be so treated, what could he do but despise? |
20755 | And for what purpose does Byron introduce these frightful images? |
20755 | And what comes of this? |
20755 | And what is that? |
20755 | And why should Reineke have acknowledged an obligation any more than we, to creatures so utterly below himself? |
20755 | And you really believe all that? |
20755 | Are the songs of the Cid or of Siegfried true? |
20755 | Are there none in the Iliad? |
20755 | Are they all equally favourable to excellence of character? |
20755 | Are they_ ultimate genera_ refusing to be classified farther? |
20755 | Are you happy, Rabbit?'' |
20755 | Are you so much wiser than the saints who approved the things which you have denounced? |
20755 | Bad feeding at home, eh? |
20755 | But are circumstances everything? |
20755 | But how to arrive at this? |
20755 | But how_ could_ a man be a member of ten universities? |
20755 | But is it so? |
20755 | But pass beyond them, and where are we? |
20755 | But what can a Cat do? |
20755 | But what moral question can be asked which admits now of a grander solution than was offered two, perhaps three, thousand years ago? |
20755 | But where am I to get another Benvenuto if you hang this one for me?'' |
20755 | But which is best? |
20755 | But who are they? |
20755 | But who does not perceive that no miracle was ever performed under such conditions as these?'' |
20755 | But, after all, what are they? |
20755 | But, really and truly, what practical notions of duty have we beyond that of abstaining from committing sins? |
20755 | By what sophistry could we justify ourselves, if not by the very same which we had just been so eagerly condemning? |
20755 | Ca n''t you answer a civil question?'' |
20755 | Can the Pope absolve him? |
20755 | Can the bishop absolve him? |
20755 | Can the father absolve him? |
20755 | Can the long records of humanity, with all its joys and sorrows, its sufferings and its conquests, teach us no more than this? |
20755 | Can we wonder at a fox of Reineke''s abilities taking such a world at its word? |
20755 | Can you imagine a science which would have[A]_ foretold_ such movements as those? |
20755 | Children are well enough for foxes and wild creatures; refined dogs know better; and, for doing-- can''t I stand on my toes? |
20755 | Come out to hunt for yourself?'' |
20755 | Could n''t you die? |
20755 | Do they offer equal opportunities? |
20755 | Do you expect your princes to take up arms to defend_ you_--_you_, a wretched worm like you? |
20755 | Do you feel good and great?'' |
20755 | Do you know what we do to our drones? |
20755 | Do you never wonder what dogs are, and what this world is?'' |
20755 | Do you say such teaching leads to disregard of duty? |
20755 | Does he only''seem to succeed?'' |
20755 | Does it prove? |
20755 | Fame I would have parted with; but to be the sport of blackguards-- to be pelted with potsherds and dirt and ordure-- is not this worse than death? |
20755 | Fiction is only false, when it is false, not to fact, else how could it be fiction? |
20755 | For what better test of truth have we than the ablest men''s acceptance of it? |
20755 | For, ultimately, how do we know that right is right, and wrong is wrong? |
20755 | God may appear on earth for him; or if that be too bold a hope, and death finds him as he is-- what is death then? |
20755 | Has Luther been crucified for the world?'' |
20755 | Has Mr. Emerson any similar clear idea of great man or good man? |
20755 | Has he the fruits of the Spirit? |
20755 | Has it justified its own existence? |
20755 | Have the lessons of the Reformation been thrown away? |
20755 | Have we not seen men of the world in our own time become the dupes of the most childish and absurd illusions? |
20755 | He is the heart of his age, and his verse expresses his age; and what matter is it by what name he describes his places or his persons? |
20755 | He was in the midst of his disciples and they saw Him, and then he was gone whither who could tell? |
20755 | He''had received good at the hand of the Lord, and should he not receive evil?'' |
20755 | He_ ought_ to have committed them, and so he had; the old argument then as now.--''Is not thy wickedness great?'' |
20755 | How are we to touch the heart; how to awaken the desire? |
20755 | How far may we apply the parallel to the Synoptical Gospels? |
20755 | How was it then to be accounted for? |
20755 | How, then, did they come to act as they did? |
20755 | I myself have my tongue and my pen, and why should I not use them?'' |
20755 | I wonder what has become of him; and my last children, too, what has become of them? |
20755 | If God has thought fit to place a man in purgatory, who shall say that it is good for him to be taken out of purgatory? |
20755 | If I am asked( concludes Spinoza) why then all mankind were not created by God, so as to be governed solely by reason? |
20755 | If created-- out of what is it created? |
20755 | If it be not divine-- what is it then? |
20755 | If it can tell us little of the past, and nothing of the future, why waste our time over so barren a study? |
20755 | If not, where is our science? |
20755 | If so, where is he? |
20755 | If such creatures as they can do their duty, and improve, and be happy, why ca n''t we?'' |
20755 | If we doubt with these, whom are we to believe? |
20755 | In acquiring learning, in study, and industry? |
20755 | In days like these, when we hear so much of progress, it is worth while to ask ourselves what advances we have made further in the same direction? |
20755 | In leading an honest, chaste, and sober life? |
20755 | In what other poem in the world is there pathos deep as this? |
20755 | Is faith never to cease to dread investigation? |
20755 | Is he patient, kind, good, gentle, modest, temperate, chaste? |
20755 | Is humanity crawling out of the cradle, or tottering into the grave? |
20755 | Is it in nursery, in schoolroom, or in opening manhood? |
20755 | Is it not rather the face and form which Nature made-- the strength which is ours, we know not how-- our talents, our rank, our possessions? |
20755 | Is it not so? |
20755 | Is it really? |
20755 | Is it? |
20755 | Is knowledge always to advance under the ban of religion? |
20755 | Is no man to be admitted to grace who does not know how the Father differs from the Son, and both from the Spirit? |
20755 | Is not our choice determined for us? |
20755 | Is science chiefly to value each new discovery as a victory gained over its rival? |
20755 | Is there any such? |
20755 | Is this antagonism a law of humanity? |
20755 | Is this still selfishness, only more enlightened? |
20755 | It is a beautiful day, Dog; you wo n''t take a trot out with me?'' |
20755 | It is rather, which shall I best succeed in? |
20755 | It may be true that we can act as we choose, but can we_ choose_? |
20755 | It was clear enough that these great personages themselves did not believe what they taught; so why should the people believe it? |
20755 | It will be said in a case,_ e.g._ of moral trial, that there may have been_ power_; but was there_ power enough_ to resist the temptation? |
20755 | Job had called on God, and prayed that he might appear, that he might plead his cause with him; and now he comes, and what will Job do? |
20755 | Let us ask her living interpreters then, and what shall we get for an answer? |
20755 | Many a wise man has attacked Luther, and what has been effected? |
20755 | No evidence can affect convictions which have been arrived at without evidence-- and why should we attempt a task which it is hopeless to accomplish? |
20755 | Of what use is it to destroy an idol, when another, or the same in another form, takes immediate possession of the vacant pedestal? |
20755 | Or were Popes''decrees thenceforward to be tried like the words of other men-- by the ordinary laws of evidence? |
20755 | Page 330: carged: In''a huge high- carged''[ May mean high- charged as with many weapons, or cargo, as heavy freight?] |
20755 | People in general accept it on authority; but authority itself must repose on some ulterior basis; and what is that? |
20755 | Peter answered and said unto Him,"Will the wolves then tear the sheep?" |
20755 | Popes, bishops, clergy, kings, emperors-- are none of these-- are not all these together-- wiser than Martin Luther the monk?'' |
20755 | Rogers?'' |
20755 | Shall I be a lawyer, merchant, manufacturer, tradesman, engineer? |
20755 | Shall I be a soldier? |
20755 | Should he appear, or not appear? |
20755 | So things went on, and from time to time strangers would come among them, and would say, Why are you sitting here under the old tree? |
20755 | Something was to be done; but what, or how? |
20755 | Suppose these commandments obeyed-- what then? |
20755 | Tacitus, indeed, was born before the science of history; but would M. Comte have seen any more clearly? |
20755 | That the early Fathers quoted some accounts of our Lord''s life is abundantly clear; but did they quote these? |
20755 | The being who accomplished a work so vast-- a work compared to which the first creation appears but a trifling difficulty-- what could He be but God? |
20755 | The fact was so:[ Greek: archê to hoti]: it was a fact-- what could we want more? |
20755 | The man who tries and fails, what is the use of him? |
20755 | The question now is, what has the Kirk so established done for Scotland? |
20755 | The_ form_ is everything; and what is the form? |
20755 | These six predicables, as the logician would call them, what are they? |
20755 | They did not complain, and why should we complain for them? |
20755 | They never did anything of that sort for you?'' |
20755 | They stood looking in this way for some minutes; at last, in a whispering voice, the Owl said,''What are you who presume to look into my repose? |
20755 | This evidence is surely admissible? |
20755 | Through what common term can the student pass from one into the other? |
20755 | To the lips, shall we say? |
20755 | Was Reineke no better than Iago? |
20755 | Was it in contrast to the exquisite moonlight scene which tempts the renegade out of his tent? |
20755 | Was it so indeed, then? |
20755 | Was it to bring his mind into a fit condition to be worked upon by the vision of Francesca? |
20755 | We ask, why? |
20755 | We do not know what we would be at-- make our children into men, says one-- but what sort of men? |
20755 | We say nothing of the lies in these; but why? |
20755 | Well might Erasmus exclaim,''What fungus could be more stupid? |
20755 | Well, and what then? |
20755 | Well, but I want to know whether you are any wiser or any better than Foxes were then?'' |
20755 | Were men to go on for ever saying that this and that was true, because the Pope affirmed it? |
20755 | Were the stories sung in the liturgy of Eleusis all so true? |
20755 | What are the conditions of a science? |
20755 | What are the fortunes of his house to him if the number of his own months is fulfilled?'' |
20755 | What are we here for? |
20755 | What are we to do with the rest of it? |
20755 | What are we to do, then, for our neighbour, besides abstaining from doing him injury? |
20755 | What are we? |
20755 | What can a poor pigmy like me do? |
20755 | What could be more fit than to make a match between those two? |
20755 | What could they ask for more? |
20755 | What could we do? |
20755 | What did Warham reply? |
20755 | What did you do yesterday?'' |
20755 | What do they mean by calling me a rogue?'' |
20755 | What do you do with yourself?'' |
20755 | What do you do, then?'' |
20755 | What does Bishop Butler mean? |
20755 | What edifying is this to rail? |
20755 | What have I been doing to- day? |
20755 | What in fact do we conclude when we encounter them elsewhere? |
20755 | What is existence? |
20755 | What is goodness then? |
20755 | What is it, Ox?'' |
20755 | What is man that he should be clean, and he that is born of a woman that he should be righteous? |
20755 | What is that supreme type of character which is in itself good or great, unqualified with any farther_ differentia_? |
20755 | What is the Almighty that we should serve Him? |
20755 | What matter is it what his own name was, while we have himself, and while we have the originals, from which he drew? |
20755 | What must have been the position of the clergy in the fulness of their power, when they could speak thus on the eve of their prostration? |
20755 | What next? |
20755 | What other answers have there been? |
20755 | What ought one to do to be as happy as you?'' |
20755 | What shall I do? |
20755 | What sin is there in the Decalogue in which he has not steeped himself to the lips? |
20755 | What then is the use of History? |
20755 | What was a bishopric to him? |
20755 | What was he to say? |
20755 | What was he, a poor, friendless, solitary monk, that he should set himself against the majesty of the triple crown? |
20755 | What was he? |
20755 | What was life to him or any man when bought with a sin against his soul? |
20755 | What was the good of all that excitement-- that agony of self- reproach for little things? |
20755 | What will he care? |
20755 | What will she tell him? |
20755 | What would Mr. Carlyle say of it, we thought, with his might and right? |
20755 | What would be done? |
20755 | What, then, were these ideas-- these_ veræ ideæ_, as he calls them-- and how were they to be obtained? |
20755 | When did he live? |
20755 | Where are the highest types-- the pattern lawyer, and shopkeeper, and merchant? |
20755 | Where shall I make most money? |
20755 | Wherefore do the heathen say, Where is now their God?'' |
20755 | Wherefore do the wicked become old, yea, and are mighty in power? |
20755 | Which best suits this disposition, and which suits that? |
20755 | Who and what is Luther? |
20755 | Who but God could have wrested his prize from a power which half the thinking world believed to be his coequal and coeternal adversary? |
20755 | Who can put confidence in a charlatan? |
20755 | Who does succeed, then, if he no more than seems? |
20755 | Who is this man who dares to say that for so many crowns the soul of a sinner can be made whole? |
20755 | Who knows but in the end I may turn into a dog?'' |
20755 | Who knows? |
20755 | Who, then, was Homer? |
20755 | Whom do we choose for the county member, the magistrate, the officer, the minister? |
20755 | Why didst thou bring me forth out of the womb? |
20755 | Why do we feel so sure that what we are told of Elijah or Elisha took place exactly as we read it? |
20755 | Why do we find excuses for youth, for inexperience, for violent natural passion, for bad education, bad example? |
20755 | Why do we reject the account of St. Columba or St. Martin as a tissue of idle fable? |
20755 | Why in cases of guilt do we vary our moral censure according to the opportunities of the offender? |
20755 | Why is Drake to be best known, or to be only known, in his last voyage? |
20755 | Why is the Church silent? |
20755 | Why is this? |
20755 | Why not-- why not? |
20755 | Why pass over the success, and endeavour to immortalise the failure? |
20755 | Why should I irritate Luther against me, when he has horns and knows how to use them?" |
20755 | Why should not God give a power to the saint which He had given to the prophet? |
20755 | Why, except that we feel that all these things do affect the culpability of the guilty person, and that it is folly and inhumanity to disregard them? |
20755 | Why, then, does the mind perceive the modes of but one attribute only?'' |
20755 | Why? |
20755 | Will a time ever be when the lost secret of the foundation of Rome can be recovered by historic laws? |
20755 | Will he drink the wrath of the Almighty? |
20755 | Will you quote the weary proverb? |
20755 | Will you say that''God layeth up His iniquity for His children?'' |
20755 | With the empire of Germany added to his inherited dominions, who could resist him? |
20755 | Would he or would he not retract? |
20755 | Would n''t you like some children to play with? |
20755 | Would n''t you like something to do? |
20755 | You know our epic?'' |
20755 | and how created-- and why? |
20755 | and if there be, where is the representative of this? |
20755 | and what are its lessons? |
20755 | and what is nobleness? |
20755 | and what is that something which we say exists? |
20755 | and what profit should we have if we pray to Him?'' |
20755 | and when may any subject be said to enter the scientific stage? |
20755 | and where are the examples? |
20755 | and where will you be then-- where will you be then?'' |
20755 | at least, could n''t I before I was so fat?'' |
20755 | ca n''t I dance? |
20755 | do I? |
20755 | do any of you? |
20755 | do you take care of your children?'' |
20755 | does it produce conviction? |
20755 | he said,''it is you, is it?'' |
20755 | he said;''and where am I to get eight florins?'' |
20755 | he says,''and the speeches of one that is desperate, which are as wind?'' |
20755 | how are we to know them? |
20755 | if we were so unhappy as to know?'' |
20755 | or did some evil spirit bring it forth? |
20755 | or how the nativity of the Son differs from the procession of the Spirit? |
20755 | or in the legends of Æneas? |
20755 | or is there any other larger type of greatness under which they fall? |
20755 | or, how came they to permit a change of such magnitude when they had so little sympathy with it? |
20755 | said the cardinal at last to him,''do you think the Pope cares for the opinion of a German boor? |
20755 | so true as fact? |
20755 | what can we wish for them? |
20755 | what hope is there of them? |
20755 | what is he? |
20755 | what is that?'' |
20755 | what use is there in them? |
20755 | what, you in the woods? |
20755 | what_ is_ anything? |
20755 | where is it all gone? |
20755 | which are they? |
20755 | who shall say that he himself desires it? |
20755 | why do we so anxiously watch their disposition, to determine the education which will best answer to it? |
20755 | why the pains to keep them from bad society? |
20755 | why, if he knew the names of the evangelists, did he never mention them even by accident? |
20447 | But you believe in eternal damnation, do you not? |
20447 | Did you deliver it? |
20447 | Do you believe in eternal punishment, as set forth in the confession of faith? |
20447 | Has anyone seen a map of the land of Nod? |
20447 | Have you preached on that subject lately? |
20447 | Is the keen logic and broad humanity of Ingersoll converting the brain and heart of Christendom? |
20447 | Well, what was the matter--did you drink, or cheat your employer, or were you idle? |
20447 | What was the trouble? |
20447 | Where are the four rivers that ran murmuring through the groves of Paradise? |
20447 | Where do you come from? |
20447 | Who was Cain''s wife? |
20447 | Who was the snake? 20447 A gentleman passing, stopped for a moment and said to the little girl:What relation is the little boy to you?" |
20447 | About how many have taken part in the recent nominations? |
20447 | About what age were you when you began this investigation which led to your present convictions? |
20447 | Above the grave what can the honest minister say? |
20447 | According to your views, what disposition is made of man after death? |
20447 | After all, has he not pursued the same method with me that he blames me for pursuing in regard to the Bible? |
20447 | Although you are not in favor of taking the Philippines by force, how do you regard the administration in its conduct of the war? |
20447 | And are they not, in spite of their professions to the contrary, enemies to republican liberty? |
20447 | And if she is granted one, is virtue in danger, and shall we lose the high ideal of home life? |
20447 | And in what way has not Spiritualism done good? |
20447 | And is it desirable that this relation should be rendered sacred by a church? |
20447 | And is there a woman so heartless and so immoral that she would force another to bear what she would shudderingly avoid? |
20447 | And the same old question is upon us now: What shall be done with the victims of drink? |
20447 | And what did you think of it? |
20447 | And what do you think of the modern development of metaphysics-- as expressed outside of the emotional and semi- ecclesiastical schools? |
20447 | And what shall I say of Sidney Carton? |
20447 | And why should we take so much pains to free the body, and then enslave the mind? |
20447 | And, after all, is not a noble man, is not a pure woman, the finest revelation we have of God-- if there be one? |
20447 | Are all mediums impostors? |
20447 | Are not parallel railroads an evil? |
20447 | Are not persons allowed to testify in the United States whether they believe in future rewards and punishments or not? |
20447 | Are not religion and morals inseparable? |
20447 | Are not the Catholics the least progressive? |
20447 | Are our workingmen to wear wooden shoes? |
20447 | Are the doctrines of Agnosticism gaining ground, and what, in your opinion, will be the future of the church? |
20447 | Are the fathers and brothers blameless who allow young girls to make coats, cloaks and vests in an atmosphere poisoned by the ignorant and low- bred? |
20447 | Are the millions of Spiritualists deluded? |
20447 | Are there not some human natures so morally weak or diseased that they can not keep from sin without the aid of some sort of religion? |
20447 | Are they in any sense correct? |
20447 | Are they rectifying the error now? |
20447 | Are they sincere-- have they any real basis for their psychological theories? |
20447 | Are we not entering upon the era of our greatest prosperity? |
20447 | Are we really in need of the children born of such parents? |
20447 | Are women becoming freed from the bonds of sectarianism? |
20447 | Are you aware that it has been attempted to show that some money loaned or given him by yourself was really what he purchased the pistol with? |
20447 | Are you getting nearer to or farther away from God, Christianity and the Bible? |
20447 | Are you going to make a formal reply to their sermons? |
20447 | Are you going to take any part in the campaign? |
20447 | Are you in favor of expansion? |
20447 | Are you in favor of the A. P. A.? |
20447 | Are you in favor of the annexation of Canada? |
20447 | Are you in sympathy with the workingmen and their objects? |
20447 | Are you seeking to quit public lecturing on religious questions? |
20447 | Are you still a Republican in political belief? |
20447 | Are you to go on the lecture platform again? |
20447 | Are you willing to give your opinion of the Pope? |
20447 | As Truth can brook no compromises, has it not the same limitations that surround social and domestic hospitality? |
20447 | As a lawyer, will you express an opinion as to the moral and legal responsibility of a victim of alcoholism? |
20447 | Ball and Burchard? |
20447 | Besides, if this woman of whom he speaks was a lady, how did she happen to stay where obscene language was being used? |
20447 | But do n''t you think, Colonel, that the materialistic philosophy, even in the light of your own interpretation, is essentially pessimistic? |
20447 | But do you not think the Greenback movement will help the Democracy to success in 1880? |
20447 | But has the Republican party all the good and the Democratic all the bad? |
20447 | But if it clings to soft money? |
20447 | But if they will not disband? |
20447 | But suppose that the Chinese came to look upon wheat in the same light that other people look upon wheat and its product, bread? |
20447 | But suppose they give the same receptions in the South? |
20447 | But the question arises, What is Christianity? |
20447 | But unless it can be shown that Atheism interferes with the sight, the hearing, or the memory, why should justice shut the door to truth? |
20447 | But what about the Prohibitionists? |
20447 | But what about there being"belief"in Matthew? |
20447 | But what can we say of a marriage where the parties hate each other? |
20447 | But what is the simple assertion of Thomas Carlyle worth? |
20447 | But what would you do if they should make an attempt to arrest you? |
20447 | But who will win? |
20447 | But would n''t it be better for the people if the railroads were managed by the Government as is the Post- Office? |
20447 | But, Colonel, is there no danger of greatly interfering with a woman''s duties as wife and mother? |
20447 | Can any one, by studying geology, find the locality of the great white throne? |
20447 | Can anyone imagine that such a course would add to the joy of Paradise, or even tend to keep one harp in tune? |
20447 | Can anything be more infamous than to endeavor to make a woman, under such circumstances, remain with such a man? |
20447 | Can it be said that a State is"free"that is absolutely governed by the Nation? |
20447 | Can she never sit by her own hearth, with the arms of her children about her neck, and by her side a husband who loves and protects her? |
20447 | Can the good of society require the woman to remain? |
20447 | Can the virtue of others be preserved only by the destruction of her happiness, and by what might be called her perpetual imprisonment? |
20447 | Can these phenomena be considered aside from any connection with, or form of, superstition? |
20447 | Can they do this as long as the Government collects ninety million dollars per annum from that one source? |
20447 | Can you find in the graveyard of nations this epitaph:"Died of a Surplus"? |
20447 | Can you guess as to what the platform in going to contain? |
20447 | Can you offer any explanation of the extraordinary phenomena such as Henry J. Newton has had produced at his own house under his own supervision? |
20447 | Can, or ought, the Liberals and Spiritualists to unite? |
20447 | Christianity certainly fosters charity? |
20447 | Colonel Ingersoll, are you a Socialist? |
20447 | Colonel, are your views of religion based upon the Bible? |
20447 | Colonel, crossing the Atlantic back to America, what do you think of the Greenback movement? |
20447 | Colonel, did you ever kill any game? |
20447 | Colonel, have you read the revised Testament? |
20447 | Colonel, to start with, what do you think of the solid South? |
20447 | Colonel, what do you think about Mr. Cleveland''s Hawaiian policy? |
20447 | Colonel, what do you think of the course the Mayor has pursued toward you in attempting to stop your lecture? |
20447 | Colonel, what is your opinion of Secularism? |
20447 | Did God know how Herod would use his freedom? |
20447 | Did God know what Herod would do? |
20447 | Did God write it? |
20447 | Did he ever mention the quarto in any letter, essay, or in any way? |
20447 | Did he have a copy? |
20447 | Did he know that he would become the villain in the drama of Christ? |
20447 | Did he know that he would cause the children to be slaughtered in his vain efforts to kill the infant Christ? |
20447 | Did he mention the copy in his will? |
20447 | Did the hand that was stretched out to him on the stage of the Academy reach across the chasm which separates orthodoxy from infidelity? |
20447 | Did they write exactly what the Holy Spirit wanted them to write? |
20447 | Did you anticipate a verdict? |
20447 | Did you discuss the matter with him? |
20447 | Did you make this remark as a Christian, or as a lady? |
20447 | Did you read Mr. Courtney''s answer? |
20447 | Did you say these words to illustrate in some faint degree the refining influence upon women of the religion you preach? |
20447 | Do I understand you to imply that there will be a neutral policy, as it were, towards the South? |
20447 | Do liberal books, such as the works of Paine and Infidel scientists sell well? |
20447 | Do many people write to you upon this subject; and what spirit do they manifest? |
20447 | Do n''t you think that some good has been accomplished, some valuable information obtained, by vivisection? |
20447 | Do n''t you think that the pass system is an injustice--that is, that ordinary travelers are taxed for the man who rides on a pass? |
20447 | Do n''t you think the belief of the Agnostic is more satisfactory to the believer than that of the Atheist? |
20447 | Do newspapers to- day exercise as much influence as they did twenty- five years ago? |
20447 | Do not its facts and conclusions prove, if not immortality, at least the continuity of life beyond the grave? |
20447 | Do not the evidences of design in the universe prove a Creator? |
20447 | Do these things really happen? |
20447 | Do they believe that by forcing people to remain together who despise each other they are adding to the purity of the marriage relation? |
20447 | Do they deserve any credit for the course they have taken? |
20447 | Do they forget that people have a choice? |
20447 | Do they not know that all marriage is an outward act, testifying to that which has happened in the heart? |
20447 | Do they not understand something of the human heart, and that true love has always been as pure as the morning star? |
20447 | Do they not, as a rule, give something to deaden pain? |
20447 | Do they sustain any relation except that of hunter and hunted-- that is, of tyrant and victim? |
20447 | Do they, so far as you know, justify his charge? |
20447 | Do you agree with George''s principles? |
20447 | Do you agree with Mr. Carnegie that a college education is of little or no practical value to a man? |
20447 | Do you agree with the Pope in attacking the present governments of Europe and the memories of Mazzini and Saffi? |
20447 | Do you agree with the Pope that:"Sound rules of life must be founded on religion"? |
20447 | Do you apprehend any trouble from the Southern leaders in this closing session of Congress, in attempts to force pernicious legislation? |
20447 | Do you believe Madame Blavatsky does or has done the wonderful things related of her? |
20447 | Do you believe in a God; and, if so, what kind of a God? |
20447 | Do you believe in free text- books in the public schools? |
20447 | Do you believe in socialism? |
20447 | Do you believe in spirit entities, whether manifestible or not? |
20447 | Do you believe in the existence of a Supreme Being? |
20447 | Do you believe in the resurrection of the body? |
20447 | Do you believe that any sane man ever had a vision? |
20447 | Do you believe that the Democratic success was due to the possession of reverse principles? |
20447 | Do you believe that the divorced should be allowed to marry again? |
20447 | Do you believe that the race is growing moral or immoral? |
20447 | Do you believe that the spirit lives as an individual after the body is dead? |
20447 | Do you believe that the world, and all that is in it came by chance? |
20447 | Do you believe that there is such a thing as a miracle, or that there has ever been? |
20447 | Do you believe the people can be made to do without a stimulant? |
20447 | Do you believe the spirits of the dead come back to earth? |
20447 | Do you believe there will ever be a millennium, and if so how will it come about? |
20447 | Do you believe, or disbelieve, in the immortality of the soul? |
20447 | Do you care to say who your choice is for Republican nominee for President in 1888? |
20447 | Do you consider any religion adequate? |
20447 | Do you consider inebriety a disease, or the result of diseased conditions? |
20447 | Do you consider marriage a contract or a sacrament? |
20447 | Do you consider that churches are injurious to the community? |
20447 | Do you consider that society in general has been made better by religious influences? |
20447 | Do you consider the new ballot- law adapted to the needs of our system of elections? |
20447 | Do you consider the religion of Bhagavat Purana of the East as good as the Christian? |
20447 | Do you deny the immortality of the soul? |
20447 | Do you enjoy Shakespeare more in the library than Shakespeare interpreted by actors now on the boards? |
20447 | Do you enjoy lecturing? |
20447 | Do you foresee any danger of centralization in the full enfranchisement of the citizens of Washington? |
20447 | Do you imagine she would condemn Burns or Shelley for that reason? |
20447 | Do you intend making any reply to what she says? |
20447 | Do you know her personally? |
20447 | Do you know that you have been greatly criticized for what you have said on this subject? |
20447 | Do you know the reason she applied the epithet? |
20447 | Do you know this from experience? |
20447 | Do you not believe that such a man as Robert Dale Owen was sincere? |
20447 | Do you not think Arthur has grown and is a greater man than when he was elected? |
20447 | Do you not think that capital is entitled to protection? |
20447 | Do you not think that the Bible has consolation for those who have lost their friends? |
20447 | Do you not think that these men had a fair trial? |
20447 | Do you not think there are some dangerous tendencies in Liberalism? |
20447 | Do you really think that the church is losing ground? |
20447 | Do you really think, Colonel, that the country has just passed through a crisis? |
20447 | Do you regard him as more popular now than ever before? |
20447 | Do you regard it as a religion? |
20447 | Do you regard the Briggs trial as any evidence of the growth of Liberalism in the church itself? |
20447 | Do you say this because your reason is convinced that it is? |
20447 | Do you still believe that suicide is justifiable? |
20447 | Do you sympathize with the Socialists, or do you think that the success of George would promote socialism? |
20447 | Do you take much interest in politics, Colonel Ingersoll? |
20447 | Do you think Cleveland will put any Southern men in his Cabinet? |
20447 | Do you think mankind is drifting away from the supernatural? |
20447 | Do you think resumption will work out all right? |
20447 | Do you think so? |
20447 | Do you think that Cleveland''s course as to appointments has strengthened him with the people? |
20447 | Do you think that Liberals should undertake a reform in the marriage and divorce laws and relations? |
20447 | Do you think that Mr. George would make a good mayor? |
20447 | Do you think that Senator Logan will be able to deliver this State to the Grant movement according to the understood plan? |
20447 | Do you think that bigotry would persecute now for religious opinion''s sake, if it were not for the law and the press? |
20447 | Do you think that eloquence is potent in a convention to set aside the practical work of politics and politicians? |
20447 | Do you think that evolution and revealed religion are compatible-- that is to say, can a man be an evolutionist and a Christian? |
20447 | Do you think that is so, Mr. Ingersoll? |
20447 | Do you think that men are naturally criminals and naturally virtuous? |
20447 | Do you think that the American people are seeking after truth, or do they want to be amused? |
20447 | Do you think that the Knights of Labor will cut any material figure in this election? |
20447 | Do you think that the era of good feeling between the North and the South has set in with the appointment of ex- rebels to the Cabinet? |
20447 | Do you think that the friends of Gresham would support Blaine if he should be nominated? |
20447 | Do you think that the marriage institution is held in less respect by Infidels than by Christians? |
20447 | Do you think that the moral atmosphere will improve with the political atmosphere? |
20447 | Do you think that the nominations have been well received throughout the United States? |
20447 | Do you think that the old parties are about to die? |
20447 | Do you think that the orthodox church gets its ideas of the Sabbath from the teachings of Christ? |
20447 | Do you think that the political features of the incoming administration will differ from the present? |
20447 | Do you think that the vivisectionists do their work without anesthetics? |
20447 | Do you think that there is any danger of war? |
20447 | Do you think the Christian religion has made the world better? |
20447 | Do you think the President should have stated his policy in Boston the other day? |
20447 | Do you think the Republican party should take a decided stand on the temperance issue? |
20447 | Do you think the South will ever equal or surpass the West in point of prosperity? |
20447 | Do you think the election has brought about any particular change in the issues that will be involved in the campaign of 1880? |
20447 | Do you think the investigations of the Republicans of the Danville and Copiah massacres will benefit them? |
20447 | Do you think the law in the next decade will permit the affirmative oath? |
20447 | Do you think the laws governing divorce ought to be changed? |
20447 | Do you think the people lead the newspapers, or do the newspapers lead them? |
20447 | Do you think the use of the word sheol will make any difference to the preachers? |
20447 | Do you think there will be a second coming? |
20447 | Do you think we are going to have war with Spain? |
20447 | Do you think young men need a college education to get along? |
20447 | Do you uphold the Anarchists? |
20447 | Do you wish to say anything as to the reasoning of Justice Harlan on the rights of colored people on railways, in inns and theatres? |
20447 | Do you, in any way, see any reason or foundation for the severe and bitter criticisms made against the Stalwart leaders in connection with this crime? |
20447 | Does Christianity advance or retard civilization? |
20447 | Does exposure do any good? |
20447 | Does he compare any other Infidels with Christians? |
20447 | Does it point with pride to the Mexican fiasco, or does it rely entirely upon the great fishery triumph? |
20447 | Does not a Creator need a Creator as much as the thing we think has been created? |
20447 | Does not a designer need a design as much as a design needs a designer? |
20447 | Does not the Government feed the mob spirit-- the lynch spirit? |
20447 | Does not the mob follow the example set by the Government? |
20447 | Does the protective tariff cheapen the prices of commodities to the laboring man? |
20447 | Does the question of the inspiration of Scriptures affect the beauty and benefits of Christianity here and hereafter? |
20447 | Dr. Abbott, will tend to soften the sentiment of the orthodox churches against the stage? |
20447 | Dr. Banks stand against a circus? |
20447 | Dr. Fulton? |
20447 | Dr. Jewett before the Methodist ministers''meeting? |
20447 | Dr. Parkhurst, of New York, justifiable, and do you think that it had a tendency to help morality? |
20447 | During the recent presidential campaign did any clergymen denounce you for your teachings, that you are aware of? |
20447 | Father Lambert''s"Notes on Ingersoll,"and if so, what have you to say of them or in reply to them? |
20447 | From your knowledge of the religious tendency in the United States, how long will orthodox religion be popular? |
20447 | Had she then good cause for divorce? |
20447 | Had they been in that country, with their present ideas, what would they have said? |
20447 | Has Spiritualism, through its mediums, ever told the world anything useful, or added to the store of the world''s knowledge, or relieved its burdens? |
20447 | Has any church succeeded as well as the Catholic? |
20447 | Has any orthodox minister in the year 1898 given just one paragraph to literature? |
20447 | Has not Spiritualism added to the world''s stock of hope? |
20447 | Has not the Democracy injured itself irretrievably by permitting the free trade element to rule it? |
20447 | Has not the Republican party trouble enough with the spirituous to let the spiritual alone? |
20447 | Has not the married woman the right of self- defence? |
20447 | Has society any interest in forcing women to live with men they hate? |
20447 | Has the Christian religion changed in theory of late years, Colonel Ingersoll? |
20447 | Has the woman whose rights have been outraged no right to build another home? |
20447 | Has there ever been found a line from any play or sonnet in his handwriting? |
20447 | Have n''t you just the faintest glimmer of a hope that in some future state you will meet and be reunited to those who are dear to you in this? |
20447 | Have you any decided opinions on that subject? |
20447 | Have you any objection to being interviewed as to your ideas of Grant, and his position before the people? |
20447 | Have you any objection to stating your real opinion in regard to the matter? |
20447 | Have you any objections to giving your present views of the question? |
20447 | Have you been invited to lecture in Europe? |
20447 | Have you ever been interfered with before in delivering Sunday lectures? |
20447 | Have you ever been misrepresented in interviews? |
20447 | Have you ever had any similar experiences before? |
20447 | Have you found any other work, sacred or profane, which you regard as more reliable? |
20447 | Have you given them reason to believe so? |
20447 | Have you had any experience with spirit photography, spirit physicians, or spirit lawyers? |
20447 | Have you investigated Spiritualism, and what has been your experience? |
20447 | Have you noticed a great change in public sentiment in the last three or four years? |
20447 | Have you read Miss Cleveland''s book? |
20447 | Have you read Nordau''s"Degeneracy"? |
20447 | Have you read the replies of the clergy to your recent lecture in this city on"What Must we do to be Saved?" |
20447 | Have you seen him? |
20447 | Have you seen or known of any Theosophical or esoteric marvels? |
20447 | Have you seen the attacks made upon you by certain ministers of New York, published in the_ Herald_ last Sunday? |
20447 | Have you seen the published report that Dorsey claims to have paid you one hundred thousand dollars for your services in the Star Route Cases? |
20447 | Have you seen the recent clerical strictures upon your doctrines? |
20447 | He did not say: Why have you called me from another world? |
20447 | He left a library, was there a copy of the plays in it? |
20447 | He would ask himself the question:"Is it possible that this is a divine institution? |
20447 | How about Illinois? |
20447 | How about lying, Colonel? |
20447 | How about that"personal and confidential letter"? |
20447 | How are they to be prevented? |
20447 | How are we to do away with crime? |
20447 | How are we to do away with pauperism? |
20447 | How are we to do away with want and misery in every civilized country? |
20447 | How are you getting along with Delaware? |
20447 | How are you on the arbitration treaty? |
20447 | How can any one come to the conclusion that the Catholic Church has been a source of truth, a source of intellectual light? |
20447 | How can anyone believe that the church of John Calvin has been a source of truth? |
20447 | How can the coffin or the grave be purchased? |
20447 | How could the church live a minute unless somebody attended to the affairs of this world? |
20447 | How could there be a disaster with a vast surplus in the treasury? |
20447 | How did Guiteau impress you and what have you remembered, Colonel, of his efforts to reply to your lectures? |
20447 | How did he walk? |
20447 | How did taxation become necessary? |
20447 | How did the card of Dr. Thomas strike you? |
20447 | How do I account for the defeat of Mr. Blaine? |
20447 | How do the clergy generally treat you? |
20447 | How do we do away with larceny? |
20447 | How do you account for Mr. Blaine''s action in allowing his name to go before the convention at Minneapolis in 1892? |
20447 | How do you account for the defeat of Mr. Blaine? |
20447 | How do you account for the results of the recent elections? |
20447 | How do you account for these attacks? |
20447 | How do you answer the argument, or the fact, that the church is constantly increasing, and that there are now four hundred millions of Christians? |
20447 | How do you enjoy staying in Chicago? |
20447 | How do you explain the figure:"His soul, like Mazeppa, was lashed naked to the wild horse of every fear and love and hate"? |
20447 | How do you like the administration of President Hayes? |
20447 | How do you regard the action of Bismarck in returning the Lasker resolutions? |
20447 | How do you regard the opposition of the local clergy and of the Bourbon Democracy to enfranchising the citizens of the District? |
20447 | How do you regard the present political situation? |
20447 | How do you regard the religious question in politics? |
20447 | How do you regard the situation in Ohio? |
20447 | How do you stand on the money question? |
20447 | How do you stand with the clergymen, and what is their opinion of you and of your views? |
20447 | How do you think he will treat the South? |
20447 | How does the literature of to- day compare with that of the first half of the century, in your opinion? |
20447 | How does the next campaign look? |
20447 | How does the religious state of California compare with the rest of the Union? |
20447 | How does this happen in a Government where church and state are not united? |
20447 | How good does a father have to be, in order to put his son under obligation to defend his blunders? |
20447 | How has the Democratic party"averted disaster"? |
20447 | How have the recently expressed opinions of our local clergy impressed you? |
20447 | How have you acquired the art of growing old gracefully? |
20447 | How is it possible for the virtues to grow in the damp and darkened basements? |
20447 | How is this? |
20447 | How many clergymen would it take to command, at regular prices, the audiences that attend the presentation of Wagner''s operas? |
20447 | How many in England? |
20447 | How much importance do you attach to the present prohibition movement? |
20447 | How should the dispute be settled? |
20447 | How soon do you think we would have the millennium if every person attended strictly to his own business? |
20447 | How then can she hope to conquer this country? |
20447 | How were you pleased with the Paine meeting here, and its results? |
20447 | How will the Democratic victory affect the colored people in the South? |
20447 | How would an honest Christian minister console the widow and the fatherless children? |
20447 | How would he dare to tell what he claims to be truth in the presence of the living? |
20447 | I agree with the Presbyterian General Assembly, if the creed is true, why should anyone try to amuse himself? |
20447 | I believe it was Confucius who said:"How should I know anything about another world when I know so little of this?" |
20447 | I said to him:"Is that honest?" |
20447 | I see that Mr. Beecher is coming round to your views on theology? |
20447 | I see that some one has been charging that Judge Gresham is an Infidel? |
20447 | I see that some people are objecting to your taking any part in politics, on account of your religious opinion? |
20447 | I see that you are frequently charged with disrespect toward your parents-- with lack of reverence for the opinions of your father? |
20447 | I see that you say that one of the great issues in the coming campaign will be civil rights; what do you mean by that? |
20447 | I should be glad if you would tell me what you think the differences are between English and American oratory? |
20447 | I understand that there was some trouble in connection with your lecture in Victoria, B. C. What are the facts? |
20447 | I was told that you came to St. Louis on your wedding trip some thirty years ago and went to Shaw''s Garden? |
20447 | I would like to ask him if the Old Testament is in favor of religious toleration? |
20447 | I would like to ask if there is a Christian in the world who would not be overjoyed to find that every one of these passages was an interpolation? |
20447 | I would like to ask you why, in your opinion as a student of history, has the Protestant Church always been so bitterly opposed to the theatre? |
20447 | I would like to have a positive expression of your views as to a future state? |
20447 | I would like to know if that is so? |
20447 | I would like to know something of the history of your religious views? |
20447 | I would rather be deceived than killed, would n''t you? |
20447 | If Blaine had been nominated at Cincinnati in 1876 would he have made a stronger candidate than Hayes did? |
20447 | If English actors are so much better than American, how is it that an American star is supported by the English? |
20447 | If God allows injustice to triumph here, why not there? |
20447 | If I asked for proofs for your theory, what would you furnish? |
20447 | If Mr. Mills has given a true statement with regard to the measure proposed by him, what relation does that measure bear to the President''s message? |
20447 | If Robert Elsmere''s views were commonly adopted what would be the effect? |
20447 | If a community violates that law, why should not the individual? |
20447 | If a man is rich why should he have any pension? |
20447 | If at that time there was nothing in existence but himself, how could he have exerted any force? |
20447 | If free trade will not reduce wages what will? |
20447 | If he allows rascality to succeed in this world, why not in the next? |
20447 | If he allows the innocent to suffer here, why not there? |
20447 | If he can stand it, I can; and why should there be any malice on the subject? |
20447 | If it is called upon for counsel and advice, how can it give advice without knowing the facts and circumstances? |
20447 | If its creed is not true, if its doctrines are mistakes, if its dogmas are monstrous delusions, how can it be said to have been a source of truth? |
20447 | If not, in what particulars does it require amendment? |
20447 | If she has the right to leave, has she the right to get a new house? |
20447 | If she owes no duty to her husband; if it is impossible for her to feel toward him any thrill of affection, what is there of marriage left? |
20447 | If so do you intend to accept the"call"? |
20447 | If so, what do you think of it? |
20447 | If the Democratic party makes anti- imperialism the prominent plank in its platform, what effect will it have on the party''s chance for success? |
20447 | If the Jews did not believe in immortality, how do you account for the allusions made to witches and wizards and things of that nature? |
20447 | If the President feels that he is bound to carry out the civil- service law, ought not the Senate to feel in the same way? |
20447 | If the colored people have to depend upon the State for protection, and the Federal Government can not interfere, why say any more about it? |
20447 | If the dead were not a Christian, what then? |
20447 | If the man is sick, if one of the children dies, how can doctors and medicines be paid for? |
20447 | If the man was in the army a day or a month, and was uninjured, and can make his own living, or has enough, why should he have a pension? |
20447 | If the ordinance exempts scientific, literary and historical lectures, as it is said it does, will not that exempt you? |
20447 | If the woman is not in fault, does society insist that her life should be wrecked? |
20447 | If there is anything whatever in this argument, is it not that the traffic pays a bribe of ninety million dollars a year for its life? |
20447 | If there is no beatitude, or heaven, how do you account for the continual struggle in every natural heart for its own betterment? |
20447 | If there is only punishment in this world, will not some escape punishment? |
20447 | If they are higher here than in foreign countries, the question arises, why are they higher? |
20447 | If they have done good, could they not have done just as much if they had used anesthetics? |
20447 | If they have the right to compel the President to choose from four, why not from three, or two? |
20447 | If this man has a wife and a couple of children how can the family live? |
20447 | If we should agree to- morrow to put God in the Constitution, the question would then be: Which God? |
20447 | If you should write your last sentence on religious topics what would be your closing? |
20447 | If you take away the idea of eternal punishment, how do you propose to restrain men; in what way will you influence conduct for good? |
20447 | If you were to compare individual English and American orators-- recent or living orators in particular-- what would you say? |
20447 | If you were to witness phenomena that seemed inexplicable by natural laws, would you be inclined to favor Spiritualism? |
20447 | If, again, you say the church is a source of authority, why do you say so? |
20447 | In other words, is not this simply a circle of human ignorance? |
20447 | In other words, who has been idle? |
20447 | In the next presidential contest what will be the main issue? |
20447 | In this connection there has been so much said about the art of acting-- what is your idea as to that art? |
20447 | In view of all this, where do you think the presidential candidate will come from? |
20447 | In what estimation do you hold Charles Watts and Samuel Putnam, and what do you think of their labors in the cause of Freethought? |
20447 | In what geologic period was the great white throne formed? |
20447 | In what light do you regard the Chinaman? |
20447 | In what light do you regard the Philippines as an addition to the territory of the United States? |
20447 | In what section of the country do you find the most liberality? |
20447 | In your experience as a lawyer what was the most unique case in which you were ever engaged? |
20447 | In your opinion, what relation do Liberalism and Prohibition bear to each other? |
20447 | Is Agnosticism gaining ground in the United States? |
20447 | Is Chicago as liberal, intellectually, as New York? |
20447 | Is Christianity really gaining a strong hold on the masses? |
20447 | Is England expected to give us another Shakespeare? |
20447 | Is Judge Hoadly to be attacked because he exercises the liberty that he gives to others? |
20447 | Is Spiritualism a religion or a truth? |
20447 | Is a State free that can make no treaty with any other State or country-- that is not permitted to coin money or to declare war? |
20447 | Is he to rely for meat, on poaching, and then is he to be transported to some far colony for the crime of catching a rabbit? |
20447 | Is his influence upon the world good or otherwise? |
20447 | Is it a fact that there are thousands of clergymen in the country whom you would fear to meet in fair debate? |
20447 | Is it because we lack men of genius or because our life is too material that no truly great American plays have been written? |
20447 | Is it consistent to say that a design can not exist without a designer, but that a designer can? |
20447 | Is it desirable to have families raised under such circumstances? |
20447 | Is it ever right to lie? |
20447 | Is it necessary to lose your freedom in order to retain your character, in order to be womanly or manly? |
20447 | Is it not a Republican administration that is at present investigating the alleged evils of trusts? |
20447 | Is it not a fact that you possess the confidence and friendship of some of the most respected leaders of that party? |
20447 | Is it not strange that, with one exception, the most notable operas written since Wagner are by Italian composers instead of German? |
20447 | Is it not the duty of society to protect her from her husband? |
20447 | Is it not the duty of the Senate to see to it that the President does not, with its advice and consent, violate the civil service law? |
20447 | Is it not the fact that punishments have grown less and less severe for many years past? |
20447 | Is it possible for impudence to go further? |
20447 | Is it possible that God has so made the world that the threat of eternal punishment is necessary for the preservation of society? |
20447 | Is it possible that God''s last witness died with Cicero? |
20447 | Is it possible that an infinitely wise and good God would insist on this poor, helpless woman remaining with the wild beast, her husband? |
20447 | Is it possible that he is a kind of vulture that sees only the carrion of another? |
20447 | Is it possible that his companions would object to his being paid for honest work in the penitentiary? |
20447 | Is it possible that human nature stands on such slippery ground? |
20447 | Is it possible that logic stands paralyzed in the presence of paternal absurdity? |
20447 | Is it possible that the superior support the inferior? |
20447 | Is it possible that, after preachers have had the field for eighteen hundred years, the way to make money is to attack the clergy? |
20447 | Is it to the interest of a husband and wife to live together after love has perished and when they hate each other? |
20447 | Is it true that you were once threatened with a criminal prosecution for libel on religion? |
20447 | Is it true, as rumored, that you intend to leave Washington and reside in New York? |
20447 | Is it true? |
20447 | Is it your experience that public men usually ride on passes? |
20447 | Is not Christianity and the belief in God a check upon mankind in general and thus a good thing in itself? |
20447 | Is not a pleasant illusion preferable to a dreary truth-- a future life being in question? |
20447 | Is not the ballot an assurance to the laboring man that he can get fair treatment from his employer? |
20447 | Is not the"lake of fire and brimstone"an obsolete issue? |
20447 | Is not this definition-- a definition given in hatred-- a perfect definition of every monarchy and of nearly every government in the world? |
20447 | Is she entitled to a divorce now? |
20447 | Is such a man seeking the good of his fellow- men? |
20447 | Is that true which succeeds to- day, or next year, or in the next century? |
20447 | Is the Age of Chivalry dead? |
20447 | Is the Republican party dead? |
20447 | Is the consent of the Senate a mere matter of form? |
20447 | Is the noun"United States"singular or plural, as you use English? |
20447 | Is the religious movement of which you are the chief exponent spreading? |
20447 | Is the spirit of patriotism declining in America? |
20447 | Is the woman still bound? |
20447 | Is there a more wonderful character in all the realm of fiction? |
20447 | Is there a probability that Mr. Sherman will be retained in the Cabinet? |
20447 | Is there a woman in the world who would not shrink from this herself? |
20447 | Is there any better Mrs. Malaprop than Mrs. Drew, and better Sir Anthony than John Gilbert? |
20447 | Is there any better or more ennobling belief than Christianity; if so, what is it? |
20447 | Is there any morality in this-- any virtue? |
20447 | Is there any possibility of your coming to England, and, I need hardly add, of your coming to speak? |
20447 | Is there any remedy? |
20447 | Is there any split in the solid South? |
20447 | Is there any such thing as mind- reading or thought- transference? |
20447 | Is there any such thing as telepathy? |
20447 | Is there anything else bearing upon the question at issue or that would make good reading, that I have forgotten, that you would like to say? |
20447 | Is there anything in the charge that the Republican party seeks to change our form of government by gradual centralization? |
20447 | Is there anything new about religion since you were last here? |
20447 | Is there no future for her? |
20447 | Is there no mutuality? |
20447 | Is there no other applicable to this case? |
20447 | Is there no truth in the statement, then? |
20447 | Is this all that man can do with the assistance of God? |
20447 | Is this because priests instinctively know priests? |
20447 | Is this because you regard Washington as the pleasantest and most advantageous city for a residence? |
20447 | Is this intended as a slander against me or the ministers? |
20447 | Is this the best?" |
20447 | Is this trifling experiment of any importance? |
20447 | Is this true? |
20447 | Is what we call civilization a sham? |
20447 | Is your objection based on any religious grounds, or on any prejudice against the ceremony because of its religious origin; or what is your objection? |
20447 | Is your theory, Colonel, the result of investigation of the subject? |
20447 | It is claimed that an amendment to the law, such as is desired, will interfere with the growth of art? |
20447 | It is possible that our civilization to- day rests upon the price of alcohol, and that, should the price be reduced, we would all go down together? |
20447 | It is reported that you are the son of a Presbyterian minister? |
20447 | It is said that in the past four or five years you have changed or modified your views upon the subject of religion; is this so? |
20447 | It is said, Colonel Ingersoll, that you are for Henry George? |
20447 | It seems to me that reason should come first, because if you say the Bible is a source of authority, why do you say it? |
20447 | Judging by your criticism of mankind, Colonel, in your recent lecture, you have not found his condition very satisfactory? |
20447 | Judging from what has been told you of his utterances and actions, what kind of a man would you take him to be? |
20447 | MUST RELIGION GO? |
20447 | Might not the rich do much? |
20447 | Mr. Banks, and what do you think of what he said? |
20447 | Mr. Crafts stated that you were in the habit of swearing in company and before your family? |
20447 | Mr. Ingersoll, do you think that Mr. Blaine wanted the nomination in 1884, when he got it? |
20447 | Mr. Ingersoll, what do you think defeated Blaine for the nomination in 1876? |
20447 | Mr. Lansing? |
20447 | Mr. Sherman expresses the opinion that if he had had the"moral strength"of the Ohio delegation in his support he would have been nominated? |
20447 | Must he be reduced to the diet of the old country? |
20447 | Must he sell his birthright for the sake of being a doorkeeper? |
20447 | Must he stand upon an exact par with the laborers of Belgium and England and Germany, not only, but with the slaves and serfs of other countries? |
20447 | Must she be an outcast forever? |
20447 | Must they be preserved to please God? |
20447 | Must this woman, full of kindness, affection and health, be chained until death releases her? |
20447 | Must we depend on police or statesmen? |
20447 | Must we wait for mobs to inaugurate reform? |
20447 | Not even in the case of a Democratic victory? |
20447 | Now that a lull has come in politics, I thought I would come and see what is going on in the religious world? |
20447 | Now, as to the other part of the question,"Is not a belief in God a check upon mankind in general?" |
20447 | Now, if a State refuses to do anything upon the subject, what is the citizen to do? |
20447 | Now, if the man turns out to be a wild beast, if he destroys the happiness of the wife, why should she remain his victim? |
20447 | Now, is it possible that he gets additional rights by immigration? |
20447 | Now, is there not some better organization of society that will help in this trouble? |
20447 | Now, let me ask, what consolation could a Christian minister have given to his family? |
20447 | Now, the question arises, what is humane about this society? |
20447 | Now, what is morality? |
20447 | Of course men may conspire to quit work, but how is it to be proved? |
20447 | Of his last ride, holding the poor girl by the hand? |
20447 | Of his last walk? |
20447 | Of what possible use is it to know how long a dog or horse can live without food? |
20447 | Of what use can it be to take a dog, tie him down and cut out one of his kidneys to see if he can live with the other? |
20447 | Of what use is it to be false to ourselves? |
20447 | Of what use is it to give a man two or three dollars a month? |
20447 | Perhaps you will tell me your methods as a speaker, for I''m sure it would be interesting to know them? |
20447 | R. Heber Newton? |
20447 | Samuel Jones? |
20447 | Samuel did not pretend that he had been living, or that he was alive, but asked:"Why hast thou disquieted me?" |
20447 | Shall you attend the Albany Freethought Convention? |
20447 | Shall you sue the Opera House management for breach of contract? |
20447 | Should Liberals vote on Liberal issues? |
20447 | Should a woman be compelled to remain the wife of a man who hates and abuses her, and whom she loathes? |
20447 | Should a woman be punished for having married? |
20447 | Should not the museums and art galleries be thrown open to the workingmen free on Sunday? |
20447 | Should the drama teach lessons and discuss social problems, or should it give simply intellectual pleasure and furnish amusement? |
20447 | Should we not have other bills to colonize the Germans, the Swedes, the Irish, and then, may be, another bill to drive the Chinese into the sea? |
20447 | Should we wait and crush by brute force or should we prevent? |
20447 | Since you expounded your justification of suicide, Colonel, I believe you have had some cases of suicide laid at your door? |
20447 | So the first question is, What is a miracle? |
20447 | Somebody asked Confucius about another world, and his reply was:"How should I know anything about another world when I know so little of this?" |
20447 | Still, I suppose we can count on you as a Republican? |
20447 | Suppose God should answer the prayers and convert me, how would he bring the conversion about? |
20447 | Suppose a man has a bad father; is he bound by the bad father''s opinion, when he is satisfied that the opinion is wrong? |
20447 | Suppose the dog can live a week or a month or a year, what then? |
20447 | Suppose the father changes his opinion; what then? |
20447 | Suppose the father thinks one way, and the mother the other; what are the children to do? |
20447 | Suppose they arrest you what will you do? |
20447 | Suppose we had free trade to- day, what would become of the manufacturing interests to- morrow? |
20447 | Suppose, as a matter of fact, the Devil did get hold of it; what part of the Bible would Mr. Beecher pick out as having been written by the Devil? |
20447 | Supposing this to have been accomplished, what effect is it likely to have on the future of creeds? |
20447 | Surely, there is no need for the Legislature of Pennsylvania to protect an infinite God, and why should the Bible be protected by law? |
20447 | Swing? |
20447 | That is a perfectly reasonable question, is it not, Colonel Ingersoll? |
20447 | That is no explanation, and, after admitting that we do not know and that we can not explain, why should we proceed to explain? |
20447 | The Republicans are making all the mistakes they can, and the only question now is, Can the Democrats make more? |
20447 | The Senate is almost tied; do you think that any Republicans are likely to vote in the interest of the President''s policy at this session? |
20447 | The great objection to your teaching urged by your enemies is that you constantly tear down, and never build up? |
20447 | The great questions are: Will man ever be sufficiently civilized to be honest? |
20447 | The idea expressed is: I was asleep, why did you disturb that repose which should be eternal? |
20447 | The issue is fairly made-- shall American labor be protected, or must the American laborer take his chances with the labor market of the world? |
20447 | The minister asks:"What right have you to hope? |
20447 | The ministers are always talking about worldly people, and yet, were it not for worldly people, who would pay the salary? |
20447 | The other part is how cheaply can we manufacture it? |
20447 | The people shouted:"If all is illusion, what made you run away?" |
20447 | The question arises, What is Christianity? |
20447 | The question is, is it correct? |
20447 | The question ought not to be,"Has this been sworn to?" |
20447 | The real question is, what do they stand for? |
20447 | Then I assume that you and Mr. Beecher have made up? |
20447 | Then you do not deny that you received such an enormous fee? |
20447 | Then you only consider the Greenback movement a temporary thing? |
20447 | Then you would not undertake to say what becomes of man after death? |
20447 | Then your present convictions began to form themselves while you were listening to the teachings of religion as taught by your father? |
20447 | Then, if there is no objection to a third term, what about a fourth? |
20447 | They intended to do what they did, and why should the South not be recognized? |
20447 | Thousands of mistakes are made-- are these mistakes sacred? |
20447 | Tilden? |
20447 | To what extent does it harden the community for the Government to take life? |
20447 | To what stratum does it belong? |
20447 | Under a Federal Constitution guaranteeing civil and religious liberty, are the so- called"Blue Laws"constitutional? |
20447 | Upon this question what does our party say? |
20447 | Was Lincoln an orthodox Christian? |
20447 | Was it extemporaneous? |
20447 | Was it the result of his hatred of the Jews? |
20447 | Was not Mr. Jarvis right in standing by the law? |
20447 | Was the tragedy of the Garden of Eden a success? |
20447 | Was there any ground to expect aid or any different action on Arthur''s part? |
20447 | Well, Colonel, is the world growing better or worse? |
20447 | Well, Colonel, what are you up to? |
20447 | Well, what do you think of the religious revival system generally? |
20447 | Well, what does inspiration mean? |
20447 | Were the abolitionists all believers in the inspiration of the Bible? |
20447 | Were the founders of the party-- the men who gave it heart and brain-- conspicuous for piety? |
20447 | Were you an admirer of Lord Beaconsfield? |
20447 | What God are we to have in the Constitution? |
20447 | What about Bayard and Hancock as candidates? |
20447 | What about Beecher''s sermons on"Evolution"? |
20447 | What about Henry George''s books? |
20447 | What about Indiana? |
20447 | What about Zola''s trial and conviction? |
20447 | What about the other ministers? |
20447 | What advice would you give to a young man who was ambitious to become a successful public speaker or orator? |
20447 | What are Mr. Blaine''s chances for the presidency? |
20447 | What are such lives worth? |
20447 | What are the chances for the Republican party in 1888? |
20447 | What are the consolations of the Church of England? |
20447 | What are the most glaring mistakes of Cleveland''s administration? |
20447 | What are the reasons for and against the adoption of the policy they propose? |
20447 | What are you going to do to be saved? |
20447 | What are your conclusions as to the future of the Democratic party? |
20447 | What are your feelings in reference to idealism on the stage? |
20447 | What are your opinions on the woman''s suffrage question? |
20447 | What are your present views on theology? |
20447 | What are your views as to a third term? |
20447 | What are your views, generally expressed, on the tariff? |
20447 | What assurance has the American laborer that he will not be ultimately swamped by foreign immigration? |
20447 | What attributes should an actor have to be really great? |
20447 | What business is it of theirs who believes or disbelieves in the religion of the day? |
20447 | What causes operated for the Republican success in Iowa? |
20447 | What comfort can the orthodox clergyman give to the widow of an honest unbeliever? |
20447 | What could be more idiotic, absurd, childish, than the duel between Boulanger and Floquet? |
20447 | What could by any possibility be done? |
20447 | What did God mean when he said, If a man strike his servant so he dies, he should not be punished, because his servant was his money? |
20447 | What did you do on your European trip, Colonel? |
20447 | What did you think of the American display? |
20447 | What did you think of the late Joseph Medill? |
20447 | What did you think of them, Colonel? |
20447 | What do recent exhibitions in this city, of scenes from the life of Christ, indicate with regard to the tendencies of modern art? |
20447 | What do they care about the coachman''s soul? |
20447 | What do they care for the souls of cooks? |
20447 | What do they say of natural modesty? |
20447 | What do you base your views upon? |
20447 | What do you believe about the immortality of the soul? |
20447 | What do you believe to be his position in regard to the presidency? |
20447 | What do you mean by this? |
20447 | What do you regard as the greatest of all themes in poetry and song? |
20447 | What do you regard as the result of your lectures? |
20447 | What do you say to that? |
20447 | What do you say? |
20447 | What do you think Cleveland''s chances are in New York? |
20447 | What do you think about prize- fighting anyway? |
20447 | What do you think about the recent election, and what will be its effect upon political matters and the issues and candidates of 1880? |
20447 | What do you think as to the presidential race? |
20447 | What do you think defeated Mr. Blaine at the polls in 1884? |
20447 | What do you think generally of the revival of the bloody shirt? |
20447 | What do you think of Atkinson''s speech? |
20447 | What do you think of Beecher? |
20447 | What do you think of Bellamy? |
20447 | What do you think of Bishop Doane''s advocacy of free rum as a solution of the liquor problem? |
20447 | What do you think of Cleveland''s message? |
20447 | What do you think of England''s Poet Laureate, Alfred Austin? |
20447 | What do you think of General Washington? |
20447 | What do you think of Governor Roosevelt''s decision in the case of Mrs. Place? |
20447 | What do you think of Hall Caine''s recent efforts to bring about a closer union between the stage and pulpit? |
20447 | What do you think of Henry George for mayor? |
20447 | What do you think of Justice Harlan''s dissenting opinion in the Civil Rights case? |
20447 | What do you think of Madame Blavatsky and her school of Theosophists? |
20447 | What do you think of McKinley''s inaugural? |
20447 | What do you think of Mr. Cleveland''s Cabinet? |
20447 | What do you think of Mr. Conkling''s course? |
20447 | What do you think of Mr. Mills''Fourth of July speech on his bill? |
20447 | What do you think of Niagara Falls? |
20447 | What do you think of Pope? |
20447 | What do you think of Senator Sherman''s book-- especially the part about Garfield? |
20447 | What do you think of Wendell Phillips as an orator? |
20447 | What do you think of civil service reform? |
20447 | What do you think of him as an author? |
20447 | What do you think of international marriages, as between titled foreigners and American heiresses? |
20447 | What do you think of newspaper interviewing? |
20447 | What do you think of political parties, Colonel? |
20447 | What do you think of prohibition, and what do you think of its success in this State? |
20447 | What do you think of the Buckner Bill for the colonization of the negroes in Mexico? |
20447 | What do you think of the Chilian insult to the United States flag? |
20447 | What do you think of the Congress of Religions, to be held in Chicago during the World''s Fair? |
20447 | What do you think of the Democratic nominations? |
20447 | What do you think of the Democratic platform? |
20447 | What do you think of the French drama as compared with the English, morally and artistically considered? |
20447 | What do you think of the Mormon question? |
20447 | What do you think of the Pre- Millennial Conference that was held in New York City recently? |
20447 | What do you think of the Theosophists? |
20447 | What do you think of the action of Congress on Fitz John Porter? |
20447 | What do you think of the action of the Presbyterian General Assembly at Detroit, and what effect do you think it will have on religious growth? |
20447 | What do you think of the administration of President Cleveland? |
20447 | What do you think of the efficacy or the propriety of punishing criminals by solitary confinement? |
20447 | What do you think of the income tax as a step toward the accomplishment of what you desire? |
20447 | What do you think of the influence of the press on religion? |
20447 | What do you think of the influence of women in politics? |
20447 | What do you think of the investigation of the Department of Justice now going on? |
20447 | What do you think of the law of 1860? |
20447 | What do you think of the new legislation in the State changing the death penalty to death by electricity? |
20447 | What do you think of the new woman? |
20447 | What do you think of the policy of nominating Blaine in 1888, as has been proposed? |
20447 | What do you think of the political outlook? |
20447 | What do you think of the prohibitory movement on general principles? |
20447 | What do you think of the prospects of Liberalism in this country? |
20447 | What do you think of the recent opinion of the Supreme Court touching the rights of the colored man? |
20447 | What do you think of the result in Ohio? |
20447 | What do you think of the revision of the Westminster creed? |
20447 | What do you think of the sacredness of the Sabbath? |
20447 | What do you think of the service pension movement? |
20447 | What do you think of the signs of the times so far as the campaign has progressed? |
20447 | What do you think of the tendency of newspapers is at present? |
20447 | What do you think of the treatment of the actor by society in his social relations? |
20447 | What do you think of the trial of the Chicago Anarchists and their chances for a new trial? |
20447 | What do you think of the use he has made of the Dred Scott decision? |
20447 | What do you think of this? |
20447 | What do you think of"Spiritualism,"as it is popularly termed? |
20447 | What do you think was the main cause of the Republican sweep? |
20447 | What do you think will be the particular issue of the coming campaign? |
20447 | What do you think, Colonel, of the Cuban question? |
20447 | What does our party say? |
20447 | What does the Republican party propose? |
20447 | What does the word"extended"mean? |
20447 | What does this mean? |
20447 | What effect has the protective tariff on the condition of labor in this country? |
20447 | What effect has the woman''s suffrage movement had on the breadwinners of the country? |
20447 | What effect has unlimited immigration on the wages of women? |
20447 | What effect, if any, would the complete franchise to our citizens have upon real estate and business in Washington? |
20447 | What essentially American idea does he stand for? |
20447 | What figure will Butler cut in the campaign? |
20447 | What gave rise to the report that you had been converted--did you go to church somewhere? |
20447 | What good can it do God to keep people married who hate each other? |
20447 | What good can it do the community to keep such people together? |
20447 | What good can it, by any possibility, do? |
20447 | What had the Knights of Labor to do with a question of religion? |
20447 | What has been the attitude of President Arthur? |
20447 | What has it to do with the Democratic platform? |
20447 | What has the administration done-- what has it accomplished in the field of diplomacy? |
20447 | What has the press generally said with regard to the action of Judge Comegys? |
20447 | What have you to say about his having died with sealed lips? |
20447 | What have you to say about tariff reform? |
20447 | What have you to say about the attack of Dr. Buckley on you, and your lecture? |
20447 | What have you to say about the claim that Mr. Cleveland does not propose free trade? |
20447 | What have you to say concerning the operations of the Society for Psychical Research? |
20447 | What have you to say in regard to the decision of Judge Billings in New Orleans, that strikes which interfere with interstate commerce, are illegal? |
20447 | What have you to say in reply to the letter in to- day''s_ Times_ signed R. H. S.? |
20447 | What have you to say on the Mormon question? |
20447 | What have you to say to that? |
20447 | What have you to say to that? |
20447 | What have you to say to the assertion of Dr. Deems that there were never so many Christians as now? |
20447 | What have you to say with reference to the respective attitudes of the President and Senate? |
20447 | What have you to say? |
20447 | What is Mr. Conkling''s place in the political history of the United States? |
20447 | What is a contract? |
20447 | What is causing the development of this country? |
20447 | What is education worth? |
20447 | What is going to take the place of the pulpit? |
20447 | What is his forte? |
20447 | What is most needed in our public men? |
20447 | What is the best philosophy of summer recreation? |
20447 | What is the explanation of the stories of mental impressions received at long distances? |
20447 | What is the history of the speech delivered here in 1876? |
20447 | What is the reason for so much intemperance? |
20447 | What is the use of wasting money for food? |
20447 | What is true temperance, Colonel Ingersoll? |
20447 | What is worse than death? |
20447 | What is your conception of true intellectual hospitality? |
20447 | What is your estimate of Susan B. Anthony? |
20447 | What is your explanation of the Republican disaster last Tuesday? |
20447 | What is your explanation of the miracles referred to in the Old and New Testaments? |
20447 | What is your idea as to the difference between honest belief, as held by honest religious thinkers, and heterodoxy? |
20447 | What is your idea in regard to it? |
20447 | What is your idea of Christian Science? |
20447 | What is your idea with regard to divorce? |
20447 | What is your opinion as to the action of the President on the Venezuelan matter? |
20447 | What is your opinion as to the effect of praying for the recovery of the President, and have you any confidence that prayers are answered? |
20447 | What is your opinion concerning women as conductors of these revivals? |
20447 | What is your opinion of American writers? |
20447 | What is your opinion of Brewster''s administration? |
20447 | What is your opinion of Colonel Ingersoll? |
20447 | What is your opinion of Count Leo Tolstoy? |
20447 | What is your opinion of General Grant as he stands before the people to- day? |
20447 | What is your opinion of Ignatius Donnelly as a literary man irrespective of his Baconian theory? |
20447 | What is your opinion of Matthew Arnold? |
20447 | What is your opinion of Mr. Beecher? |
20447 | What is your opinion of Mr. Gladstone as a controversialist? |
20447 | What is your opinion of Spiritualism and Spiritualists? |
20447 | What is your opinion of charity organizations? |
20447 | What is your opinion of foreign missions? |
20447 | What is your opinion of making ex- Presidents Senators for life? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the Christian religion and the Christian Church? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the Gerry Whipping Post bill? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the effect of the multiplicity of women''s clubs as regards the intellectual, moral and domestic status of their members? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the incoming administration, and how will it affect the country? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the peculiar institution of American journalism known as interviewing? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the position taken by the United States in the Venezuelan dispute? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the relative merits of the pulpit and the stage, preachers and actors? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the religious tendency of the people of this country? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the result of the election? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the work undertaken by the_ World_ in behalf of the city slave girl? |
20447 | What is your opinion of"Christian charity"and the"fatherhood of God"as an economic polity for abolishing poverty and misery? |
20447 | What is your opinion regarding the Republican nomination for President? |
20447 | What is your opinion? |
20447 | What is your opinion? |
20447 | What is your remedy, Colonel, for the labor troubles of the day? |
20447 | What is your reply to such assertions? |
20447 | What kind of a President will Garfield make? |
20447 | What kind of a person will do the whipping? |
20447 | What language did he speak?" |
20447 | What led you to begin lecturing on your present subject, and what was your first lecture? |
20447 | What matters it that we differ? |
20447 | What moral quality is there in theological pretence? |
20447 | What must be the life of a man who can earn only one dollar or two dollars a day? |
20447 | What must other nations think when they read the two letters and mentally exclaim,"Look upon this and then upon that?" |
20447 | What must the real character of the scientific wretch be who would try an experiment like this? |
20447 | What must they eat? |
20447 | What must they wear? |
20447 | What must"the great and good"Dole think of our great and good President? |
20447 | What on earth has geology to do with the throne of God? |
20447 | What ought to be done, or what is to be the end? |
20447 | What part of the contract remains in force? |
20447 | What part should you take if not that of the weak? |
20447 | What phases will the Southern question assume in the next four years? |
20447 | What place does the theatre hold among the arts? |
20447 | What policy do they advocate? |
20447 | What possible good did it do the world for Christ to go without food for forty days? |
20447 | What punishment is there for physical crime? |
20447 | What punishment, then, is inflicted upon man for his crimes and wrongs committed in this life? |
20447 | What remains to be done now, and who is going to do it? |
20447 | What section of the United States, East, West, North, or South, is the most advanced in liberal religious ideas? |
20447 | What shall we say of a Bible that we dare not read to a Mormon as an argument against legalized lust, or as an argument against illegal lust? |
20447 | What shall we say of the moral force of Christianity, when it utterly fails in the presence of Mormonism? |
20447 | What should be done with the surplus revenue? |
20447 | What should be the attitude of the church toward the stage? |
20447 | What steps could be taken in any State of this Union? |
20447 | What suggestion would you make for the improvement of the newspapers of this country? |
20447 | What was settled? |
20447 | What was the real difficulty between you and Moses, Colonel, a man who has been dead for thousands of years? |
20447 | What was the real state of mind of the author of"Footfalls on the Boundaries of Another World"? |
20447 | What will be the effect of the enthusiastic receptions that are being given to General Grant? |
20447 | What will be the effect on labor of a departure in American policy in the direction of free trade? |
20447 | What will be the fate of the Mills Bill in the Senate? |
20447 | What will be the main issues in the next presidential campaign? |
20447 | What will be the political effect of the Greenback movement? |
20447 | What would be the effect on farms in that neighborhood? |
20447 | What would be the effect on railroads, on freights, on business-- what upon the towns through which they passed? |
20447 | What would be your advice to an intelligent young man just starting out in life? |
20447 | What would have been his fate a few years ago? |
20447 | What would have happened to him in Spain, in Portugal, in Italy-- in any other country that was Catholic-- only a few years ago? |
20447 | What would the city that had been built up by the factories be worth? |
20447 | What would the clergy of Washington think should the miracle of Cana be repeated in their day? |
20447 | What would they have done had the vaults been empty? |
20447 | What would you define public opinion to be? |
20447 | What would you think of me if I should retort, using your language, changing only the sex of the last word? |
20447 | What, in your estimation, is the value of the drama as a factor in our social life at the present time? |
20447 | What, in your judgment, is necessary to be done to insure Republican success this fall? |
20447 | What, in your judgment, is the source of the greatest trouble among men? |
20447 | What, in your judgment, is to be the outcome of the present agitation in religious circles? |
20447 | What, in your opinion, are the best possible means to spread this gospel or religion of Secularism? |
20447 | What, in your opinion, is the condition of labor in this country as compared with that abroad? |
20447 | What, in your opinion, is the condition of the Democratic party at present? |
20447 | What, in your opinion, is the significance of the vote on the Mills Bill recently passed in the House? |
20447 | What, in your opinion, were the causes for Blaine''s defeat? |
20447 | What, in your opinion, were the causes which led to the Democratic defeat? |
20447 | What, in your opinion, will be Browning''s position in the literature of the future? |
20447 | What, on the whole, is your judgment of the book? |
20447 | What, then, are their relations? |
20447 | When I watch them on the avenue I, too, fall to quoting Scripture, and say,"Can these dry bones live?" |
20447 | When Saul visited the Witch of Endor, and she, by some magic spell, called up Samuel, the prophet said:"Why hast thou disquieted me, to call me up?" |
20447 | When we come to civil service, about how many Federal officials were at the St. Louis convention? |
20447 | Where are the four hundred millions found? |
20447 | Where are the most Liberals, and in what section of the country is the best work for Liberalism being done? |
20447 | Where do we get the right to say that the negroes must emigrate? |
20447 | Where do you meet with the bitterest opposition? |
20447 | Where do you think it is necessary the Republican candidate should come from to insure success? |
20447 | Where does Mr. Buckner propose to colonize the white people, and what right has he to propose the colonization of six millions of people? |
20447 | Where is an actress on the English stage the superior of Julia Marlowe in genius, in originality, in naturalness? |
20447 | Where is the great white throne? |
20447 | Where rests the responsibility for the Armenian atrocities? |
20447 | Which did more for his country, George Washington or Abraham Lincoln? |
20447 | Which do you regard as the better, Catholicism or Protestantism? |
20447 | Which in your opinion is the greatest English novel? |
20447 | Which is the more dangerous to American institutions--the National Reform Association( God- in- the- Constitution party) or the Roman Catholic Church? |
20447 | Which would you say are the better orators, speaking generally, the American people or the English people? |
20447 | Who brought about"a critical period of our financial affairs"? |
20447 | Who created the vast debt that American labor must pay? |
20447 | Who do you think ought to be nominated at Chicago? |
20447 | Who do you think will be nominated at Chicago? |
20447 | Who made Herod? |
20447 | Who made this taxation of thousands of millions necessary? |
20447 | Who succeeded there? |
20447 | Who wants it inflicted? |
20447 | Who will be the Republican nominee for President? |
20447 | Who, in your judgment, would be the strongest man the Republicans could put up? |
20447 | Who, in your opinion, is the greatest leader of the"opposition"yclept the Christian religion? |
20447 | Who, in your opinion, is the greatest novelist who has written in the English language? |
20447 | Who, then, is really responsible for the acts of Herod? |
20447 | Whose God? |
20447 | Why are you so utterly opposed to vivisection? |
20447 | Why did he want to pick out my bad things? |
20447 | Why did not Brewster speak? |
20447 | Why did you not take part in the campaign? |
20447 | Why do people read a book like"Robert Elsmere,"and why do they take any interest in it? |
20447 | Why do the theological seminaries find it difficult to get students? |
20447 | Why do you make such a distinction between the rights of man and the rights of women? |
20447 | Why do you not meet these men, and why do you not answer these attacks? |
20447 | Why do you not respond to the occasional clergyman who replies to your lectures? |
20447 | Why give us corn, and Egypt cholera? |
20447 | Why inflict pain? |
20447 | Why is it the Presbyterians are so opposed to music in the world, and yet expect to have so much in heaven? |
20447 | Why not have the courage to say that if there be a God, all I know about him I know by knowing myself and my friends-- by knowing others? |
20447 | Why not name the one, and have done with it? |
20447 | Why not say that the universe has existed from eternity, as well as to say that a Creator has existed from eternity? |
20447 | Why not take the middle ground? |
20447 | Why not work with the great and enlightened majority? |
20447 | Why rush to the extreme for the purpose not only of making yourself useless but hurtful? |
20447 | Why should Christians refuse to persecute in this world, when their God is going to in the next? |
20447 | Why should God treat us any better than he does the rest of his children? |
20447 | Why should I say that he has the assistance of spirits? |
20447 | Why should Sunday be observed otherwise than as a day of recreation? |
20447 | Why should a barbarian boy cast reproach upon his parents? |
20447 | Why should a man say that he loves God better than he does his wife or his children or his brother or his sister or his warm, true friend? |
20447 | Why should a member of Parliament or of Congress swear to maintain the Constitution? |
20447 | Why should an infinite God allow some of his children to enslave others? |
20447 | Why should any one, when convinced that Christianity is a superstition, have or feel a sense of loss? |
20447 | Why should ex- Presidents be taken care of? |
20447 | Why should he allow a child of his to burn another child of his, under the impression that such a sacrifice was pleasing to him? |
20447 | Why should he annihilate his mistakes? |
20447 | Why should he make mistakes that need annihilation? |
20447 | Why should he send pestilence and famine to China, and health and plenty to us? |
20447 | Why should such a State be called free? |
20447 | Why should the Democratic party lay claim to any anti- trust glory? |
20447 | Why should the Republican party be so particular about religious belief? |
20447 | Why should the reputations of the dead, and the feelings of those who live, be placed at the mercy of the ministers? |
20447 | Why should they be compelled to license that which they are not permitted to enjoy? |
20447 | Why should they care for what the animals suffer? |
20447 | Why should we expect an infinite Being to do better in another world than he has done and is doing in this? |
20447 | Why should we follow such an example? |
20447 | Why should we not protect, by the same means, the actor? |
20447 | Why should we postpone our joy to another world? |
20447 | Why should we worship in God what we detest in man? |
20447 | Why should you love the memory of one whom God hates?" |
20447 | Why so? |
20447 | Why was the word sheol introduced in place of hell, and how do you like the substitute? |
20447 | Why was this? |
20447 | Why were the bonds sold? |
20447 | Why were the greenbacks issued? |
20447 | Why, I ask, should God give life to men whom he knows are unworthy of life? |
20447 | Why, then, resort to the duel? |
20447 | Will Dr. Banks in his fifty- two sermons of next year show that his God is not responsible for the crimes of Herod? |
20447 | Will Liberalism ever organize in America? |
20447 | Will Mr. Cleveland, in your opinion, carry out the civil service reform he professes to favor? |
20447 | Will a time ever come when political campaigns will be conducted independently of religious prejudice? |
20447 | Will he listen to or grant any demands made of him by the alleged Independent Republicans of New York, either in his appointments or policies? |
20447 | Will it necessitate the nomination of an Ohio Republican next year? |
20447 | Will the Democratic party have a strong issue in its anti- trust cry? |
20447 | Will the Supreme Court take cognizance of this case and prevent the execution of the judgment? |
20447 | Will the church and the stage ever work together for the betterment of the world, and what is the province of each? |
20447 | Will the instructions given to delegates be final? |
20447 | Will the negro continue to be the balance of power, and if so, will it inure to his benefit? |
20447 | Will the religion of humanity be the religion of the future? |
20447 | Will the time ever come when it can truthfully be said that right is might? |
20447 | Will there be other trials? |
20447 | Will these two considerations cut any figure in the presidential campaign of 1884? |
20447 | Will this add to their happiness? |
20447 | Will this reverse seriously affect Republican chances next year? |
20447 | Will you give your reasons? |
20447 | Will you lecture the coming winter? |
20447 | Will you state your reasons for your belief? |
20447 | Will you take any notice of Mr. Magrath''s challenge? |
20447 | With a solid South do you not think the Democratic nominee will stand a good chance? |
20447 | With all your experiences, the trials, the responsibilities, the disappointments, the heartburnings, Colonel, is life worth living? |
20447 | With the introduction of the Democracy into power, what radical changes will take place in the Government, and what will be the result? |
20447 | Wo n''t you give us, then, Colonel, your analysis of this act, and the motives leading to it? |
20447 | Would he want a divorce? |
20447 | Would it not be better to teach that he who does wrong must suffer the consequences, whether God forgives him or not? |
20447 | Would people be any more moral solely because of a disbelief in orthodox teaching and in the Bible as an inspired book, in your opinion? |
20447 | Would the Catholicism of General Sherman''s family affect his chances for the presidency? |
20447 | Would the Democracy of New York unite on Seymour? |
20447 | Would you again refuse to take the stump for Mr. Blaine if he should be renominated, and if so, why? |
20447 | Would you consent to live in any but a Christian community? |
20447 | Would you have Government clerks and officials appointed to office here given the franchise in the District? |
20447 | Would you have us discard it altogether? |
20447 | Would you mind telling me how it was you came to be a public speaker, a lecturer, an orator? |
20447 | Yet the sacred volume, no matter who wrote it, is a mine of wealth to the student and the philosopher, is it not? |
20447 | You consider Greenbackers inflationists, do you not? |
20447 | You do not deny that a religious belief is a comfort? |
20447 | You do not seem to think that Arthur has a chance? |
20447 | You have studied the Bible attentively, have you not? |
20447 | You knew John Russell Young, Colonel? |
20447 | You seem to agree with all that Justice Harlan has said, and to have the greatest admiration for his opinion? |
20447 | You think, then, that there is no great principle involved? |
20447 | Your objective point is to destroy the doctrine of hell, is it? |
20447 | Your views of the country''s future and prospects must naturally be rose colored? |
20447 | and if so what do you think of them? |
20447 | and should this, if given, include the women clerks? |
20447 | as expressed in_ The Herald_ of last week? |
20447 | but,"Is this true?" |
20447 | of the people to even call themselves Presbyterians, about how long will it take, at this rate, to convert mankind? |
3252 | ''How mosh does he bay you by der veeks?'' 3252 ''Might not some other cause,''said I,''produce this concurrence? |
3252 | ''On which side?'' 3252 A bit of the wing, Roxy, or of the-- under limb?" |
3252 | A good many books, has n''t he? |
3252 | A long ride to- day? |
3252 | A young person,he said to himself,--"why a young person? |
3252 | About what? |
3252 | Afraid of them? |
3252 | Afraid? 3252 Ah, Mr. Gridley,"he said,"you are not studying the civil law, are you?" |
3252 | An''to be sure ai n''t I tellin''you, Mr. Gridley, jist as fast as my breath will let me? 3252 And Silas Peckham?" |
3252 | And do you take real pleasure in the din of all those screeching and banging and growling instruments? |
3252 | And how does Mr. Dudley Veneer take all this? |
3252 | And how have you all been at the mansion house? |
3252 | And now,he said,"what do you think of her companion?" |
3252 | And so you advise me to make love to the English girl, do you? |
3252 | And this is what you have been working at so long,--is it, Clement? |
3252 | And what are your pursuits, Jack? 3252 And what becomes of all those that he drops into the basket?" |
3252 | And what do you say to these others? |
3252 | And what have you found, my dear? |
3252 | And what was that? |
3252 | And who and what is that,he said,--"sitting a little apart there,--that strange, wild- looking girl?" |
3252 | And who was that, pray? |
3252 | And why not your English maiden? |
3252 | And why the New Portfolio, I would ask? |
3252 | And worth a great deal of money? |
3252 | And you did not speak to her? |
3252 | Anything ketchin''about it? |
3252 | Anything new in the city? |
3252 | Are a dozen additional spasms worth living for? |
3252 | Are there not some special inconveniences connected with what is called celebrity? 3252 Are we dead?" |
3252 | Are we like to be alone and undisturbed? |
3252 | Are you crazy? |
3252 | Are you going to open a correspondence with Mr. Maurice Kirkwood, Lurida? 3252 Are you not a little overstating his peculiarity? |
3252 | Are you sure you can depend on Kitty? |
3252 | Are you the literary critic of that well- known journal, or do you manage the political column? |
3252 | Believe it, Euthymia? 3252 Board and lodging for ten days, Mr. Peckham,--whose board and lodging, pray?" |
3252 | Busy, grandpapa? |
3252 | But is there nothing in thy track To bid thee fondly stay, While the swift seasons hurry back To find the wished- for day? |
3252 | But surely, Sophy, you a''n''t afraid to have Dick marry her, if she would have him for any reason, are you? 3252 But what if it were a case of''How happy could I be with either''? |
3252 | But when we come to inquire Whence is matter? 3252 But, as I said above, what could I do? |
3252 | But,said be,"suppose that I had been offered such a place; do you think I ought to accept it and leave Arrowhead Village? |
3252 | By the way, Doctor, have you seen anything of a little plaid- pattern match- box? |
3252 | Ca n''t find out anything about him, you said, did n-''t you? 3252 Can he answer these questions? |
3252 | Can you repeat it to us? |
3252 | Canst thou by searching find out God? 3252 Children of the natural method[ his own method of classification of skin diseases,] are you all here?" |
3252 | Cynthia Badlam Fund Hopkins,said the good woman triumphantly,--"is that what you mean?" |
3252 | DO YOU WANT TO BE REMEMBERED AFTER THE CONTINENTS HAVE GONE UNDER, AND COME UP AGAIN, AND DRIED, AND BRED NEW RACES? 3252 Dead, is he? |
3252 | Dear mother,cried the boy,"why wo n''t you listen to reason? |
3252 | Did Number Five go to meet you in your laboratory, as she talked of doing? |
3252 | Did any of you notice any remarkable sounds last night,he said,--"or this morning? |
3252 | Did ever passion heat words to incandescence as it did those of Sappho? |
3252 | Did he talk with you on the way? |
3252 | Did n''t he say to Cain,''Where is Abel, thy brother?'' |
3252 | Did n''t you tell me once, Clement, that you were attempting a bust of Innocence? 3252 Did she look at you?" |
3252 | Did the party give you possession of these documents without making any effort to retain them? |
3252 | Did y''bring home somethin''from the party? 3252 Did you ever see a genuine Yankee?" |
3252 | Did you happen to notice anything about it, Kitty? |
3252 | Did you remark Elsie''s ways this forenoon? |
3252 | Did you see the paper that he showed her before he fastened it up with the others, Kitty? |
3252 | Did you talk about books at all with the old man? |
3252 | Did you write the letter from Rome, published a few weeks ago? |
3252 | Did, you ever see a case of epilepsy cured by nitrate of silver? |
3252 | Do n''t you know who he was nor what he was? |
3252 | Do n''t you speak about my client? 3252 Do n''t you think he worries himself about the souls of young women rather more than for those of old ones, Myrtle?" |
3252 | Do n''t you think she''s vuiry good- lookin''? |
3252 | Do not dull people bore you? |
3252 | Do you go to those musical hullabaloos? |
3252 | Do you know anything of Captain H. of the Massachusetts Twentieth? |
3252 | Do you know much about the Veneer family? |
3252 | Do you know what I think? |
3252 | Do you mean to say that every man is not absolutely free to choose his beliefs? |
3252 | Do you notice how many people you meet with their mouths stretched wide open? |
3252 | Do you really think Dick means mischief to anybody, that he has such dangerous- looking things? |
3252 | Do you really think of studying medicine? |
3252 | Do you recollect giving some of them to Mr. Bradshaw to look over? |
3252 | Do you see that? |
3252 | Do you seriously think of becoming a practitioner of medicine? |
3252 | Do you suppose I am going to answer such questions as you are putting me because you repeat them over, Mr. Gridley? 3252 Do you think her father has treated her judiciously?" |
3252 | Do you understand it? 3252 Do you want money?" |
3252 | Do? |
3252 | Doctor,the physician began, as from a sudden suggestion,"you wo n''t quarrel with me, if I tell you some of my real thoughts, will you?" |
3252 | Does Mr. Clement Lindsay live here? |
3252 | Does Mr. William Murray Bradshaw know anything about any papers, such as I am referring to, that may have been sent to the office? |
3252 | Dolus an virtus quis in hoste requirat? |
3252 | Elsie there? 3252 FISH AND DANDIES ONLY KEEP ON ICE.--Who will take? |
3252 | Far off his coming--shall I say"shone,"and finish the Miltonic phrase, or leave the verb to the happy conjectures of my audience? |
3252 | For whom this gift? |
3252 | Four hands all round? |
3252 | Greatly interested in the souls of his people, is n''t he? |
3252 | Had n''t you better let me write it for you, dear? |
3252 | Has n''t he some curiosities,--old figures, old jewelry, old coins, or things of that sort? |
3252 | Has she left no letter,--no explanation of her leaving in this way? |
3252 | Has that young gentleman ever delivered into your hands any papers relating to the affairs of the late Malachi Withers, for your safe keeping? |
3252 | Has there not been some understanding between you that he should become the approved suitor of Miss Myrtle Hazard? |
3252 | Have some of these shell- oysters? |
3252 | Have they a billiard- room in the upper story? |
3252 | Have you ever talked with her about studying medicine? |
3252 | Have you found it well furnished with the books you most want? |
3252 | Have you heard anything against him? |
3252 | Have you heerd anything yet, Kitty Fagan? |
3252 | Have you kept your eye on her steadily? |
3252 | Have you received any papers from any of the family since the settlement of the estate? |
3252 | Have you seen his room? 3252 Have you stay, my friend?" |
3252 | Have you watched him pretty close for the last few days? |
3252 | He does look warm, does n''t he? |
3252 | He? 3252 How are you, Boy?" |
3252 | How are you, Dad? |
3252 | How are you, my fortunate friend? |
3252 | How can he be reached? |
3252 | How can the man who has learned but one art procure all the conveniences of life honestly? 3252 How can we manage to get an impartial judgment?" |
3252 | How can you ask that, Mr. Gridley? 3252 How do I know, Jeff?" |
3252 | How do you like the books I see you reading? |
3252 | How do you like the look of these oranges? |
3252 | How is Mr. Kirkwood, to- day? |
3252 | How is this? |
3252 | How long ago did her mother die? |
3252 | How long since your return to this country, may I ask? |
3252 | How long were you gone? |
3252 | How many horses does your papa keep? |
3252 | How many times,I kept saying to myself,"is that wicked old moon coming up to stare at me?" |
3252 | How many words do you think I shall want? |
3252 | How many? |
3252 | How much do you pay for your winter- strained? |
3252 | How much is it now? |
3252 | How much should you call about right for the picter an''figgerin''? |
3252 | How much, should you say? |
3252 | How much? |
3252 | How old is Elsie? |
3252 | I could n''t help comin'',said Nurse Byloe,"we do so love our babies,--how can we help it, Miss Badlam?" |
3252 | I hope I should be equal to that emergency,answered the young Doctor;"but I trust you are not suffering from any such accident?" |
3252 | I wonder if he would examine some old coins of mine? |
3252 | I wonder if the old man reads other novelists.--Do tell me, Deacon, if you have read Thackeray''s last story? |
3252 | If any of those papers were of importance, should you think your junior partner ought to keep them from your knowledge? |
3252 | If this is not genuine pathos, where will you find it, I should like to know? 3252 In what literary occupation have you been engaged, if you will pardon my inquiry? |
3252 | Is Helen come? |
3252 | Is Miss Badlam in? |
3252 | Is all this from real life? |
3252 | Is it as I thought? |
3252 | Is it probable that time and circumstances will alter a habit of nervous interactions so long established? 3252 Is n''t it a leetle rash to give him the use of his hands? |
3252 | Is n''t it so? 3252 Is not poetry the natural language of lovers?" |
3252 | Is she a good scholar? |
3252 | Is she violent in her delirium? |
3252 | Is the boy still awake? |
3252 | Is the last word to be spelt with one or two s''s? |
3252 | Is the person you are seeking a niece or other relative of yours? |
3252 | Is there a young person here, a stranger? |
3252 | Is there nobody that I can trust, or is everybody hunting me like a bird? |
3252 | Is there nobody that will venture his life to save a brother like that? |
3252 | Is this only your own suggestion? |
3252 | Is this the mighty ocean?--is this all? |
3252 | Is this very rare and valuable? 3252 Is your appetite as good as usual?" |
3252 | It''s apoplexy,--I told you so,--don''t you see how red he is in the face? |
3252 | Jawin''abaout? 3252 Judge, will you take Mrs. Sprowle in to supper?" |
3252 | Just out of the village,--that''s all.--There''s a kink in her mane,--pull it out, will you? |
3252 | Keep what, Kitty? 3252 Know of what, Cyprian?" |
3252 | Knows how to shut a fellow up pretty well for a young one, does n''t he? |
3252 | Lecture to students of your sex? 3252 Let Ol''Sophy set at''th''foot o''th''bed, if th''young missis sets by th''piller,--won''y'', darlin''? |
3252 | Lived in Rome once? |
3252 | Madam, do you remember you have your party tonight? |
3252 | Marry a man because she hates him, Sophy? 3252 May I ask how long you lived in Rome?" |
3252 | May I ask when, where, and of whom you obtained these papers, Miss Badlam? |
3252 | May I ask where you picked up the coin you are showing me? |
3252 | May I ask who the person or persons may be on whose account you wish to look at papers belonging to my late relative, Malachi Withers? |
3252 | May I not be Clement, dearest? 3252 Miss Hazard, will you allow me to present to you my friend, Mr. Clement Lindsay?" |
3252 | Mr. Gridley? 3252 My return? |
3252 | Myrtle is very lovely,Bathsheba answered,"but is n''t she a little too-- flighty-- for one like your brother? |
3252 | Naow get up, will ye? |
3252 | Nervous? 3252 Never observed it? |
3252 | Nothing very serious, I hope? |
3252 | Nuss Byloe, is that you? 3252 O Mr. Gridley, you are too bad,--what do I care for governors and presidents? |
3252 | Odd, is n''t it, father, the old man''s asking me to come and see him? 3252 Oh!--And the pink one, three seats from her? |
3252 | Oh, Doctor dear, what I''m thinkin''of a''n''t true, is it? |
3252 | Oh, how''s your haalth, Miss Darley? |
3252 | Oh, is n''t''Pickwick''nice? |
3252 | Oh, what is Heaven but the fellowship Of minds that each can stand against the world By its own meek and incorruptible will? |
3252 | One more gallop, Juan? |
3252 | Physician art thou, one all eyes; Philosopher, a fingering slave, One that would peep and botanize Upon his mother''s grave? |
3252 | Places you have been to, and people you have known? |
3252 | Quite warm, is n''t it, this evening? |
3252 | Rip Van Myrtle, you call that handsome girl, do you, Miss Clara? 3252 Scorn trifles"comes from Aunt Mary Moody Emerson, and reappears in her nephew, Ralph Waldo.--"What right have you, Sir, to your virtue? |
3252 | Sell you them things to make a colation out of? |
3252 | Shall I read you some of the rhymed pieces first, or some of the blank- verse poems, sir? |
3252 | Shall I seek a deeper slumber at the bottom of the lake I love than I have ever found when drifting idly over its surface? 3252 Shall I tell you the secret of the true scholar? |
3252 | Shall I try the other publishers? |
3252 | Shall we judge a country by the majority, or by the minority? 3252 Sick, my child?" |
3252 | Signor? 3252 So Mr. Clement Lindsay has been saving a life, has he, and got some hard knocks doing it, hey, Susan Posey? |
3252 | So you admire conceited people, do you? |
3252 | Sounds like Coleridge, hey? 3252 Surely you are not afraid?" |
3252 | Susan Posey, child, what is your trouble? |
3252 | THE SUPREME SELF- INDULGENCE IS TO SURRENDER THE WILL TO A SPIRITUAL DIRECTOR.--Protestantism gave up a great luxury.--Did it though? 3252 Tell me, Sophy,"she said,"was Elsie always as shy as she seems to be now, in talking with those to whom she is friendly?" |
3252 | Tell me, darlin'',--don''you love somebody?--don''you love? 3252 Tell me, my dear, would you be willing to give up meeting this man alone, and gratify my friend, and avoid all occasion of reproach?" |
3252 | Tell me,said Gifted,"what are these papers, and who is he that looks upon them and drops them into the basket?" |
3252 | Thackeray''s story? 3252 The first thing? |
3252 | The regular correspondent from where? |
3252 | Them? |
3252 | Think about it? |
3252 | Think well of him? 3252 To be sure you are,"answered the Tutor,"and what of it? |
3252 | To be, or not to be: that is the question Whether''t is nobl----"William, shall we have pudding to- day, or flapjacks?" |
3252 | W''at''s in a name? |
3252 | WHY DO YOU COMPLAIN OF YOUR ORGANIZATION? 3252 Was that all that happened?" |
3252 | Was there ever anything like it? |
3252 | Was there ever such a senseless, stupid creature as I am? 3252 Was"--? |
3252 | Well, Doctor,the Counsellor began,"how are stocks in the measles market about these times? |
3252 | Well, Kitty, how are things going on up at The Poplars? 3252 Well, Stebbins,"said Mr. Dudley Veneer,"have you brought any special message from the Doctor?" |
3252 | Well, how has Elsie seemed of late? |
3252 | Well, if you say so; but why that P., Mrs. Hopkins? 3252 Well, then, Mrs. Hopkins, what shall be the boy''s name?" |
3252 | Well, there is some truth in that; but did you think the old- fashioned family doctor was extinct, a fossil like the megatherium? |
3252 | Well, what does she say to it? |
3252 | Well, what has been the trouble, Nurse? |
3252 | Well? |
3252 | Well? |
3252 | Whar he''s gone? 3252 What I''seen''bout Dick Veneer?" |
3252 | What I''ve got? 3252 What State do you come from?" |
3252 | What are their amusements? |
3252 | What are your favorites among his writings, Deacon? 3252 What building is that?" |
3252 | What can I do better,he said to himself,"than have a dance with Rosa Milburn?" |
3252 | What can I do with such a creature as this? |
3252 | What can have brought Dudley out to- night? |
3252 | What color was your mantle? |
3252 | What did you do before you became a soldier? |
3252 | What did you tell me, Miss Vincent, was this fellow''s particular antipathy? |
3252 | What disposition had you thought of making of them? |
3252 | What do you mean by asking me these questions, Mr. Gridley? 3252 What do you mean to do when you get back?" |
3252 | What do you say to my taking your question as the subject of a paper to be read before the Society? 3252 What do you say to the love poetry of women?" |
3252 | What do you say, uncle? |
3252 | What do you think of the young man over there at the Veneers''? |
3252 | What do you want of me, Elsie Venner? |
3252 | What do you want to know? |
3252 | What does all this mean? 3252 What has the public to do with my private affairs?" |
3252 | What if we change Isosceles to Theodore, Mrs. Hopkins? 3252 What is it, Doctor? |
3252 | What is it, Helen? 3252 What is it?" |
3252 | What is it? |
3252 | What is like to be the further history of the case? 3252 What is that you have seen about Mr. Richard Veneer that gives you such a spite against him, Sophy?" |
3252 | What is the first book you would put in a student''s hands, doctor? |
3252 | What is the first thing you would do? |
3252 | What is the matter, Cousin Elsie? 3252 What is the matter, my darling?" |
3252 | What is the meaning of all this? 3252 What is the meaning of all this?" |
3252 | What is the remedy? 3252 What is this great stone pillar here for?" |
3252 | What made you ask me about him? 3252 What makes you think I care more for her than for her American friend?" |
3252 | What may her figure be? |
3252 | What now, Susan Posey, my dear? |
3252 | What o''clock is it? |
3252 | What paper has had anything about it, Lurida? 3252 What part of Georgia?" |
3252 | What shall we sing this evening? |
3252 | What the d--- is the reason I ca n''t see Myrtle, Cynthia? |
3252 | What then? |
3252 | What thinkest thou, Luke, of the maid we have been visiting? |
3252 | What time is''t? |
3252 | What were you whispering? |
3252 | What would Amanda think of a suitor who courted her with a rhyming dictionary in his pocket to help him make love? |
3252 | What would I do about it? 3252 What''r''you jawin''abaout?" |
3252 | What''s fetched y''daown here so all- fired airly? |
3252 | What''s the matter with Elsie Venner? |
3252 | What''s the matter with your shoulder, Venner? |
3252 | What''s the matter, do you suppose? 3252 What''s the meaning of all this, Cynthia? |
3252 | What''s the meaning of that, Kitty? 3252 What, Mr. Gridley? |
3252 | What,he answered,"the man that paddles a birch canoe, and rides all the wild horses of the neighborhood? |
3252 | What? |
3252 | When Adam delved and Eve span, Who was then the gentleman? |
3252 | When a fellah goes out huntin''and shoots a squirrel, do you think he''s go''n''to let another fellah pick him up and kerry him off? 3252 Where am I? |
3252 | Where are our broomsticks? |
3252 | Where did our friends pick up all these fine ecstatic airs? |
3252 | Where did you get that flower, Elsie? |
3252 | Where did you go to church when you were at home? |
3252 | Where did you go? |
3252 | Where did you meet her? |
3252 | Where is the boat I was in? |
3252 | Where is the first volume of this Medical Cyclopaedia? |
3252 | Where is the light to come from that is to do as much for our poor human lives? |
3252 | Where is your uneasiness, Myrtle? |
3252 | Where shall I send your trunk after you from your uncle''s? |
3252 | Where''s all the oranges gone to? |
3252 | Which is the image of your protector, Myrtle? 3252 Which of the men do you wish would take himself off?" |
3252 | Which one shall it be? |
3252 | Who are those? |
3252 | Who are you, giants, whence and why? |
3252 | Who are you? |
3252 | Who can doubt that in this passage of his story he is picturing his own visions, one of the fairest of which was destined to become reality? 3252 Who do you think is coming, Mr. Gridley? |
3252 | Who fought? |
3252 | Who gave this cup? |
3252 | Who has a part with**** at this next exhibition? |
3252 | Who is she, I should like to know? |
3252 | Who is that girl in ringlets,--the fourth in the third row on the right? |
3252 | Who is that in the canoe over there? |
3252 | Who is that pretty girl my young doctor has got there? |
3252 | Who is that? |
3252 | Who is this Clement Lindsay, Bathsheba? |
3252 | Who might that favored person be? |
3252 | Who tol''you Elsie was a woman, Doctor? |
3252 | Who was at the wedding? |
3252 | Who was the general on the American side? |
3252 | Who was the person you sentenced? |
3252 | Who''s hurt? 3252 Who''s took care o''them things that was on the hoss?" |
3252 | Who''shurt? 3252 Why call him_ the Post_?" |
3252 | Why did n''t we all have a chance to help erect that statue? |
3252 | Why did not Miss Darley go to the party last evening? |
3252 | Why did you ask me for myself, when you could have claimed me? |
3252 | Why do n''t they take her away from the school, if she is in such a strange, excitable state? |
3252 | Why do n''t you tell the man he is wasting that water? 3252 Why does he keep out of sight as he does?" |
3252 | Why is it,she said,"that there is so common and so intense a desire for poetical reputation? |
3252 | Why should n''t you go to see a brother as well as a sister, I should like to know? 3252 Why strikest not? |
3252 | Why then goest thou as some Boswell or literary worshipper to this saint or to that? 3252 Why, Cynthy Badlam, what do y''mean?" |
3252 | Why, Kitty,he said,"what mischief do you think is going on, and who is to be harmed?" |
3252 | Why, Mr. Peckham,she said,"do you mean this? |
3252 | Why, bless me, is that my young friend Miss Myrtle Hazard? |
3252 | Why, have n''t I met you walking with her, and did n''t you both seem greatly interested in the subject you were discussing? 3252 Why, how do you know without tasting them?" |
3252 | Why, my dear friend, how can you think of such a thing? 3252 Why, my dear little soul,"said Mr. Bernard,"what are you worried about? |
3252 | Why, sister, do n''t you know that Myrtle Hazard is missing,--gone!--gone nobody knows where, and that we are looking in all directions to find her? |
3252 | Why, then, Master, didst thou give her of thy medicine, seeing that her ail is unto death? |
3252 | Why, what is there to be interviewed in him? 3252 Why, what''s the matter, my dear?" |
3252 | Why,said the Doctor, sharply,--"have you ever seen him with any such weapon about him?" |
3252 | Why? |
3252 | Wicked to live, my dear? 3252 Will you allow me to take that envelope containing papers, Miss Badlam?" |
3252 | Will you go with me to the doctor''s, and let him read it in our presence? 3252 Will you state, if you please-- I beg your pardon-- may I ask who is your own favorite author?" |
3252 | Will you tell me,she said,"where you have found any account of the bands and lines in the spectrum of dream- nitrogen? |
3252 | Will you walk towards my home with me today? |
3252 | Winter- strained? |
3252 | Would you kindly write your autograph in my note- book, with that pen? 3252 Y''do n''t think anything dreadful has come o''that child''s wild nater, do ye?" |
3252 | Y''ha''n''t heerd nothin''abaout it, Squire, d''ye mean t''say? |
3252 | Yes; but you surely would not consider it inspiration of the same kind as that of the writers of the Old Testament? |
3252 | Yes? |
3252 | Yes? |
3252 | You do n''t know the notion that people commonly have about that tree, Sophy? |
3252 | You do n''t know? 3252 You do n''t mean that she has any mark about her, except-- you know-- under the necklace?" |
3252 | You find great changes in London, of course, I suppose? |
3252 | You have heard the news, Mr. Gridley, I suppose? |
3252 | You know Sir Walter Raleigh''s''History of the World,''of course? |
3252 | You know all about it, Olive? |
3252 | You know nothing about her, then? |
3252 | You know something about that nephew of yours, during these last years, I suppose? |
3252 | You made the pulse about ninety,--a little hard,--did n''t you; as I did? 3252 You never noticed the colors and patterns of her dresses? |
3252 | You read this lecture, do n''t you, Professor? |
3252 | You receive a good many volumes of verse, do you not? |
3252 | You remember my son, Cortland Saunders, whom I brought to see you once in Boston? |
3252 | You say she has had some of her old nervous whims,--has the doctor been to see her? |
3252 | You spoke of Newspapers,she said, without any change of tone or manner:"do you not frequently write for them yourself?" |
3252 | You want to get out of the new church into the old one, do n''t you? |
3252 | You would n''t act so, if you were dancing with Mr. Langdon,--would you, Elsie? |
3252 | You would n''t trust a woman even if she was dead, hey, Nurse? |
3252 | Your partner must have known about it yesterday? |
3252 | Your whole quarter''s allowance, I bullieve,--ain''t it? |
3252 | _ It is easy enough to get up if you are dragged up, but how will it be to come down such a declivity? 3252 ''How long?'' 3252 ''Some things can be done as well as others,''can they? 3252 ''Then why not invent them?'' 3252 ''What is this truth you seek? 3252 ''What personalities?'' 3252 ''What will you do, then?'' 3252 ''Why, that is a kind of title of nobility, is n''t it? 3252 ''sseventy exclusive cases as he from the three cases in the ward of the Dublin Hospital? |
3252 | ( 3) Yes, we''re boys,--always playing with tongue or with pen,--And I sometimes have asked,--Shall we ever be men? |
3252 | ( Born in a house with a gambrel- roof,-- Standing still, if you must have proof.--"Gambrel?--Gambrel?" |
3252 | ( Why did not she ask if the girl was his daughter? |
3252 | ( commonly pronounced haalth)--instead of, How do you do? |
3252 | ***** What was the errand on which he visited our earth,--the message with which he came commissioned from the Infinite source of all life? |
3252 | *****"Let us then ponder his words:--''Wilt thou not ope thy heart to know What rainbows teach and sunsets show? |
3252 | --"About those conditions?" |
3252 | --"And is there nothing yet unsaid Before the change appears? |
3252 | --"Guess he''s been through the mill,--don''t look so green, anyhow, hey? |
3252 | --And how did the Lady receive these valuable and useful gifts? |
3252 | --And the Evening Transcript? |
3252 | --And the calipers said I.--What are the calipers? |
3252 | --And this is all the friend you have to love? |
3252 | --And thou? |
3252 | --And whence thy sadness in a world of bliss Where never parting comes, nor mourner''s tear? |
3252 | --And where is my cat? |
3252 | --Anything you like,--he answered,--what difference does it make how you christen a foundling? |
3252 | --Bonfire?--shrieked the little man.--The bonfire when Robert Calef''s book was burned? |
3252 | --Can a man love his own soul too well? |
3252 | --Did I not say to you a little while ago that the universe swam in an ocean of similitudes and analogies? |
3252 | --Do I remember Byron''s line about"striking the electric chain"? |
3252 | --Do men fly yet? |
3252 | --Do you mean to say the pun- question is not clearly settled in your minds? |
3252 | --Do you mean you can always see the sources from which a man fills his mind,--his feeders, as you call them? |
3252 | --Do you receive many visitors,--I mean vertebrates, not articulates? |
3252 | --Do you think they mean business? |
3252 | --Do you want an image of the human will, or the self- determining principle, as compared with its prearranged and impassable restrictions? |
3252 | --Funny, wasn''it? |
3252 | --Has the planet met with any accident of importance? |
3252 | --Has the universal language come into use? |
3252 | --Have I ever acted in private theatricals? |
3252 | --He said, as I returned it to him, You have heard military men say that such a person had an eye for country, have n''t you? |
3252 | --How can a man help writing poetry in such a place? |
3252 | --How do I know that? |
3252 | --How does she go to work to help you? |
3252 | --How general is the republican form of government? |
3252 | --I am afraid I did,--I said,--but was n''t I colored myself so as to look ridiculous? |
3252 | --I wonder if anybody ever finds fault with anything I say at this table when it is repeated? |
3252 | --I wonder if you know the TERRIBLE SMILE? |
3252 | --If Iris does not love this Little Gentleman, what does love look like when one sees it? |
3252 | --If a fellow attacked my opinions in print would I reply? |
3252 | --Is that the same piece of money as the other one? |
3252 | --Is the Daily Advertiser still published? |
3252 | --Is the euthanasia a recognized branch of medical science? |
3252 | --Is the oldest inhabitant still living? |
3252 | --Is there a new fuel since the English coal- mines have given out? |
3252 | --May I venture to ask,--I said, a little awed by his statement and manner,--what is your special province of study? |
3252 | --Next month!--said I.---Why, what election do you mean? |
3252 | --No doubt, no doubt, if you meet him once; but what are you going to do with him if you meet him every day? |
3252 | --Of these three questions, What is matter? |
3252 | --Oh, indeed,--said I,--and may I venture to ask on what particular point you are engaged just at present? |
3252 | --Oh, you could n''t mistake those dried leaves for an insect, hey? |
3252 | --Should you like to hear what moderate wishes life brings one to at last? |
3252 | --The Doctor put his hand to his forehead and drew a long breath.--"What is there you notice out of the way about Elsie Venner?" |
3252 | --The divinity- student wished to know what I thought of affinities, as well as of antipathies; did I believe in love at first sight? |
3252 | --Then to the Doctor,--"Anybody get sick at Sprowles''s? |
3252 | --Well, then, how did the little beast which is peculiar to that special complaint intrude himself into the Order of Things? |
3252 | --What are the great faults of conversation? |
3252 | --What do you think I question everything for, the Master replied,--if I never get any answers? |
3252 | --What do you think the parson found, When he got up and stared around? |
3252 | --What do you think, Sir,--said the divinity- student,--opens the souls of poets most fully? |
3252 | --What if, instead of talking this morning, I should read you a copy of verses, with critical remarks by the author? |
3252 | --What in the world can have become of That Boy and his popgun while all this somewhat extended sermonizing was going on? |
3252 | --What is the prevalent religious creed of civilization? |
3252 | --What is the saddle of a thought? |
3252 | --What should decide one, in choosing a summer residence? |
3252 | --When the Lord sends out a batch of human beings, say a hundred-- Did you ever read my book, the new edition of it, I mean? |
3252 | --Where have I been for the last three or four days? |
3252 | --Where is the election held? |
3252 | --Who knows it not,--this dead recoil Of weary fibres stretched with toil, The pulse that flutters faint and low When Summer''s seething breezes blow? |
3252 | --Who was that person that was so abused some time since for saying that in the conflict of two races our sympathies naturally go with the higher? |
3252 | --Will you read them very good- naturedly? |
3252 | --Would I be so good as to specify any particular example?--Oh,--an example? |
3252 | --Yes,--said I,--but why should n''t we always set a man talking about the thing he knows best? |
3252 | --You do n''t know what I mean by the GREEN STATE? |
3252 | --You do n''t know what I mean, indignant and not unintelligent country- practitioner? |
3252 | --You do n''t know what plague has fallen on the practitioners of theology? |
3252 | --You do n''t know what your thoughts are going to be beforehand? |
3252 | --You do n''t mean to say you have studied insects as well as solar systems and the order of things generally? |
3252 | --You do n''t suppose that my remarks made at this table are like so many postage- stamps, do you,--each to be only once uttered? |
3252 | --You have a laugh together sometimes, do you? |
3252 | --You have n''t heard about my friend the Professor''s first experiment in the use of anaesthetics, have you? |
3252 | --You remember the old story of the tender- hearted man, who placed a frozen viper in his bosom, and was stung by it when it became thawed? |
3252 | --said I.--Have you seen the Declaration of Independence photographed in a surface that a fly''s foot would cover? |
3252 | -And how is your father and your mother? |
3252 | -Oh, the Governor and the Head Centre? |
3252 | -Terrible fact? |
3252 | -Wouldn''t do?--said I,--why not? |
3252 | -Yes, yes; did you ever see how they will poke those wonderful little fingers of theirs into every fold and crack and crevice they can get at? |
3252 | .............. What have I rescued from the shelf? |
3252 | ..._ But will they come when you do call for them?_"The most formidable thing about a London party is getting away from it. |
3252 | 1.--Whether a lady was ever known to write a letter covering only a single page? |
3252 | 16 correctly the first time?) |
3252 | 2.--What constitutes a man a gentleman? |
3252 | 3.--Whether face or figure is most attractive in the female sex? |
3252 | A PERSON at table asked me whether I"went in for rum as a steady drink?" |
3252 | A Prologue? |
3252 | A West Minkville?] |
3252 | A fellow is n''t all battery, is he? |
3252 | A hundred and forty?" |
3252 | A little while afterwards he asked of his fellow- traveller, Professor Thayer,"How much did I weigh? |
3252 | A man that had been saying all his fine things to Miss Susan Posey, too, had he, before he had bestowed his attentions on her? |
3252 | A return of the natural instincts of girlhood with returning health? |
3252 | A temple such as Athens might have been proud to rear upon her Acropolis? |
3252 | A visitor, indigenous to the region, looking pensively at the figure, asked the lady of the house"if that was a statoo of her deceased infant?" |
3252 | A voice whispers, What next? |
3252 | A work of art, is it, Miss Myrtle Hazard?" |
3252 | A young girl''s caprice? |
3252 | A''n''t it fun to hear him blow off his steam? |
3252 | A''n''t much of a loser, I guess, by acceptin''his propositions?" |
3252 | Advertise for a bronzed living horse-- Lyceum invitations and engagements-- bronze versus brass.---What''s the use in being frightened? |
3252 | After all, what was your Chevy Chace to stir blood with like a trumpet? |
3252 | After reading what Emerson says about"the masses,"one is tempted to ask whether a philosopher can ever have"a constituency"and be elected to Congress? |
3252 | Again, what was the influence this girl had seemingly exerted, under which the venomous creature had collapsed in such a sudden way? |
3252 | Ah, Lord of life, though spectres pale Fill with their threats the shadowy vale, With Thee my faltering steps to aid, How can I dare to be afraid? |
3252 | Ah, said I to myself; does that young girl understand French? |
3252 | Ah, wilt thou yet return, Bearing thy rose- hued torch, and bid thine altar burn? |
3252 | Ahead? |
3252 | Ai n''t they nice children? |
3252 | Ai n''t you telling me stories? |
3252 | All at once he jumped up and said,-- Do n''t you want to hear what I just read to the boys? |
3252 | All here, then, perhaps; all where, now? |
3252 | All these have left their work and not their names, Why should I murmur at a fate like theirs? |
3252 | All up for a year or more,--hey?" |
3252 | All your wisdom is to him like the lady''s virtue in Raleigh''s song:"If she seem not chaste to me, What care I how chaste she be?" |
3252 | Alumin.(?) |
3252 | Am I not gentle? |
3252 | Am I not harmless? |
3252 | Am I not kind? |
3252 | Am I not mirrored in those eyes of yours? |
3252 | Amid our slender group we see; With him we still remained"The Class,"without his presence what are we? |
3252 | An effect of an influx from another sphere of being? |
3252 | An impression produced by her dream? |
3252 | An obelisk such as Thebes might have pointed out with pride to the strangers who found admission through her hundred gates? |
3252 | An old campaigner came up.--"Can these fellows get well?" |
3252 | An''she ha''n''got the same kind o''feelin''s as other women.--Do you know that young gen''l''m''n up at the school, Doctor?" |
3252 | And Mary said,--as one who, tried too long, Tells all her grief and half her sense of wrong,"What is this thoughtless thing which thou hast done? |
3252 | And Number Five and her young friend the Tutor,--have they kept on in their dangerous intimacy? |
3252 | And are you, and is your husband, and Paolo,--good Paolo,--are you all as well and happy as you have been and as you ought to be? |
3252 | And can we smile when thou art dead? |
3252 | And can you tell me why you like candy? |
3252 | And did n''t I grin when I saw the pieces fly? |
3252 | And having a chance every day, too, how could you expect her to stand it?" |
3252 | And how could prose go on all- fours more unmetrically than this? |
3252 | And how did you like his looks?" |
3252 | And how does our young lady seem to be of late?" |
3252 | And how does the law apply to this? |
3252 | And if boys may have this additional ornament to their vertebral columns, why not men? |
3252 | And if men, why not giants? |
3252 | And if once the blacks had leave to run, how many whites would have to stay at home to guard their dissolving property? |
3252 | And in the first place, will you allow me to ask what led you to this particular place? |
3252 | And in the same person, do n''t you know the same two shades in different parts of the character that you find in the wing and thigh of a partridge? |
3252 | And is it not appalling to think of the''large constitution of this man,''when you reflect on the acres of canvas which he has covered? |
3252 | And is not the sky that covers us one roof, which makes us all one family? |
3252 | And is this the pen you write with? |
3252 | And of deception too-- do you see how nearly those dried leaves resemble an insect? |
3252 | And so it was all as plain sailing for Number Five and the young Tutor as it had been for Delilah and the young Doctor, was it? |
3252 | And so of the people you know; ca n''t you pick out the full- flavored, coarse- fibred characters from the delicate, fine- fibred ones? |
3252 | And so you think you would like to become an octogenarian? |
3252 | And wants you to come and talk religion with him in his study, Susan Posey, does he? |
3252 | And was he noted in his day? |
3252 | And what brings my young friend out in such good season this morning? |
3252 | And what is your whole human family but a parenthesis in a single page of my history? |
3252 | And what more natural than that one should be inquiring about what another has accepted and ceased to have any doubts concerning? |
3252 | And what shall we do with Pope''s"Essay on Man,"which has furnished more familiar lines than"Paradise Lost"and"Paradise Regained"both together? |
3252 | And what would literature or art be without such associations? |
3252 | And who is the new- comer? |
3252 | And who might he be, forsooth? |
3252 | And whom do you know so well as your friends? |
3252 | And will you agree to abide by his opinion, if it coincides with mine?" |
3252 | And will you believe it? |
3252 | And will you stop in England, and bring home the author of"Counterparts"with you? |
3252 | And your family, are they as discreet as yourself?" |
3252 | And-- and-- my son, do you remember Major Gideon Withers?" |
3252 | Any corner in bronchitis? |
3252 | Any strange cases among the scholars?" |
3252 | Any syndicate in the vaccination business?" |
3252 | Any young men teach in the school?" |
3252 | Anybody tell you he sick?" |
3252 | Are angels more true? |
3252 | Are horses subject to the Morbus Addisonii? |
3252 | Are ministers composed of finer clay than the rest of mankind, that entitles them to this preeminence? |
3252 | Are my friends bent on killing me with kindness? |
3252 | Are not Erard and Broadwood and Chickering the true humanizers of our time? |
3252 | Are not almost all brains a little wanting in bilateral symmetry? |
3252 | Are not most of us a little crazy, doctor,--just a little? |
3252 | Are the English taller, stouter, lustier, ruddier, healthier, than our New England people? |
3252 | Are the laity an inferior order of beings, fit only to be slaves and to be governed? |
3252 | Are there never any worms in the leaves after they get old and yellow, Miss Cynthia?" |
3252 | Are there not fruits, which, while unripe, are not to be tasted or endured, which mature into the richest taste and fragrance? |
3252 | Are there not moods in which it seems to you that they are disposed to see all things out of plumb and in false relations with each other? |
3252 | Are there not rough buds that open into sweet flowers? |
3252 | Are there not some subjects in looking at which it seems to you impossible that they should ever see straight? |
3252 | Are we any wiser than those great men? |
3252 | Are we less earthly than the chosen race? |
3252 | Are we not fresh and blooming? |
3252 | Are we not glad that the responsibility of the decision did not rest on us? |
3252 | Are we not the centre of something? |
3252 | Are we not there ourselves? |
3252 | Are we not whole years short of that interesting period of life when Mr. Balzac says that a man, etc., etc., etc.? |
3252 | Are we not young? |
3252 | Are we to spend twelve hundred millions, and raise six hundred thousand soldiers, in order to protect slavery? |
3252 | Are you in the tune for pork? |
3252 | Are you not ready to recognize in me a friend, an equal, a sister, who can speak to you as if she had been reared under the same roof? |
3252 | Are you quite sure that you wish to live to be threescore and twenty years old? |
3252 | Are you true to me, dearest Clement,--true as when we promised each other that we would love while life lasted? |
3252 | Are you willing to give it to me? |
3252 | Art thou, too, dreaming of a mortal''s kiss Amid the seraphs of the heavenly sphere? |
3252 | As for his wound, how could it do otherwise than well under such hands? |
3252 | At five or ten or fifteen years old they put their hands up to their foreheads and ask, What are they strapping down my brains in this way for? |
3252 | At last I got out the question,--Will you take the long path with me? |
3252 | At last the Scarabee creaked out very slowly,"Did I understand you to ask the following question, to wit?" |
3252 | At last: Do you know the story of Andromeda? |
3252 | At twoscore, threescore, is he then full grown? |
3252 | Author writing, jacks?" |
3252 | Ay, said a doubting bystander, but how many made vows of gifts and were shipwrecked notwithstanding? |
3252 | Because Cleopatra swallowed a pearl?" |
3252 | Because bread is good and wholesome and necessary and nourishing, shall you thrust a crumb into my windpipe while I am talking? |
3252 | Because if they are not, what could hinder a witch from crossing the line that separates Wilmington from Andover, I should like to know? |
3252 | Because time softens its outlines and rounds the sharp angles of its cornices, shall a fellow take a pickaxe to help time? |
3252 | Besides, what business has a mere boarder to be talking about such things at a breakfast- table? |
3252 | Born in Injy,--that''s it, ai n''t it? |
3252 | Bradshaw?" |
3252 | Bradshaw?" |
3252 | Bradshaw?" |
3252 | Bradshaw?" |
3252 | Breathes there such a being, O Ceruleo- Nasal? |
3252 | Bridshaw?" |
3252 | Burn up? |
3252 | But after all, what could I do? |
3252 | But am I not glad, for my own sake, that I went? |
3252 | But are there any trustworthy friends to the Union among the slaveholders? |
3252 | But can it be astronomy alone that does it? |
3252 | But come, now, why should not a giant have a tail as well as a dragon? |
3252 | But confound the make- believe women we have turned loose in our streets!--where do they come from? |
3252 | But did n''t it make you nervous, reading about so many people possessed with such strange notions?" |
3252 | But do you think that I can forget them? |
3252 | But how could any conceivable antipathy be so comprehensive as to keep a young man aloof from all the world, and make a hermit of him? |
3252 | But how do you think practice would be? |
3252 | But how in respect of those who were not asked? |
3252 | But how long would it take to turn that circle into a polygon, unless some mighty counteracting force should prevent it? |
3252 | But how to let one''s self down from the high level of such a character to one''s own poor standard? |
3252 | But how was it in Salem, according to Mr. Upham''s own statement? |
3252 | But if not, was the baptismal name Francis or Franklin? |
3252 | But in the first place, what do we mean by an antipathy? |
3252 | But is n''t there some truth in it, Doctor? |
3252 | But is there not something of rest, of calm, in the thought of gently and gradually fading away out of human remembrance? |
3252 | But there must be others,--I am afraid many others,--who will exclaim:"He has had his day, and why ca n''t he be content? |
3252 | But what are you going to do when you find John Keats an apprentice to a surgeon or apothecary? |
3252 | But what could she do? |
3252 | But what if I should lay down the rule, Be cheerful; take all the troubles and trials of life with perfect equanimity and a smiling countenance? |
3252 | But what if one does say the same things,--of course in a little different form each time,--over her? |
3252 | But what if the joy of the summer is past, And winter''s wild herald is blowing his blast? |
3252 | But what if this so- called antipathy were only a fear, a terror, which borrowed the less unmanly name? |
3252 | But what if your oldest boy had been stolen from his cradle and bred in a North- Street cellar? |
3252 | But what is half a century to a place like Stonehenge? |
3252 | But what is the gift of a mourning ring to the bequest of a perpetual annuity? |
3252 | But what is this? |
3252 | But what right have I to say it can not be so? |
3252 | But what shall I do now? |
3252 | But what shall we say to the"Ars Poetica"of Horace? |
3252 | But what should I do with Number Five? |
3252 | But what was the use of a young man''s pretending to know anything in the presence of an old owl? |
3252 | But what was this new light which seemed to have kindled in her eyes? |
3252 | But what would youth be without its extravagances,--its preterpluperfect in the shape of adjectives, its unmeasured and unstinted admiration? |
3252 | But what''s the use of good looks if they scare away folks? |
3252 | But what, even then, could she have done? |
3252 | But where are those contemporaries? |
3252 | But where did them black eyes come from? |
3252 | But where to look for what I wanted? |
3252 | But who else was there? |
3252 | But who is that other one that has been lengthening his stride from the first, and now shows close up to the front? |
3252 | But who shall tune the pitch- pipe? |
3252 | But why does n''t he come to our meetings? |
3252 | But why should I illustrate further what it seems almost a breach of confidence to speak of? |
3252 | By and by, perhaps, we can work you into our series of poets; but the best pears ripen slowly, and so with genius.--Where shall I send the volumes?" |
3252 | By digging in calomel freely about their roots? |
3252 | By watering them with Fowler''s solution? |
3252 | Ca n''t you get your friends to unite with you in committing those odious instruments of debauchery to the flames in which you have consumed your own? |
3252 | Ca n''t you lend it to me for a while? |
3252 | Came from where? |
3252 | Can I bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion? |
3252 | Can I hear any more the voice of singing men and singing women? |
3252 | Can I help you, my brother''? |
3252 | Can I see this young person?" |
3252 | Can Number Five be masquerading in verse? |
3252 | Can any ear reconcile itself to the last of these three lines of Emerson''s? |
3252 | Can any of you tell what those two words are? |
3252 | Can he dispose of them? |
3252 | Can he have furnished the model I saw at the sculptor''s? |
3252 | Can it be possible that her prediction is not far from its realization? |
3252 | Can it be that the curse is passing away, and my daughter is to be restored to me,--such as her mother would have had her,--such as her mother was?" |
3252 | Can it be that this imparts a religious character to the article? |
3252 | Can she tell me anything? |
3252 | Can such peculiarities-- be transmitted by inheritance? |
3252 | Can that ever be? |
3252 | Can thy servant taste what I eat or what I drink? |
3252 | Can we find any trace of this idea elsewhere? |
3252 | Can we make a safe and honorable peace as the quarrel now stands? |
3252 | Can you describe in intelligible language the smell of a rose as compared with that of a violet? |
3252 | Can you find no lesson in this? |
3252 | Can you help any soul_? |
3252 | Can you help me to get sight of any of these papers not to be found at the Registry of Deeds or the Probate Office?" |
3252 | Can you not imagine the tones in which those words,''Peace, be still,''were spoken? |
3252 | Can you obtain what you wish? |
3252 | Can you see tendency in your life? |
3252 | Can you suggest what should be done to dispel the existing prejudice?" |
3252 | Can you tell how much money there is in a safe, which also has thick double walls, by kneading its knobs with your fingers? |
3252 | Can you tell me just how high they are? |
3252 | Canst thou find out the Almighty unto perfection?" |
3252 | Casts and drawings of A. are multiplied, and the bump does not lose in the act of copying.--I did not say it gained.--What do you look so for? |
3252 | Cognati, queis te salvo est opus? |
3252 | Colts grew horses, beards turned gray, Deacon and deaconess dropped away, Children and grand- children-- where were they? |
3252 | Come here, Youngster, will you? |
3252 | Come to go to bed, little dears? |
3252 | Come, now,--he said,--what''s the use of these comparisons? |
3252 | Consulting daily with Cynthia Badlam, was he? |
3252 | Could I make an appointment with you for either of those days? |
3252 | Could a brother of this young lady have written it? |
3252 | Could he not confer that immortality so dear to the human heart? |
3252 | Could it be so? |
3252 | Could it be that--? |
3252 | Could it be the roar of the thousand wheels and the ten thousand footsteps jarring and trampling along the stones of the neighboring city? |
3252 | Could n''t be anything in such a violent supposition as that, and yet such a crafty fellow as that Bradshaw,--what trick was he not up to? |
3252 | Could she be an heiress in disguise? |
3252 | Could she call him at will by looking at him? |
3252 | Could she have stayed to meet the schoolmaster? |
3252 | Could that be a copy of"Thoughts on the Universe"? |
3252 | Could that have anything to do with his pursuit of Myrtle Hazard today?" |
3252 | Could the cures have been real ones, produced by the principle of ANIMAL MAGNETISM? |
3252 | Could they help recalling Romeo and Juliet? |
3252 | Cuprum,(?) |
3252 | Curious entities, or non- entities, space and tithe? |
3252 | Cyprian Eveleth was the one she thought most of; but Cyprian was as true as his sister Olive, and who else was there? |
3252 | D''d y''ever see Ed''in Forrest play Metamora? |
3252 | D''you remember how handsome she looked in the tableau, when the fair was held for the Dorcas Society? |
3252 | DO YOU MEAN TO SAY JEAN CHAUVIN, THAT''HEAVEN LIES ABOUT US IN OUR INFANCY''? |
3252 | Darwinii( we can keep A. D. you see) 1872? |
3252 | Did I not see his eyes turn toward her as the silvery notes rippled from her throat? |
3252 | Did Sir Isaac think what he was saying when he made HIS speech about the ocean,--the child and the pebbles, you know? |
3252 | Did he ever see the Siamese twins, or any pair like them? |
3252 | Did he mean to speak slightingly of a pebble? |
3252 | Did he possess a hitherto unexercised personal power, which put the key of this young girl''s nervous system into his hands? |
3252 | Did he tell her he loved her? |
3252 | Did he think she hated every kind of goodness and loved every kind of evil? |
3252 | Did he think she was hateful to the Being who made her? |
3252 | Did it not seem as if Death had spared them for Love, and that Love should lead them together through life''s long journey to the gates of Death? |
3252 | Did it occur to you that he could not see you clearly enough to know you from any other son or daughter of Adam? |
3252 | Did n''t I hear this gentleman saying, the other day, that every American owns all America? |
3252 | Did n''t one of my teachers split a Gunter''s scale into three pieces over the palm of my hand? |
3252 | Did n''t somebody say he was very handsome? |
3252 | Did n''t you ever think she would have to give in to Murray Bradshaw at last? |
3252 | Did n''t you have to finish it, Deacon, after you had once begun?" |
3252 | Did not C. buy nuts and gingerbread, when a boy, with the money he stole? |
3252 | Did not my own consciousness migrate, or seem, at least, to transfer itself into this brilliant life history, as I traced its glowing record? |
3252 | Did not worthy Mr. Higginson say that a breath of New England''s air is better than a sup of Old England''s ale? |
3252 | Did she go only to get out of his, her cousin''s, reach? |
3252 | Did she not remember the difference of their position? |
3252 | Did the tenants of the fatal ledge recognize some mysterious affinity which made them tributary to the cold glitter of her diamond eyes? |
3252 | Did they ever die? |
3252 | Did they not follow her in her movements, as she turned her tread this or that way? |
3252 | Did we talk of graveyards and epitaphs? |
3252 | Did y''ever look at those eyes of his, M''randy? |
3252 | Did y''ever mind that cut over his left eyebrow?" |
3252 | Did y''ever watch her at meetin''playing with posies and looking round all the time of the long prayer? |
3252 | Did you ever happen to see that most soft- spoken and velvet- handed steam- engine at the Mint? |
3252 | Did you ever hear Olive play''Songs without Words''? |
3252 | Did you ever hear of a man''s growing lean by the reading of"Romeo and Juliet,"or blowing his brains out because Desdemona was maligned? |
3252 | Did you ever hear of a poet who did not talk about them? |
3252 | Did you ever hear of the Capsulae, Suprarenales? |
3252 | Did you ever read old Daddy Gilpin? |
3252 | Did you ever read the oldest of medical documents,--the Oath of Hippocrates?" |
3252 | Did you ever see a bear- trap? |
3252 | Did you ever see a case of catalepsy? |
3252 | Did you ever see an oyster opened? |
3252 | Did you ever see her before?" |
3252 | Did you ever see one of those Japanese figures with the points for acupuncture marked upon it? |
3252 | Did you ever think of that? |
3252 | Did you ever watch a baby''s fingers? |
3252 | Did you get them together by accident or according to some preconceived plan? |
3252 | Did you happen to remember that though he does not allow that he is deaf, he will not deny that he does not hear quite so well as he used to? |
3252 | Did you pull me out of the water?" |
3252 | Did you think I did n''t know anything about the human body?" |
3252 | Didst thou not mark that he stayed his roaring when I did press hard over the lesser bowels? |
3252 | Do I see her afar in the distance? |
3252 | Do I understand that you are an author?" |
3252 | Do all the women have bad noses and bad mouths? |
3252 | Do n''t keep that boy waiting,--how do we know what messages he has got to carry? |
3252 | Do n''t spiders have their mates as well as other folks? |
3252 | Do n''t they say that Theophrastus lived to his hundred and seventh year, and did n''t he complain of the shortness of life? |
3252 | Do n''t you ever feel a longing to send your thoughts forth in verse, Cyprian?" |
3252 | Do n''t you hate me, dying as I am?" |
3252 | Do n''t you know how hard it is for some people to get out of a room after their visit is really over? |
3252 | Do n''t you know that he''ll have you and all of us in his paper? |
3252 | Do n''t you know that nothing is safe where one of those fellows gets in with his note- book and pencil? |
3252 | Do n''t you perceive the sonorousness of these old dead Latin phrases? |
3252 | Do n''t you remember the quiet brown colt ASTEROID, with the star in his forehead? |
3252 | Do n''t you see how small Conscientiousness is? |
3252 | Do n''t you see that a student in his library is a caddice- worm in his case? |
3252 | Do n''t you see that all this is just as true of a poem? |
3252 | Do n''t you see why? |
3252 | Do n''t you see why? |
3252 | Do n''t you think I shall ever learn to know what is nice from what is n''t? |
3252 | Do n''t you think he would find another to make him happy? |
3252 | Do n''t you think it will be safer-- for the women- folks-- jest to wait till mornin'', afore you put that j''int into the socket?" |
3252 | Do n''t you think the''inspiration of the Almighty''gave Newton and Cuvier''understanding''?" |
3252 | Do n''t you think they would like to hear it?" |
3252 | Do n''t you think you and I should be apt to do just so, if we were in the critical line? |
3252 | Do n''t you think you can say which is the dark- meat and which is the white- meat poet? |
3252 | Do n''t you think, on the whole, you have pretty good reason to trust me? |
3252 | Do n''t you want some more items of village news? |
3252 | Do n''t you want to wait here, jest a little while, till I come back? |
3252 | Do n''t your clients call you their lawyer? |
3252 | Do not these muscles of mine represent a hundred loaves of bread? |
3252 | Do not you all wonder and admire to see and behold and hear? |
3252 | Do these young folks suppose that all vanity dies out of the natures of old men and old women? |
3252 | Do they not name their children after you very frequently? |
3252 | Do they really think those little thin legs can do anything in such a slashing sweepstakes as is coming off in these next forty years? |
3252 | Do they see what this amounts to? |
3252 | Do we not use more emphatic words than these in our self- depreciation? |
3252 | Do we understand the intricate machinery of the Universe? |
3252 | Do you care to know about the Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian, that shall be King hereafter of Mexico( if L. N. has his way)? |
3252 | Do you come with any authority to make inquiries?" |
3252 | Do you cry at those great musical smashes? |
3252 | Do you eat a cheese before you buy it?" |
3252 | Do you feel the rocks tremble as my huge billows crash against them? |
3252 | Do you find it an easy and pleasant exercise to make rhymes?" |
3252 | Do you find yourself disposed to take a special interest in Elsie,--to fall in love with her, in a word? |
3252 | Do you forget Helen, and the fair women who made mischief and set nations by the ears before Helen was born? |
3252 | Do you forget the angels who lost heaven for the daughters of men? |
3252 | Do you go armed?" |
3252 | Do you know a good article of brown sagas when you see it?" |
3252 | Do you know anything about him, Bathsheba? |
3252 | Do you know anything particular about him?" |
3252 | Do you know how Art brings all ages together? |
3252 | Do you know how important good jockeying is to authors? |
3252 | Do you know how people hate to have their names misspelled? |
3252 | Do you know that I met him this morning, and had a good look at him, full in the face?" |
3252 | Do you know that every man has a religious belief peculiar to himself? |
3252 | Do you know that you feel a little superior to every man who makes you laugh, whether by making faces or verses? |
3252 | Do you know the charm of melancholy? |
3252 | Do you know two native trees called pitch pine and white pine respectively? |
3252 | Do you know what his name is? |
3252 | Do you know what it all means?" |
3252 | Do you know what to do about it? |
3252 | Do you know what would have happened if that liquid had been clouded, and we had found life in the sealed flask? |
3252 | Do you know, I believe I could solve the riddle of the''Arrowhead Village Sphinx,''as the paper called him, if he would only stay here long enough?" |
3252 | Do you know, I can make her laugh and cry, reading my poor stories? |
3252 | Do you know, my dear, I think there is a blank at the Sheriff''s office, with a place for his name in it?" |
3252 | Do you know, too, that the majority of men look upon all who challenge their attention,--for a while, at least,--as beggars, and nuisances? |
3252 | Do you mean to say that the upper Me, the Me of the true thinking- marrow, the convolutions of the brain, does not know better? |
3252 | Do you not find in persons whom you love, whom you esteem, and even admire, some marks of obliquity in mental vision? |
3252 | Do you not remember soliloquies something like this? |
3252 | Do you not think there may be a crime which is not a sin? |
3252 | Do you notice how, while everything else has gone to smash, that wheel remains sound and fit for service? |
3252 | Do you really want to know"whether oatmeal is preferable to pie as an American national food"? |
3252 | Do you recognize the fact that we are living in a new time? |
3252 | Do you remember about that woman in Scriptur''out of whom the Lord cast seven devils? |
3252 | Do you remember how the angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph and told him to flee into Egypt? |
3252 | Do you remember that chap the sheriff come and took away when we kep''tahvern? |
3252 | Do you remember what I used to say in my lectures?--or were you asleep just then, or cutting your initials on the rail? |
3252 | Do you say that old age is unfeeling? |
3252 | Do you see any cloudiness in it? |
3252 | Do you see equally well with both eyes, and hear equally well with both ears? |
3252 | Do you see my foaming lips? |
3252 | Do you see that Hedericus? |
3252 | Do you suppose he does n''t enjoy the quiet of that resting- place? |
3252 | Do you suppose if there is anything in the evil eye it would go through glass? |
3252 | Do you suppose our dear didascalos over there ever read Poli Synopsis, or consulted Castelli Lexicon, while he was growing up to their stature? |
3252 | Do you suppose she left that poison to rankle in the tender soul of her darling? |
3252 | Do you suppose that I shall cease to follow the love( or the loves; which do you think is the true word, the singular or the plural?) |
3252 | Do you take any idea from it? |
3252 | Do you think I do n''t understand what my friend, the Professor, long ago called THE HYDROSTATIC PARADOX OF CONTROVERSY? |
3252 | Do you think I was necessarily a greater fool and coward than another? |
3252 | Do you think blue eye- glasses would be better than common ones? |
3252 | Do you think he would be willing to let this friend of mine share in the privileges of spiritual intercourse which you enjoy?" |
3252 | Do you think it really the larva of meloe? |
3252 | Do you think it would be wrong in me to do it? |
3252 | Do you think men of true genius are apt to indulge in the use of inebriating fluids? |
3252 | Do you think she did not see the ridiculous element in a silly speech, or the absurdity of an outrageously extravagant assertion? |
3252 | Do you think she has any special fancy for anybody else in the school besides Miss Darley?" |
3252 | Do you think so? |
3252 | Do you think there is anything so very odd about this idea? |
3252 | Do you think you can make your heroes and heroines,--nay, even your scrappy supernumeraries,--out of refuse material, as you made your scarecrow? |
3252 | Do you want me to describe more branches of the sciatic and crural nerves? |
3252 | Do you want to know what I think he is? |
3252 | Do you want to know why that name is given to the men who do most for the world''s progress? |
3252 | Do you want to make him kill me? |
3252 | Do you wonder that my thoughts took the poetical form, in the contemplation of these changes and their melancholy consequences? |
3252 | Do? |
3252 | Does God hate me so?" |
3252 | Does Hahnemann himself represent Homoeopathy as it now exists? |
3252 | Does He behold with smile serene The shows of that unending scene, Where sleepless, hopeless anguish lies, And, ever dying, never dies? |
3252 | Does a license to preach transform a man into a higher order of beings and endow him with a natural quality to govern? |
3252 | Does all this seem strange and incredible to the reader of my manuscript? |
3252 | Does he become unconscious, too? |
3252 | Does he hope to secure a hearing from those who have come into the reading world since his coevals? |
3252 | Does he really believe that everybody remembers all of his, writer''s, words he may happen to have read? |
3252 | Does he suppose we want to be known and talked about in public as"Teacups"? |
3252 | Does he write and publish for those of his own time of life? |
3252 | Does it please their thin ghosts thus to be dragged to the light of day? |
3252 | Does n''t Cyprian want some more every- day kind of girl to keep him straight? |
3252 | Does n''t Elsie look savage? |
3252 | Does n''t Sydney Smith say that a public man in England never gets over a false quantity uttered in early life? |
3252 | Does n''t he look handsome, though?" |
3252 | Does n''t it seem as if there was a kind of Injin look to''em? |
3252 | Does n''t it seem as if there was a vein of satire as well as of fun that ran through the solemn manifestations of creative wisdom? |
3252 | Does n''t she carry a lump of opium in her pocket? |
3252 | Does n''t your baker, does n''t your butcher, speak of the families he supplies as his families?" |
3252 | Does not Mr. Bryant say, that Truth gets well if she is run over by a locomotive, while Error dies of lockjaw if she scratches her finger? |
3252 | Does not Myrtle look more in her place by the side of Murray Bradshaw than she would with Gifted hitched on her arm?" |
3252 | Does not a single star seem very lonely to you up there? |
3252 | Does not her face recall to you one that you remember, as never before?" |
3252 | Does not your heart throb, in the presence of budding or blooming womanhood, sometimes as if it"were ready to crack"with its own excess of strain? |
3252 | Does she ever listen about to hear what people are saying?" |
3252 | Does she remind you of him?" |
3252 | Does she tell you all her plans and projects?" |
3252 | Does the Bunker- Hill Monument bend in the blast like a blade of grass? |
3252 | Does the bird know why its feathers grow more brilliant and its voice becomes musical in the pairing season? |
3252 | Does the ocean share your grief? |
3252 | Does the river listen to your sighs? |
3252 | Does the simpleton really think that everybody has read all he has written? |
3252 | Does this girl like to have her own way pretty well, like the rest of the family?" |
3252 | Does this sound wild and extravagant? |
3252 | Doubt it, do you? |
3252 | Down at the Island, deer- shooting.--How many did I bag? |
3252 | Down flat,--five,--six,--how many? |
3252 | Dr. Kittredge, is there any ketchin''complaint goin''about in the village?" |
3252 | Dropped? |
3252 | Earn his money, hey, Master Gridley?" |
3252 | Endless doubt and unrest here below; wondering, admiring, adoring certainty above.--Am I not right? |
3252 | Errors excepted.--Did I hear some gentleman say,"Doubted?" |
3252 | Est- elle bien gentille, cette petite? |
3252 | Euthymia said,"or has some one been putting the idea into your head?" |
3252 | Everything else being equal, which is best for an American to marry, an American or an English girl? |
3252 | Everything right? |
3252 | Festive,--hey? |
3252 | Fish''s way of reproducing the expression without the insinuation which called it forth is a practical misstatement which does Mr. Motley great wrong? |
3252 | Folks had read letters laid ag''in''the pits o''their stomachs,''n''why should n''t they see out o''the backs o''their heads? |
3252 | For art thou not the Palladium of our Troy? |
3252 | For talking at its best being an inspiration, it wants a corresponding divine quality of receptiveness; and where will you find this but in woman? |
3252 | For what do we understand by that word? |
3252 | From what cliff was it broken? |
3252 | Genius has given you the freedom of the universe, why then come within any walls? |
3252 | Gifted Hopkins? |
3252 | Got his witch grandmother mummied in it? |
3252 | Great on Paul''s Epistles,--don''t you think so?" |
3252 | Gridley?" |
3252 | Gridley?" |
3252 | Gridley?" |
3252 | Gridley?" |
3252 | Habet?] |
3252 | Had I ever perused McFingal? |
3252 | Had a message for him,--could she see him in his study? |
3252 | Had any young fellow been on the train within a day or two, who had attracted his notice? |
3252 | Had he not discovered a, new tabanus? |
3252 | Had he sense and spirit enough to deal with such people? |
3252 | Had not he as good right to ask questions as Abraham? |
3252 | Had she never worn that painted robe before? |
3252 | Had she some such love- token on her neck as the old Don''s revolver had left on his? |
3252 | Had she, after all, some human tenderness in her heart? |
3252 | Haow''s your haalth?" |
3252 | Has Mr. Bradshaw been following after her lately? |
3252 | Has Mr. William Murray Bradshaw ever delivered into your hands any papers relating to the affairs of the late Malachi Withers, for your safe keeping?" |
3252 | Has anybody a brandy flask about him?" |
3252 | Has anybody counted the spoons? |
3252 | Has it not A claim for some remembrance in the book That fills its pages with the idle words Spoken of men? |
3252 | Has n''t he got any sisters or nieces or anybody to see to his things, if he should be took away? |
3252 | Has nobody got thirteen cents? |
3252 | Has not a man a right to ask this question in the here or in the hereafter,--in this world or in any world in which he may find himself? |
3252 | Has she not exhausted this lean soil of the elements her growing nature requires? |
3252 | Has the young Doctor''s crown yet received the seal which is Nature''s warrant of wisdom and proof of professional competency? |
3252 | Has there any old fellow got mixed with the boys? |
3252 | Has your aunt Silence promised to bear your expenses while you are in the city? |
3252 | Has"Stultus"forgiven the indignity of being thus characterized? |
3252 | Have n''t I found the true story of this strange visitor? |
3252 | Have n''t I guessed right, now, tell me, my dear?" |
3252 | Have n''t I solved the riddle of the Sphinx? |
3252 | Have n''t any of you seen the wonderful fat man exhibitin''down in Hanover Street? |
3252 | Have they any of those uneasy people called reformers?" |
3252 | Have they fired cannon? |
3252 | Have they looked in the woods everywhere? |
3252 | Have you a grief that gnaws at your heart- strings? |
3252 | Have you any commands for the city?" |
3252 | Have you any personal experience as to the power of fascination said to be exercised by certain animals? |
3252 | Have you ever heard the Lady-- the one that I sit next to at the table-- say anything about me? |
3252 | Have you ever met with any cases which admitted of a solution like that which I have mentioned? |
3252 | Have you ever read Spenser''s Faery Queen?" |
3252 | Have you ever read the little book called"The Stars and the Earth?" |
3252 | Have you eyes to find the five Which five hundred did survive?" |
3252 | Have you got any handsome pictures in your house?" |
3252 | Have you read Sampson Reed''s"Growth of the Mind"? |
3252 | Have you seen how large it is? |
3252 | Have you seen them galloping about together? |
3252 | Have you the means to pay for your journey and your stay at a city hotel?" |
3252 | Hawthorne says in a letter to Longfellow,"Why do n''t you come over, being now a man of leisure and with nothing to keep you in America? |
3252 | Hazard? |
3252 | Hazard? |
3252 | He began, after an awkward pause,"You would not have me stay in a communion which I feel to be alien to the true church, would you?" |
3252 | He cut you dead, you say? |
3252 | He had been a widower long enough,"--nigh twenty year, wa''n''t it? |
3252 | He knows forty times as much about heaven as that Stoker man does, or ever''s like to,--why do n''t they run after him, I should like to know? |
3252 | He looked at it for a moment, and put his hands to his eyes as if moved.--I was thinking,--he said indistinctly----How? |
3252 | He made a figure, it is true, in Dryden''s great Ode, but what kind of a figure? |
3252 | He may perhaps be a widower before a great while.--Does he know that you are working those slippers for him?" |
3252 | He must live for this child''s sake, at any rate; and yet,--oh, yet, who could tell with what thoughts he looked upon her? |
3252 | He never looked so happy,--could anything fill his cup fuller? |
3252 | He said he was very glad to hear it, did he, when you told him that your beloved grandmother had just deceased? |
3252 | He saw she was in suffering, and said presently,"You have pain somewhere; where is it?" |
3252 | He took as his text,"Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?" |
3252 | He was a serviceable kind of body on occasion, after all, was he not, hey, Mr. Byles Gridley? |
3252 | He was silent,--and sat looking at his handsome left hand with the red stone ring upon it.--Is he going to fall in love with Iris? |
3252 | He was under the effect of opiates,--why not( if his case was desperate, as it seemed to be considered) stop his sufferings with chloroform? |
3252 | Helen''s eyes glistened as she interrupted him,--"What do you mean? |
3252 | Her father, I believe, is sensible enough;--what sort of a woman was her mother, Doctor?--I suppose, of course, you remember all about her?" |
3252 | Here are the mills that grind food for its hunger, and"is not the life more than meat, and the body than raiment?" |
3252 | Here is another chance for you,--I said.--What do you want nicer than such a young lady as Iris? |
3252 | His home!--the Western giant smiles, And twirls the spotty globe to find it;-- This little speck the British Isles? |
3252 | His tired old eyes glistened as he asked about them,--could it be that their little romance recalled some early vision of his own? |
3252 | Hope the Squire treated you hahnsomely,--liberal pecooniary compensation,--hey? |
3252 | Hope you do.-- Born there? |
3252 | Hoped his uncle was well, and his charming cousin,--was she as original as ever? |
3252 | Hopkins? |
3252 | Hopkins?" |
3252 | Hopkins?" |
3252 | How about the miserable Indians? |
3252 | How can I do what all these letters ask me to? |
3252 | How can he tell the exhaustion produced by his evacuants from the collapse belonging to the disease they were meant to remove? |
3252 | How can it be made grand and dignified enough to be equal to the office assigned it? |
3252 | How can one explain its significance to those whose musical faculties are in a rudimentary state of development, or who have never had them trained? |
3252 | How can one tell the story of the finish in cold- blooded preterites? |
3252 | How can we give it the distinction we demand for it? |
3252 | How can you cry when you do n''t know what it is all about? |
3252 | How can you expect anything interesting from such a human cocoon? |
3252 | How can you fail to see the resemblance? |
3252 | How can you tell that anything is poetry, I should like to know, if there is neither a regular line with just so many syllables, nor a rhyme? |
3252 | How could I ever judge Margaret fairly after such a crushing discovery of her superiority? |
3252 | How could I look at the Bodleian Library, or wander beneath its roof, without recalling the lines from"The Vanity of Human Wishes"? |
3252 | How could he ever come to fancy such a quadroon- looking thing as that, she should like to know? |
3252 | How could he help admiring Byron and falling into more or less unconscious imitation of his moods if not of his special affectations? |
3252 | How could he resist the dictate of humanity which called him to make his visits more frequent, that her intervals of rest might be more numerous? |
3252 | How could he resist the temptation? |
3252 | How could it be otherwise? |
3252 | How could it be otherwise?--Did you speak, Madam? |
3252 | How could one be otherwise?" |
3252 | How could the man in whose thought such a meteoric expression suddenly announced itself fail to recognize it as divine? |
3252 | How could they expire if they did n''t breathe? |
3252 | How could they have got on together? |
3252 | How d''ye do? |
3252 | How d''ye do? |
3252 | How d''ye know she has n''t fell into the river? |
3252 | How did Dr. Jackson gain the position which all conceded to him? |
3252 | How did they get their model of the pyramid? |
3252 | How did you get me into dry clothes so quick?" |
3252 | How do I know that I shall feel like opening it? |
3252 | How do I know that I shall have a chance to open it again? |
3252 | How do I know that anybody will want it to be opened a second time? |
3252 | How do we know that a rapid pulse is not a normal adjustment of nature to the condition it accompanies? |
3252 | How do you feel now you are awake?" |
3252 | How do you know that he will not send it to one of the gossiping journals like the''Household Inquisitor''? |
3252 | How do you know that posterity may not resuscitate these seemingly dead poems, and give their author the immortality for which he longed and labored? |
3252 | How do you know that this stranger will not show your letter to anybody or everybody? |
3252 | How do you know there''s anything to find? |
3252 | How do you suppose this change was brought about? |
3252 | How does Dr. Meigs know that the patients he bled in puerperal fever would not have all got well if he had not bled them? |
3252 | How does a footpath across a field establish itself? |
3252 | How does your knowledge stand to- day? |
3252 | How far did that atmosphere extend, and through what channel did it act? |
3252 | How have I managed to keep so long out of the idiot asylum? |
3252 | How have you been since our correspondence on Fascination and other curious scientific questions?" |
3252 | How is a physician to distinguish the irritation produced by his blister from that caused by the inflammation it was meant to cure? |
3252 | How is it possible that I can keep up my freedom of intercourse with you all if you insist on bellowing my"asides"through a speaking- trumpet? |
3252 | How long is Mr. William Murray Bradshaw like to be away?" |
3252 | How long will school- keeping take to kill you? |
3252 | How long would it have taken small doses of calomel and rhubarb to save as many children? |
3252 | How many more generations will pass before Milton''s alarming prophecy will find itself realized in the belief of civilized mankind?" |
3252 | How many of us ever read or ever will read Drayton''s"Poly- Olbion?" |
3252 | How many of you who are before me are familiarly acquainted with the name of Broussais, or even with that of Andral? |
3252 | How many would find it out if one should say over in the same words that which he said in the last decade? |
3252 | How much do you weigh?" |
3252 | How much dress and how much light can a woman bear? |
3252 | How much nearer have we come to the secret of force than Lully and Geber and the whole crew of juggling alchemists? |
3252 | How much snow could you melt in an hour, if you were planted in a hogshead of it? |
3252 | How often is he mentioned except as a warning? |
3252 | How old was Floyer when he died, Fordyce? |
3252 | How old was I, The Dictator, once known by another equally audacious title,--I, the recipient of all these favors and honors? |
3252 | How pleasant do you think it is to have an arm offered to you when you are walking on a level surface, where there is no chance to trip? |
3252 | How safe would anybody feel to live with her? |
3252 | How shall I describe the conflicts of those dreamy, bewildering, dreadful years? |
3252 | How shall we characterize the doctrine of endless torture as the destiny of most of those who have lived, and are living, on this planet? |
3252 | How should he ever live through the long months of November and December? |
3252 | How should she forget it? |
3252 | How was it likely she would look on such an extraordinary proposition? |
3252 | How would you like being called up to ride ten miles in a midnight snow- storm, just when one of your raging headaches was racking you?" |
3252 | How''s the Deacon, Miss Withers?" |
3252 | How''s your folks?" |
3252 | How''s your haalth, Colonel Sprowle?" |
3252 | How, then, did nitrate of silver come to be given for epilepsy? |
3252 | How, then, is he to blame mankind for inheriting"sinfulness"from their first parents? |
3252 | Hullo, You- sir, joo know th''wuz gon- to be a race to- morrah? |
3252 | Hush,--said I,--what will the divinity- student say? |
3252 | I am fair to the poets,--don''t you agree that I am? |
3252 | I am in the power of a dreadful man--""You mean Mr. William Murray Bradshaw?" |
3252 | I appropriated it to my own use; what can one do better than this, when one has a friend that tells him anything worth remembering? |
3252 | I asked the first of those two old New- Yorkers the following question:"Who, on the whole, seemed to you the most considerable person you ever met?" |
3252 | I began abruptly:--Do you know that you are a rich young person? |
3252 | I brought home one buck shot.--The Island is where? |
3252 | I did not say that you and I do n''t know, but how many people do know anything about it? |
3252 | I do n''t believe you have exercised enough;--don''t you think it''s confinement in the school has made you nervous?" |
3252 | I do n''t know what there is about Elsie''s,--but do you know, my dear, I find myself curiously influenced by them? |
3252 | I do n''t think anything of such objects, you know; but what should he have it in his chamber for? |
3252 | I do n''t want to speak too slightingly of these verbal critics;--how can I, who am so fond of talking about errors and vulgarisms of speech? |
3252 | I from my clinging babe was rudely torn; His tender lips a loveless bosom pressed Can I forget him in my life new born? |
3252 | I hear that a newspaper correspondent has visited him so as to make a report to his paper,--do you know what he found out?" |
3252 | I heard him distinctly whispering to the young fellow who brought him to dinner, SHALL I TELL IT? |
3252 | I hope he will carry that faculty of an honest laugh with him wherever he goes,--why should n''t he? |
3252 | I hope you are invited to Miss Eveleth''s to- morrow evening?" |
3252 | I know my danger,--does not Lord Byron say,"I have even been accused of writing puffs for Warren''s blacking"? |
3252 | I never saw or heard of anything like it, in prose at least;--do you remember much of Coleridge''s Poems, Doctor?" |
3252 | I no like his looks these las''days.--Is that a very pooty gen''l''m''n up at the schoolhouse, Doctor?" |
3252 | I reasoned with myself: Why should I not have outgrown that idle apprehension which had been the nightmare of my earlier years? |
3252 | I recollect his regretting the splendid guardsmen of the old Empire,--for what? |
3252 | I said nothing, but looked the question, What are you laughing at? |
3252 | I said to myself, Why should not I overcome this dread of woman as Peter the Great fought down his dread of wheels rolling over a bridge? |
3252 | I said,''Did you begin, Dear Queen?'' |
3252 | I say,"Boys, who was this man Shakespeare, people talk so much about?" |
3252 | I should like to know if all story- tellers do not do this? |
3252 | I suppose all of you have had the pocket- book fever when you were little?--What do I mean? |
3252 | I suppose you do a little of what we teachers used to call"cramming"now and then? |
3252 | I suppose you do n''t care about going, Elsie?" |
3252 | I suppose you will have some fine horses, and who would n''t be glad to? |
3252 | I was there, of course? |
3252 | I wonder if anybody will be curious enough to look further along to find out what it was before she reads the next paragraph? |
3252 | I wonder if she remembers how very lovely and agreeable she was? |
3252 | I wonder if you ever thought of the single mark of supremacy which distinguishes this tree from all our other forest- trees? |
3252 | IV What is a country village without its mysterious personage? |
3252 | If I like Broadway better than Washington Street, what then? |
3252 | If I were Florence Smythe, I''d try it, and begin now,--eh, Clara?" |
3252 | If a man picks your pocket, do you not consider him thereby disqualified to pronounce any authoritative opinion on matters of ethics? |
3252 | If a person who is born with it looks at you, you die, or something happens-- awful-- is n''t it? |
3252 | If all she did was hateful to God, what was the meaning of the approving or else the disapproving conscience, when she had done"right"or"wrong"? |
3252 | If any of you really believe in a working Utopia, why not join the Shakers, and convert the world to this mode of life? |
3252 | If any, born of kindlier blood, Should ask, What maiden lies below? |
3252 | If he has not seen so much of women, where could he study all that is best in womanhood as he can in his own wife? |
3252 | If he is not authority on the subject of his own doctrines, who is? |
3252 | If he writes the same word twice in succession, by accident, he always erases the one that stands second; has not the first- comer the prior right? |
3252 | If my little sister comes to Boston next June, will you let me bring her to see you? |
3252 | If neither of those days should suit you, could you kindly suggest another day? |
3252 | If so, when does he come to his consciousness? |
3252 | If that ai n''t what y''mean, what do y''mean? |
3252 | If the girl had only inherited that property-- whew? |
3252 | If the magnolia can bloom in northern New England, why should not a poet or a painter come to his full growth here just as well? |
3252 | If the men were so wicked, I''ll ask my papa How he dared to propose to my darling mamma; Was he like the rest of them? |
3252 | If the son of that boy''s father could not be trusted, what boy in Christendom could? |
3252 | If this is to be a child, what is it to be a woman? |
3252 | If we ca n''t understand them, because we have n''t taken a medical degree, what the Father of Lies do they ask us to sign them for? |
3252 | If we could make a peace without dishonor, could we make one that would be safe and lasting? |
3252 | If we understand them, why ca n''t we discuss them? |
3252 | If what my Rabbi tells me is the truth, Why did the choir of angels sing for joy? |
3252 | If you have really got more brains in Boston than other folks, as you seem to think, who hates you for it, except a pack of scribbling fools? |
3252 | If your ship springs a leak, what would you do? |
3252 | In love, Philip? |
3252 | In one of these, after looking round as usual, I asked aloud,"Any Massachusetts men here?" |
3252 | In that case, where would he, Dick, be? |
3252 | Inspector general?" |
3252 | Interpellandi locus hic erat; Est tibi mater? |
3252 | Is a young man in the habit of writing verses? |
3252 | Is anybody trying it softly? |
3252 | Is he in the house now?" |
3252 | Is he known to have changed his opinion as to the approaching disastrous event? |
3252 | Is he not a POET that painted us? |
3252 | Is it frut- cake? |
3252 | Is it good policy for mankind to subject themselves to such degrading vassalage and abject submission? |
3252 | Is it impossible for an archangel to smile? |
3252 | Is it likely that some other attraction may come into disturb the existing relation? |
3252 | Is it not a relief that I am abstaining from description of what everybody has heard described? |
3252 | Is it not evident that Lord Clarendon suggested the idea which Mr. Motley repelled as implying an insidious mode of action? |
3252 | Is it not true that the young man of average ability will find it as much as he can do to fit himself for these simple duties? |
3252 | Is it nuts and oranges and apples? |
3252 | Is it possible that the books which have been for me what Morhof was for Dr. Johnson can look like that to the student of the year 1990? |
3252 | Is it possible the poor thing works with her needle, too? |
3252 | Is it so? |
3252 | Is it taking too great a liberty to ask how early you began to write in verse? |
3252 | Is it the God that walked in Eden''s grove In the cool hour to seek our guilty sire? |
3252 | Is it too late now? |
3252 | Is n''t he a fust- rate- lookin''watch- dog, an''a rig''ler rat- hound?" |
3252 | Is n''t her cologne- bottle replenished oftener than its legitimate use would require? |
3252 | Is n''t it a giant putting his tongue out? |
3252 | Is n''t it a pretty thought? |
3252 | Is n''t that a picture of the poet''s hungry and hurried feast at the banquet of life? |
3252 | Is n''t that high enough? |
3252 | Is n''t there an odd sort of fascination about her? |
3252 | Is n''t there any old whisper which will tarnish that wearisome aureole of saintly perfection? |
3252 | Is n''t this book enough to scare any of you? |
3252 | Is not a Creator bound to guard his children against the ruin which inherited ignorance might entail on them? |
3252 | Is not freethinker a term of reproach in England? |
3252 | Is not the inaudible, inward laughter of Emerson more refreshing than the explosions of our noisiest humorists? |
3252 | Is not this a manifest case of insanity, in the form known as melancholia? |
3252 | Is not this a pleasing programme? |
3252 | Is not this to make vain the gift of God? |
3252 | Is not this to turn back the hand on the dial?" |
3252 | Is such a phenomenon as a laugh never heard except in our little sinful corner of the universe? |
3252 | Is that a stem or a straw? |
3252 | Is that done?" |
3252 | Is that fellow making love to Myrtle?" |
3252 | Is the door fast? |
3252 | Is the sick man moved? |
3252 | Is there a world of blank despair, And dwells the Omnipresent there? |
3252 | Is there an inner apartment that I have not seen? |
3252 | Is there any book you would like to have out of my library? |
3252 | Is there any ketchin''fevers-- bilious, or nervous, or typus, or whatever you call''em-- now goin''round this village? |
3252 | Is there any story of crime, or anything else to spice a column or so, or even a few paragraphs, with? |
3252 | Is there any trick that love and their own fancies do not play them? |
3252 | Is there anything to countenance the stories, long and widely current, about the"evil eye"? |
3252 | Is there method in your consciousness? |
3252 | Is there no progress, then, but do we return to the same beliefs and practices which our forefathers wore out and threw away? |
3252 | Is there no such thing, then, as hydrophobia? |
3252 | Is there not danger in introducing discussions or allusions relating to matters of religion into common discourse? |
3252 | Is there not in this as great an exception to all the hitherto received laws of nature as in the miracle of the loaves and fishes? |
3252 | Is this prejudice not due largely to the religious instruction that is given by the church acid Sunday- school? |
3252 | Is this the condition of affairs between Number Five and the Tutor? |
3252 | Is this the desk at which you write? |
3252 | Is this the way that genius is welcomed to the world of letters?" |
3252 | Is this typical of the creative force on the two sides of the ocean, or not? |
3252 | Is venesection done with forever? |
3252 | Is virtue piecemeal? |
3252 | Is''t not like That devil- spider that devours her mate Scarce freed from her embraces?" |
3252 | It is an honorable term,--I replied.--But why Little Boston, in a place where most are Bostonians? |
3252 | It is so much less known to the public at large than many other resorts that we naturally ask, What brings this or that new visitor among us? |
3252 | It is true that my waters exhale and are renewed from one season to another; but are your features the same, absolutely the same, from year to year? |
3252 | It is,--said I.--But would you have the kindness to tell me if you know anything about this deformed person? |
3252 | It shows a little more distinctly than in the first photograph, does n''t it?'' |
3252 | It was n''t nice a bit, was it? |
3252 | It was, Do you, Miss So and So, take this GENTLEMAN? |
3252 | It wo n''t be my fault if one visit is not enough.--You do n''t suppose Myrtle is in love with this fellow?" |
3252 | It would be a very interesting question, what was the intellectual character of those persons most conspicuous in behalf of the Perkinistic delusion? |
3252 | It''s the young Missis, Doctor,--it''s our Elsie,--it''s the baby, as we use''t''call her,--don''you remember, Doctor? |
3252 | Joseph Bellamy Stoker and his young proselyte, Miss Myrtle Hazard?" |
3252 | Joseph Bellamy Stoker has called upon you, Susan Posey, has he? |
3252 | Joseph Bellamy Stoker?" |
3252 | Just clear up these two children for me, will you, my dear? |
3252 | K.?" |
3252 | Ketched ye''ith a slippernoose, hey? |
3252 | Kindness? |
3252 | Kirkwood?" |
3252 | Kitty departed, communing with herself in this wise:--"Ockipied, is it? |
3252 | Know old Cambridge? |
3252 | Langdon?" |
3252 | Leduc? |
3252 | Leduc? |
3252 | Lindsay?" |
3252 | Lindsay?" |
3252 | Lindsay?" |
3252 | Listen to him; he is reading aloud in impassioned tones: And have I coined my soul in words for naught? |
3252 | Listen to poor old Barzillai, and hear him piping:"I am this day fourscore years old; and can I discern between good and evil? |
3252 | Liver- complaint one of''em? |
3252 | Liver- tissue brings sugar out of the blood, or out of its own substance;--why? |
3252 | Lives there one De Sauty extant now among you, Whispering Boanerges, son of silent thunder, Holding talk with nations? |
3252 | Look here,--you young philosopher over there,--do you like candy? |
3252 | Look!--said he,--is it clear or cloudy? |
3252 | Looks bright; anything in her?" |
3252 | Lord, what are we, and what are our children, but a Generation of Vipers?" |
3252 | MADNESS? |
3252 | MR. BRADSHAW CALLS ON MISS BADLAM"Is Miss Hazard in, Kitty?" |
3252 | Mahser Maurice asleep an''all this racket going on? |
3252 | May I ask why you do not try the experiment yourself? |
3252 | May I take the liberty to ask your-- profession?" |
3252 | May I venture to contrast youth and experience in medical practice, something in the way the man painted the lion, that is, the lion under? |
3252 | May not the serpent have bitten Eve before the birth of Cain, her first- born? |
3252 | May we not hope for your presence at the meeting, which is to take place next Wednesday evening? |
3252 | Mr. Bernard heard the answer, but presently stared about and asked again,"Who''s hurt? |
3252 | Mr. Bradshaw asked, in a rather excited way,"Is it possible, Miss Withers, that your niece has quitted you to go to a city school?" |
3252 | Mr. Gridley, is that you? |
3252 | Mr. Langdon, has anything happened to you?" |
3252 | Mr. Peckham, would you be so polite as to pass me a glass of srub?" |
3252 | Mr. Stoker''s sermon had touched her hard heart? |
3252 | Mr. Stoker; and when the women run after a minister or a doctor, what do the men signify? |
3252 | Mulier, Latin for woman; why apply that name to one of the gentle but occasionally obstinate sex? |
3252 | My beauty have anything ugly? |
3252 | My reader might be a little puzzled when he read that Number Five did or said such or such a thing, and ask,"Whom do you mean by that title? |
3252 | Myrtle ought, according to the common rules of conversation, to have asked, What other? |
3252 | Myrtle turned to Master Byles Gridley, and said,"You have been my friend and protector so far, will you continue to be so hereafter?" |
3252 | Nay, what was that which obscured its outline, in shape like a human figure? |
3252 | Never heard of her? |
3252 | Never? |
3252 | Never? |
3252 | Ninety- odd, was n''t it? |
3252 | No leading hotel kept by any Hazard, was there? |
3252 | No newspaper of note edited by anybody called Hazard, was there? |
3252 | No second self to say her evening prayer for? |
3252 | No sleep since twelve o''clock last night, you say?" |
3252 | Nobody sick up at the school, I hope?" |
3252 | Noisy little good- for- nothing tike,--ain''t you, Fret?" |
3252 | None of the boats missing? |
3252 | Nothing going wrong up at our ancient mansion, The Poplars, I trust?" |
3252 | Nothing? |
3252 | Now what have we come to in our own day? |
3252 | Now, said the Professor, you do n''t mean to tell me that I have got to that yet? |
3252 | Now, what did I expect when I began these papers, and what is it that has begun to frighten me? |
3252 | Of course the Algonquin kept gaining, but could it possibly gain enough? |
3252 | Of course the Professor acquires his information solely through his cranial inspections and manipulations.--What are you laughing at? |
3252 | Of what use is he going to be in my record of what I have seen and heard at the breakfast- table? |
3252 | Of what use was it to offer books like the"Saint''s Rest"to a child whose idea of happiness was in perpetual activity? |
3252 | Of what use were they to me without general indexes? |
3252 | Oh, you never read his Naufragium, or"Shipwreck,"did you? |
3252 | Old Sophy would say,--"don''you hear th''crackin''''n''th''snappin''up in Th''Mountain,''n''th''rollin''o''th''big stones? |
3252 | Old fellow?--said I,--whom do you mean? |
3252 | On what beach rolled by the waves of what ocean? |
3252 | One was tempted to ask:"What forlorn hope have you led? |
3252 | Or a living product of galvanic action, Like the status bred in Crosses flint- solution? |
3252 | Or did these girls lay their heads together, and send the poem we had at our last sitting to puzzle the company? |
3252 | Or did----write the novels and send them to London, as I fancied when I read them? |
3252 | Or have you forgotten one who will never cease to remember that she was once your own Susan?" |
3252 | Or is he a mythus,--ancient word for"humbug,"--Such as Livy told about the wolf that wet- nursed Romulus and Remus? |
3252 | Or is it a passion? |
3252 | Or is it that the explosion would derange her costume? |
3252 | Or is one of the two Annexes the make believe lover? |
3252 | Or to that of which Addison and Steele formed the centre, and which gave us the Spectator? |
3252 | Or to that where Johnson, and Goldsmith, and Burke, and Reynolds, and Beauclerk, and Boswell, most admiring among all admirers, met together? |
3252 | Or was he one of those men who are always making blunders for other people to correct? |
3252 | Or, to mention one out of many questionable remedies, shall you give Veratrum Viride in fevers and inflammations? |
3252 | Others might have wealth and beauty, he thought to himself, but what were these to the gift of genius? |
3252 | Ought I not to regret having undertaken to report the doings and sayings of the members of the circle which you have known as The Teacups? |
3252 | Ought I not to tell him so? |
3252 | Peckham?" |
3252 | Penhallow?" |
3252 | Penhallow?" |
3252 | Perhaps I shall deliver the lecture in your city: you will come and hear it, and bring him, wo n''t you, dearest? |
3252 | Perhaps he does not receive six hundred letters every day, but if he gets anything like half that number daily, what can he do with them? |
3252 | Perhaps you have been there yourself?" |
3252 | Perhaps you would be good enough to tell me what it is you like about them? |
3252 | Philip, do you know the pathos there is in the eyes of unsought women, oppressed with the burden of an inner life unshared? |
3252 | Please tell me, who taught her to play with it? |
3252 | Possibilities, Sir?--said the divinity- student; ca n''t a man who says Haow? |
3252 | Pray, do you happen to remember Wordsworth''s"Boy of Windermere"? |
3252 | Pray, what part of Maryland did you come from, and how shall I call you? |
3252 | Pray, what set you to asking me this? |
3252 | Predestined, I venture my guess, to one or the other, but to which? |
3252 | Presently the young man asked his pupil:--Do you know what the constellation directly over our heads is? |
3252 | Presently,"Why, Bernard, my dear friend, my brother, it can not be that you are in danger? |
3252 | Presently,-- Do you,--Beloved, I am afraid you are not old enough,--but do you remember the days of the tin tinder- box, the flint, and steel? |
3252 | Professor Byles Gridley,--author of''Thoughts on the Universe''?" |
3252 | Professor come home this very blessed morning with a story of one of her old black women? |
3252 | Professor,--said he, one day,--don''t you think your brain will run dry before a year''s out, if you do n''t get the pump to help the cow? |
3252 | Professor.--Do you mean to say that you have known me so long as that? |
3252 | Professor.--What message do people generally send back when you first call on them? |
3252 | Professor.--Where? |
3252 | Published by the American Tract Society?" |
3252 | Put it well, did n''t she? |
3252 | Qu''est ce qu''il a fait? |
3252 | Query, a bump? |
3252 | Questioning all things: Why her Lord had sent her? |
3252 | Read, flattered, honored? |
3252 | Rest, and low diet for a day or two, and all will be right, wo n''t it?" |
3252 | Robinson?" |
3252 | Roe replied by asking, When charity was like a top? |
3252 | Say, does He hear the sufferer''s groan, And is that child of wrath his own? |
3252 | Says"Yes?" |
3252 | Self- determining he may be, if you will, but who determines the self which is the proximate source of the determination? |
3252 | Seventeen year ago,''n''her poor mother cryin''for her,--''Where is she? |
3252 | Sha''n''t I write him a letter this very day and tell him all? |
3252 | Shall I call on you this evening and tell you about them?" |
3252 | Shall I die forgiven? |
3252 | Shall I ever meet any one of them again, in these pages or in any other? |
3252 | Shall I go instead of you?" |
3252 | Shall I read you the poems referred to in the one you have just heard, sir?" |
3252 | Shall I say anything of Austria,--what can I say that would interest you? |
3252 | Shall I tell you some things the Professor said the other day? |
3252 | Shall I tell you what that experience was?" |
3252 | Shall a man who in his younger days has written poetry, or what passed for it, continue to attempt it in his later years? |
3252 | Shall mouldering page or fading scroll Outface the charter of the soul? |
3252 | Shall priesthood''s palsied arm protect The wrong our human hearts reject, And smite the lips whose shuddering cry Proclaims a cruel creed a lie? |
3252 | Shall the minister be given to understand that you will see him hereafter in her company?" |
3252 | Shall there be no more dew on those leaves thereafter? |
3252 | Shall they ever live again in the memory of those who loved them here below? |
3252 | Shall they give expression to this secondary mental state, or not? |
3252 | Shall we always be youthful and laughing and gay, Till the last dear companion drops smiling away? |
3252 | Shall we not bid him come, and be Poet and Teacher of a most scattered flock wanting a shepherd? |
3252 | Shall we rank Emerson among the great poets or not? |
3252 | Shall we walk down the street together? |
3252 | She blushed as she thought of the comments that might be made; but what were such considerations in a matter of life and death? |
3252 | She certainly looks innocent enough; but what does a blush prove, and what does its absence prove, on one of these innocent faces? |
3252 | She does not seem to be a safe neighbor to very inflammable bodies?" |
3252 | She grew still paler, as she asked,"Is he dead?" |
3252 | She had been so lonely since he was away? |
3252 | She has a woman''s heart; and what talent of mine is to be named by the love a true woman can offer in exchange for these divided and cold affections? |
3252 | She is getting a strange influence over my fellow- teacher, a young lady,--you know Miss Helen Darley, perhaps? |
3252 | She is the best of friends, they say, but can she love anybody, as so many other women do, or seem to? |
3252 | She knows that as well as we do; and her first question after you have been talking your soul into her consciousness is, Did I please? |
3252 | She longed, and knew not wherefore Had the world nothing she might live to care for? |
3252 | She saw Mr. Gridley yesterday, I know; why wo n''t she see me to- day?" |
3252 | She told the whole story;-shall I repeat it? |
3252 | She was genteel enough for him, and-- let''s see, haow old was she? |
3252 | Shoot him? |
3252 | Should I send this poem to the publishers, or not? |
3252 | Should he challenge her lover? |
3252 | Should he fly? |
3252 | Should we lose many Kentuckians and Virginians who are now with us, if we boldly confiscated the slaves of all rebels? |
3252 | Should you expect him to turn out a Mozart or a Beethoven? |
3252 | Should you feel afraid to have him look at you? |
3252 | Should you like to hear them? |
3252 | Some explanation must take place between them, and how was it possible that it should be without emotion? |
3252 | Somebody must have''em,--why should n''t you? |
3252 | Somebody.--Who is it? |
3252 | Something like this, was n''t it? |
3252 | Something was hanging from it,--an old garment, was it? |
3252 | Sometimes a sunlit sphere comes rolling by, And then we softly whisper,--can it be? |
3252 | Speak I not truly, Master, that she will be well speedily?" |
3252 | Sprowle?" |
3252 | Such a simple thing? |
3252 | Sulphur, Mang.(?) |
3252 | Suppose I should try what I can do by visiting Miss Myrtle Hazard? |
3252 | Suppose a minister were to undertake to express opinions on medical subjects, for instance, would you not think he was going beyond his province? |
3252 | Suppose he had never been trephined, when would his consciousness have returned? |
3252 | Suppose the blow is hard enough to spoil the brain and stop the play of the organs, what happens them? |
3252 | Suppose the youth were Maurice; what then? |
3252 | Suppose, for instance, I wanted to use the double star to illustrate anything, say the relation of two human souls to each other, what would I-- do? |
3252 | Supposing it came to the worst, what could be done then? |
3252 | Symbol? |
3252 | THERE ARE PATIENT SPIRITS THAT HAVE WAITED FROM ETERNITY, AND NEVER FOUND PARENTS FIT TO BE BORN OF.--How do you know anything about all that? |
3252 | Talk about your megatherium and your megalosaurus,--what are these to the bacterium and the vibrio? |
3252 | Tell him the whole truth, and send him a ticket of admission to the Institution for Idiots and Feeble- minded Youth? |
3252 | Tell me now, you are not in earnest, are you, but only trying a little sentiment on me?" |
3252 | Tell me, Mr. Bradshaw, who is there that I shall meet if I go? |
3252 | Tell me, Sophy, what do you think would happen, if he should chance to fall in love with Elsie, and she with him, and he should marry her?" |
3252 | Tell me, oh, tell me, what is it? |
3252 | That buried passions wake and pass In beaded drops of fiery dew? |
3252 | That fellow''s the Speaker,( 3)--the one on the right; Mr. Mayor,( 4) my young one, how are you to- night? |
3252 | That is all, is n''t it? |
3252 | That is the reason people become so attached to these servants with Southern sunlight in their natures? |
3252 | That sounds like the nineteenth century, but what shall we say to this? |
3252 | That was it.--But what had he been doing to get his head into such a state?--had he really committed an excess? |
3252 | That was it; what else could it be? |
3252 | That will do for the Houyhnhnm Gazette.--Do you ever wonder why poets talk so much about flowers? |
3252 | That would be picturesque and pleasant, now, would n''t it? |
3252 | That would be pleasant, would n''t it? |
3252 | The God who dealt with Abraham as the sons Of that old patriarch deal with other men? |
3252 | The Man of Letters(?). |
3252 | The Tutor and Number Five were both quiet, thoughtful: he, evidently captivated; she, what was the meaning of her manner to him? |
3252 | The Widow knew everybody, of course: who was there in Rockland she did not know? |
3252 | The Young Astronomer shook his head, smiling a little at the question.--Was there any meet''n''-houses? |
3252 | The ancient Romans had theirs, the English and the French have theirs as well,--why should not we Americans have ours? |
3252 | The beauties of my recollections-- where are they? |
3252 | The brazen head of Roger Bacon is mute; but is not"Planchette"uttering her responses in a hundred houses of this city? |
3252 | The breeze says to us in its own language, How d''ye do? |
3252 | The cheering smile, the voice of mirth And laughter''s gay surprise That please the children born of earth, Why deem that Heaven denies? |
3252 | The clouds are rich and dark, the air serene,_ So like the soul of me, what if''t were me_?" |
3252 | The compliment was not ungrateful, and the Colonel acknowledged it by smiling and saying,"I should think the''was a trifle? |
3252 | The cries, if possible, were still louder and more persistent; they must have a speech and they would have a speech, and what could I do about it? |
3252 | The earth shook at your nativity, did it? |
3252 | The editor, who sells it to the public-- By the way, the papers have been very civil have n''t they?--to the-- the what d''ye call it? |
3252 | The eye does not bring landscapes into the world on its retina,--why should the brain bring thoughts? |
3252 | The following is an exact transcript of the lines he showed me, and which I took down on the spot:"Are you in the vein for cider? |
3252 | The jealous God of Moses, one who feels An image as an insult, and is wroth With him who made it and his child unborn? |
3252 | The magic of her new talisman? |
3252 | The man a''n''t hurt,--don''t you see him stirring? |
3252 | The minute draws near,--but her watch may go wrong; My heart will be asking, What keeps her so long? |
3252 | The modern version would be,"How came you at Mrs. Billion''s ball not having a dress on your back which came from Paris?" |
3252 | The native female turns her nose up at the idea of"living out;"does she think herself so much superior to the women of other nationalities? |
3252 | The old gentleman opposite all at once asked me if I ever read anything better than Pope''s"Essay on Man"? |
3252 | The only"chaffing"I heard was the question from one of the galleries,"Did he come in the One- Hoss Shay?" |
3252 | The paper you burned was not the original,--it was a copy substituted for it--""And did the old man outwit me after all?" |
3252 | The poems he drops into the basket are those rejected as of no account""But does he not read the poems before he rejects them?" |
3252 | The question is distinctly proposed to us, Shall Slavery die, or the great Republic? |
3252 | The question is: Who manages her, and how can you get at that person or those persons? |
3252 | The sky grows dark,--Was that the roll of thunder? |
3252 | The translations excited me much, and who can estimate the value of a good thought? |
3252 | The trees look down from the hill- sides and ask each other, as they stand on tiptoe,--"What are these people about?" |
3252 | The village people have the strangest stories about her; you know what they call her?" |
3252 | The working of Master Byles Gridley''s emphatic warning? |
3252 | The"Rhodora,"another brief poem, finds itself foreshadowed in the inquiry,"What is Beauty?" |
3252 | Then he asked,"Were you dressed as you are now?" |
3252 | Then she whispered, almost inaudibly,--for her voice appeared to fail her,"What did her mother die of, Sophy?" |
3252 | Then she would let me see the inside of it? |
3252 | Theodore Parker, is it?" |
3252 | There are a good many other strange things about her: did you ever notice how she dresses?" |
3252 | There is another question which must force itself on the thoughts of many among you:"How am I to obtain patients and to keep their confidence?" |
3252 | There may be some among those whom I address who are disposed to ask the question, What course are we to follow in relation to this matter? |
3252 | There seemed to be remarks and questionings going on, which he supposed to be something like the following:-- Which is it? |
3252 | There was a book of hymns; it had her name in it, and looked as if it might have been often read;--what the diablo had Elsie to do with hymns? |
3252 | There''s no harm in that, is there? |
3252 | These two questions are like those famous household puzzles,--Where do the flies come from? |
3252 | They all urged upon Dudley Veneer to go with them: if there was danger, why should he remain to risk it, when he sent away the others? |
3252 | They did n''t mean to shoot Myrtle Hazard, did they? |
3252 | They go only by the bumps.--What do you keep laughing so for? |
3252 | They kept at arm''s length those detestable men; What an era of virtue she lived in!--But stay Were the men all such rogues in Aunt Tabitha''s day? |
3252 | They said the doctors would want my skeleton when I was dead.--You are my friend, if you are a doctor,--a''n''t you? |
3252 | They seemed to me to betray the richest invention, so rich as almost to say, why draw any line since you can draw all? |
3252 | They tell me there is something in my eyes that draws people to me and makes them faint: Look into them, will you?" |
3252 | They were perfectly fair game; what better use could I put them to? |
3252 | Think the lines you mention are by far the best I ever wrote, hey? |
3252 | This immaculate woman,--why could n''t she have a fault or two? |
3252 | This or That, take this LADY?! |
3252 | This, that is rhyming, must have been found out very early,"''Where are you, Adam?'' |
3252 | Thomas Scott, author of the Commentary?" |
3252 | Though I never owned a horse, have I not been the proprietor of six equine females, of which one was the prettiest little"Morgin"that ever stepped? |
3252 | Thought not mortal, or not thought mortal,--which was it? |
3252 | Thus, at a marriage ceremony, once, of two very excellent persons who had been at service, instead of, Do you take this man, etc.? |
3252 | Thus,"How''s your health?" |
3252 | Thy name is at least once more spoken by living men;--is it a pleasure to thee? |
3252 | To be sure, their scales differ, but have they not the same freezing and the same boiling point? |
3252 | To look through plate- glass windows, and pity the brown soldiers,--or sneer at the black ones? |
3252 | To put gilt bands on coachmen''s hats? |
3252 | To sweep the foul sidewalks with the heaviest silks which the toiling artisans of France can send us? |
3252 | To whom should she go in her vague misery? |
3252 | Too young for love? |
3252 | Too young for love? |
3252 | Too young for love? |
3252 | Too young for love? |
3252 | Too young? |
3252 | Too young? |
3252 | Too young? |
3252 | Too young? |
3252 | Transcendentalism has its occasional vagaries( what school has not? |
3252 | Trust my poems, some of which are unpublished, to the post- office? |
3252 | Turned off by the girl they say he means to marry by and by? |
3252 | V What am I but the creature Thou hast made? |
3252 | Vain? |
3252 | Venerable figure- heads, what would our platforms be without you? |
3252 | Very good, Sir,--he answered.--When have there been most people killed and wounded in the course of this century? |
3252 | Very well; but are they separated by running water? |
3252 | Wan''to hear another? |
3252 | Want my autograph, do you? |
3252 | Was Number Five forgetful, too? |
3252 | Was Parson Young''s own heart such a hideous spectacle to himself? |
3252 | Was he a sound observer, who had made other observations and predictions which had proved accurate? |
3252 | Was he born of woman, this alleged De Sauty? |
3252 | Was he going to kneel to her? |
3252 | Was he thinking of his relations with Carlyle? |
3252 | Was it a dread of blue sky and open air, of the smell of flowers, or some electrical impression to which he was unnaturally sensitive? |
3252 | Was it a fortnight, as we now reckon duration, or only a week? |
3252 | Was it a graduate who had felt the"icy dagger,"or only a candidate for graduation who was afraid of it? |
3252 | Was it grief at parting from the place where her strange friendship had grown up with the Little Gentleman? |
3252 | Was it not an intoxicating vision of gold and glory? |
3252 | Was it not, on the contrary, invariably, under all conditions, in all companies, by the whole household, spoken of as the baby? |
3252 | Was it possible that he was going to take a fancy to her? |
3252 | Was it possible that my Captain could be lying on the straw in one of these places? |
3252 | Was it possible, in any way, to exasperate her irritable nature against him, and in this way to render her more accessible to his own advances? |
3252 | Was it snowing I spoke of? |
3252 | Was it strange that I felt a momentary pang? |
3252 | Was it the feeling of sympathy, or was it the pride of superior sagacity, that changed the look of the old man''s wrinkled features? |
3252 | Was it the first time that these strings of wampum had ever rattled upon her neck and arms? |
3252 | Was it the light reflected from the glossy leaves of the poison sumach which overhung the path that made his cheek look so pale? |
3252 | Was it wicked in me to live?" |
3252 | Was n''t that a pretty neck to slip a hangman''s noose over? |
3252 | Was she indeed writing to this unknown gentleman? |
3252 | Was she not rather becoming more and more involved in the toils of this plotting Yankee? |
3252 | Was that a hundred years ago?--But you''ve got some new pictures and things, have n''t you? |
3252 | Was the Scarabee crushed, as so many of his namesakes are crushed, under the heel of this trampling omniscient? |
3252 | Was the illness dangerous? |
3252 | Was there any great harm in the fact that the Irvings and Paulding wrote in company? |
3252 | Was there any live creatures to be seen on the moon? |
3252 | Was there any strange, mysterious affinity between the master and the dark girl who sat by herself? |
3252 | Was there enough capital of humanity in his somewhat limited nature to furnish sympathy and unshrinking service for his friends in an emergency? |
3252 | Was there ever any such water as that which we used to draw from the deep, cold well, in"the old oaken bucket"? |
3252 | Was there ever anything in Italy, I should like to know, like a Boston sunset? |
3252 | Was there ever anything more miraculous, so far as our common observation goes, than the coming and the going of these creatures? |
3252 | Was there ever anything more stinging, more concentrated, more vigorous, more just? |
3252 | Was there ever anything wholesome that was not poison to somebody? |
3252 | Was there ever such innocence in a creature so full of life? |
3252 | Was there nothing but this forbidding house- front to make the place alive with some breathing memory? |
3252 | We are naturally led to the question, What is the nature of force? |
3252 | We do n''t visit Papa Job quite so early as this without some special cause,--do we, Miss Keren- Happuch?" |
3252 | We do not want his fragments to be made wholes,--if we did, what hand could be found equal to the task? |
3252 | We had fast horses,--did not"Old Blue"trot a mile in three minutes? |
3252 | We have grown rich for what? |
3252 | We have learned a great deal about the how, what have we learned about the why? |
3252 | Wealth''s wasteful tricks I will not learn, Nor ape the glittering upstart fool;-- Shall not carved tables serve my turn, But ALL must be of buhl? |
3252 | Well, did these two ladies dance as if it was hard work to them? |
3252 | Well, how can you mistake that insect for dried leaves? |
3252 | Well, how do you suppose your lower limbs are held to your body? |
3252 | Well, should n''t you like to see me put my foot into one? |
3252 | Well, what then? |
3252 | Well, you have noticed how quietly and rapidly the cars kept on, just as if the locomotive were drawing them? |
3252 | Were not these good and sufficient reasons for her decision? |
3252 | Were schoolboys ever half so wild? |
3252 | Were they anything but planetary foundlings? |
3252 | Were they really christened by that name, any of these numerous Franks? |
3252 | Were we melancholy? |
3252 | Were we not too young to know each other''s hearts when we promised each other that we would love as long as we lived? |
3252 | Whar''s the man gone th''t brought the critter?" |
3252 | What a picture? |
3252 | What about Elsie?" |
3252 | What am I? |
3252 | What are Olympiads and Consulates to these neighboring systems of being? |
3252 | What are all the strongest epithets of our dictionary to us now? |
3252 | What are men to do when they get to heaven, after having exhausted their vocabulary of admiration on earth? |
3252 | What are the names of ministers''sons which most readily occur to our memory as illustrating these advantages? |
3252 | What are the questions we should ask him? |
3252 | What are we to do with them,--we who teach that the soul of a child is an unstained white tablet?" |
3252 | What better provision can be made for a mortal man than such as our own Boston can afford its wealthy children? |
3252 | What business had I to be trying experiments on this forlorn old soul? |
3252 | What business had Sarmatia to be fighting for liberty with a fifteen- foot pole between her and the breasts of her enemies? |
3252 | What business had he to be laying his hand on your shoulder? |
3252 | What business has he to die, I should like to know? |
3252 | What business was it of his? |
3252 | What can I do with him? |
3252 | What can I say to that? |
3252 | What can I say to you of cis- Atlantic things? |
3252 | What can justify one in addressing himself to the general public as if it were his private correspondent? |
3252 | What can promise more than an Essay by Emerson on"Immortality"? |
3252 | What can you do with chrome or loam or gnome or tome? |
3252 | What can you expect of children that come from heathens and savages? |
3252 | What cares a witch for a hangman''s noose? |
3252 | What color are your carriage- horses?" |
3252 | What could I do? |
3252 | What could account so entirely for his ways and actions as that strange poisoning which produces the state they call Tarantism? |
3252 | What could be broad enough to cover the facts of the case? |
3252 | What could be more natural than that love should find its way among the young people who helped to make up the circle gathered around the table? |
3252 | What could have been in her head when she worked out such a fantasy? |
3252 | What could he do about it? |
3252 | What could life be to her but a perpetual anguish, and to those about her but an ever- present terror? |
3252 | What could she do? |
3252 | What could the Hebrew expect when a Christian preacher could use such language about a petition breathing the very soul of humanity? |
3252 | What did he hide that paper for, a year ago and more? |
3252 | What did he mean by saying that his dream had become a vision? |
3252 | What did he mean? |
3252 | What did it mean? |
3252 | What did our two Annexes say to this unexpected turn of events? |
3252 | What did she always wear a necklace for? |
3252 | What did she do? |
3252 | What did that mean? |
3252 | What did you hand me that schoolbook for? |
3252 | What dignifies a province like a university? |
3252 | What do I care, if Dick Venner die? |
3252 | What do I mean by graduates? |
3252 | What do I say to smoking? |
3252 | What do YOU think of these verses my friends?--Is that piece an impromptu? |
3252 | What do the dear old things look like?" |
3252 | What do they know or care about this last revelation of the omnipresent spirit of the material universe? |
3252 | What do those mean? |
3252 | What do we do with ailing vegetables? |
3252 | What do we know of the mysteries of Nature? |
3252 | What do you care for O''m? |
3252 | What do you do when you build a house on a damp soil, and there are damp soils pretty much everywhere? |
3252 | What do you mean by calling certain families yours?" |
3252 | What do you mean in particular? |
3252 | What do you read such things for, my dear? |
3252 | What do you say to my voice now? |
3252 | What do you say to that? |
3252 | What do you say to that? |
3252 | What do you say to this copy of Joannes de Ketam, Venice, 1522? |
3252 | What do you say to this line of Homer as a piece of poetical full- band music? |
3252 | What do you say to this? |
3252 | What do you stop for?" |
3252 | What do you suppose are the sentiments entertained by the Thompsons with a p towards those who address them in writing as Thomson? |
3252 | What do you suppose is an interviewer''s business? |
3252 | What do you think an admiring friend said the other day to one that was talking good things,--good enough to print? |
3252 | What do you think he employs himself about? |
3252 | What do you think it was? |
3252 | What do you think of the Tarantula business? |
3252 | What do you think was kept under that lock? |
3252 | What do you think? |
3252 | What do you think? |
3252 | What do you think? |
3252 | What do you? |
3252 | What doctrines and practice were these colonists likely to bring, with them? |
3252 | What does Byles Gridley want of you, did you say?" |
3252 | What does Rome know of rat and lizard? |
3252 | What does all this sudden concentration upon the girl mean? |
3252 | What does he believe? |
3252 | What does it know about miracles? |
3252 | What does man do in a similar case of need? |
3252 | What does she come to this school for? |
3252 | What does the reader suppose was the source of the most ominous thought which forced itself upon my mind, as I walked the decks of the mighty vessel? |
3252 | What else can it be? |
3252 | What envoy will ever dare to speak with vigor if he is not sustained by the government at home? |
3252 | What feeling have I for you? |
3252 | What glorifies a town like a cathedral? |
3252 | What great discovery have you made? |
3252 | What had happened? |
3252 | What had he to do with your lioness? |
3252 | What harm doth it?" |
3252 | What has Emerson to tell us of"Inspiration?" |
3252 | What has been going on here lately, Deacon?" |
3252 | What has he done? |
3252 | What has his antipathy to do with his staying away? |
3252 | What have I got to say about temperance, the use of animal food, and so forth? |
3252 | What have I save the blessings Thou hast lent? |
3252 | What have they full- dressed you, or rather half- dressed you for, do you think? |
3252 | What have you done? |
3252 | What have you gained as a permanent possession? |
3252 | What have you got there, Jake?" |
3252 | What heathenism has ever approached the horrors of this conception of human destiny? |
3252 | What heroic task of any kind have you performed?" |
3252 | What hope I but Thy mercy and Thy love? |
3252 | What if I should content myself with a single report of what was said and done over our teacups? |
3252 | What if I should sometimes write to please myself? |
3252 | What if I should tell my last, my very recent experience with the other sex? |
3252 | What if Number Five should take off the"rose"that sprinkles her affections on so many, and pour them all on one? |
3252 | What if he is?" |
3252 | What if instead of throbbing it should falter, flutter, and stop as if never to beat again? |
3252 | What if nature has lent him a master key? |
3252 | What if one shall go round and dry up with soft napkins all the dew that falls of a June evening on the leaves of his garden? |
3252 | What if this were the trouble with Maurice Kirkwood? |
3252 | What if you or I had inherited all the tendencies that were born with his cousin Elsie?" |
3252 | What illuminates a country like its scholarship, and what is the nest that hatches scholars but a library? |
3252 | What immortal book have you written? |
3252 | What is Beauty? |
3252 | What is a Prologue? |
3252 | What is a farm but a mute gospel?" |
3252 | What is it that makes common salt crystallize in the form of cubes, and saltpetre in the shape of six- sided prisms? |
3252 | What is it that makes the reputation of Sydenham, as the chief of English physicians? |
3252 | What is it that sets you laughing so? |
3252 | What is it to him that you can localize and name by some uncouth term the disease which you could not prevent and which you can not cure? |
3252 | What is it, Elixir Vitae or Aurum potabile? |
3252 | What is it? |
3252 | What is it? |
3252 | What is love, Sophy?" |
3252 | What is that book he is holding? |
3252 | What is that look of paternity and of maternity which observing and experienced mothers and old nurses know so well in men and in women?) |
3252 | What is that old gentleman crying about? |
3252 | What is that saying of mine about I squinting brains?" |
3252 | What is that to the glorious self- renunciation of a martyr in pearls and diamonds? |
3252 | What is the condition of things in the growing intimacy of Number Five and the Tutor? |
3252 | What is the date of it? |
3252 | What is the definite belief of Emerson as expressed in this discourse,--what does it mean? |
3252 | What is the head of it, and where does it lie? |
3252 | What is the meaning of these perpetual changes and conflicts of medical opinion and practice, from an early antiquity to our own time? |
3252 | What is the meaning of this change which has come over her features, and her voice, her temper, her whole being? |
3252 | What is the meaning of this rush into rhyming of such a multitude of people, of all ages, from the infant phenomenon to the oldest inhabitant? |
3252 | What is the use of going about and setting up a flag of negation?''" |
3252 | What is the use of my saying what some of these opinions are? |
3252 | What is the use, I say? |
3252 | What is there that you can tell me to which I can not respond with sympathy? |
3252 | What is there that youth will not endure and triumph over? |
3252 | What is this beauty?'' |
3252 | What is this life without the poor accidents which made it our own, and by which we identify ourselves? |
3252 | What is this"genial atmosphere"but the very spirit of Christianity? |
3252 | What is to be the fate of Lurida? |
3252 | What is''t the chap''s been a- doin''on? |
3252 | What kills anybody quickest, Doctor?" |
3252 | What kind of a constituency is this which is to look to you as its authorized champions in the struggle of life against its numerous enemies? |
3252 | What line have we written that was on a level with our conceptions? |
3252 | What made Myrtle nervous and restless? |
3252 | What madness could impel So rum a flat to face so prime a swell?" |
3252 | What makes you think she''s in love with him? |
3252 | What man could speak more fitly, with more authority of"Character,"than Emerson? |
3252 | What man was he who would lay his hand familiarly upon his shoulder and call him Waldo? |
3252 | What more can be asked to prove their honesty and sincerity? |
3252 | What more could I ask to assure me of the Captain''s safety? |
3252 | What more could this poor, dear Helen say? |
3252 | What more natural than that it should be used again when the subject of appealing to chance came up in conversation? |
3252 | What must she do but buy a small copper breast- pin and put it under"Schoolma''am''s"plate that morning, at breakfast? |
3252 | What must you expect to forget? |
3252 | What noble principle, what deathless interest, was there at stake? |
3252 | What nobler tasks has the poet than to exalt the idea of manhood, and to make the world we live in more beautiful? |
3252 | What of all this shall I remember longest? |
3252 | What others could there be? |
3252 | What page of ours that does not betray some weakness we would fain have left unrecorded? |
3252 | What prospect have I of ever being rid of this long and deep- seated infirmity? |
3252 | What remains for you yet to learn? |
3252 | What reported conversation can stand a captious criticism like this? |
3252 | What saddest note in your spiritual dirges which will not find its chord in mine? |
3252 | What shall I do about it? |
3252 | What shall I do? |
3252 | What shall I do?" |
3252 | What shall I say in this presence of the duties of a Librarian? |
3252 | What shall I say of the personal habits you must form if you wish for success? |
3252 | What shall a man do, when a woman makes such a demand, involving such an avowal? |
3252 | What shall it be? |
3252 | What shall we say to the doctrine of the fall of man as the ground of inflicting endless misery on the human race? |
3252 | What should I be afraid of? |
3252 | What should he do about it, if it turned out so? |
3252 | What should he do? |
3252 | What should she do about it? |
3252 | What should you think of the probable musical genius of a young man who was particularly fond of jingling a set of sleigh- bells? |
3252 | What sort of a man do you find my old friend the Deacon?" |
3252 | What strange early impression was it which led a certain lady always to shriek aloud if she ventured to enter a church, as it is recorded? |
3252 | What the d''d''didos are y''abaout with them great huffs o''yourn?" |
3252 | What the deuse is that odd noise in his chamber? |
3252 | What then? |
3252 | What then? |
3252 | What then? |
3252 | What though the rose leaves fall? |
3252 | What was I saying,--I, who would not for the world have pained our unfortunate little boarder by an allusion? |
3252 | What was coming next,--a declaration, or an accusation of murder? |
3252 | What was he going to tell us? |
3252 | What was he good for? |
3252 | What was it he wanted her to keep?" |
3252 | What was she crying for? |
3252 | What was that for? |
3252 | What was that medicine which so frequently occurs in the printed letters under the name of"rubila"? |
3252 | What was the end to be attained by accepting the gage of battle? |
3252 | What was the matter with her eyes, that they sucked your life out of you in that strange way? |
3252 | What was the meaning of this slip of paper coming to light at this time, after reposing undisturbed so long? |
3252 | What was the slight peculiarity of her enunciation, when she read? |
3252 | What was the use of trying to enforce social intercourse under such conditions? |
3252 | What was there to distract him or disturb him? |
3252 | What was this unexplained something which came between her soul and that of every other human being with whom she was in relations? |
3252 | What was this wonderful substance which so astonished kings, princes, dukes, knights, and doctors? |
3252 | What were cold conventionalities at such a moment? |
3252 | What were these torturing gifts, and wherefore lent her? |
3252 | What were they thinking of? |
3252 | What will happen, though, if he makes love to her? |
3252 | What will prevent that? |
3252 | What will your hatter say about the two sides of the head? |
3252 | What wizard fills the maddening glass What soil the enchanted clusters grew? |
3252 | What would a steam- engine be without a crank? |
3252 | What would a young girl be who never mingled her voice with the songs and prayers that rose all around her with every returning day of rest? |
3252 | What would be the consequence if all this property came into the possession of Silence Withers? |
3252 | What would be the state of the highways of life, if we did not drive our THOUGHT- SPRINKLERS through them with the valves open, sometimes? |
3252 | What would it avail to tell you anecdotes of a sweet and wonderful boy, such as we solace and sadden ourselves with at home every morning and evening? |
3252 | What would our civilization be without the piano? |
3252 | What would she do it for? |
3252 | What y''been dreamin''abaout? |
3252 | What you think she do,''f anybody else tech it?" |
3252 | What''n thunder''r''y''abaout, y''darned Portagee?" |
3252 | What''n thunder''s that''ere raoun''y''r neck? |
3252 | What''r''y''dreamin''abaout?" |
3252 | What''s happened?" |
3252 | What''s happened?" |
3252 | What''s happened?" |
3252 | What''s that''ere stickin''aout o''y''r boot?" |
3252 | What''s the name of the alley, and which bell?" |
3252 | What''s the use? |
3252 | When did you ever hear such tones? |
3252 | When gratitude is a bankrupt, love only can pay his debts; and if Maurice gave his heart to Euthymia, would not she receive it as payment in full? |
3252 | When he had got through, the Doctor looked him in the face steadily, as if he were saying, Is that all? |
3252 | When his breath ceased and his heart stopped beating? |
3252 | When we come to the application, in the same Essay, almost on the same page, what can we make of such discourse as this? |
3252 | When we look for them the next morning, do we not find them withered leaves?" |
3252 | When your friends give out, who is left for you? |
3252 | Whence is it? |
3252 | Where are the cemeteries of the dead ones, or do they die at all except when we kill them? |
3252 | Where are the cradles of the young flies? |
3252 | Where can that latch be that rattles so? |
3252 | Where can you find a happier child? |
3252 | Where could it have been? |
3252 | Where did he get those expressions"A 1"and"prime"and so on? |
3252 | Where did she learn French? |
3252 | Where did the anti- republican, anti- democratic passion for swelling names come from, and how long has it been naturalized among us? |
3252 | Where did this"frightful idea"come from? |
3252 | Where does all this ambition for names without realities come from? |
3252 | Where does she get those books she is reading so often? |
3252 | Where is my Beranger? |
3252 | Where is this monument? |
3252 | Where is your hat, doctor? |
3252 | Where now is the fame of Bouillaud, Professor and Deputy, the Sangrado of his time? |
3252 | Where shall it next flame at the head of the long procession? |
3252 | Where should we go next? |
3252 | Where then did Goethe find his lovers? |
3252 | Where to? |
3252 | Where was all his legacy of knowledge when Norfolk was decimated? |
3252 | Where will you find a sympathy like mine in your hours of sadness? |
3252 | Where would Maryland, Kentucky, Missouri, Tennessee,--saved, or looking to be saved, even as it is, as by fire,--have been in the day of trial? |
3252 | Where would she come from? |
3252 | Where''s the Doctor?--let the Doctor get to him, ca n''t ye?" |
3252 | Where''s the skins of''em? |
3252 | Where''s the young master? |
3252 | Wherefore, then, should thy servant be yet a burden unto my lord the king?" |
3252 | Wherever one looked taller and fuller than the rest, I asked myself,--"Is this it?" |
3252 | Whether a hundred or a thousand years old, who knows? |
3252 | Which has most to suffer, and which has most endurance and vitality? |
3252 | Which is it?--Why, that one, there,--that young fellow,--don''t you see?--What young fellow are you two looking at? |
3252 | Which of these did he most favor? |
3252 | Which of these two girls would be the safest choice for a young man? |
3252 | Which style do you like best? |
3252 | While in my simple gospel creed That"God is Love"so plain I read, Shall dreams of heathen birth affright My pathway through the coming night? |
3252 | Who among us has taught better than Nathan Smith, better than Elisha Bartlett? |
3252 | Who are the persons that use this argument? |
3252 | Who are the"quality,"--said the Model, etc., in a community like ours? |
3252 | Who are they that practice Homoeopathy, and say this of a man with the Materia Medica of Hahnemann lying before him? |
3252 | Who are you that build your palaces on my margin? |
3252 | Who blows out the gas instead of shutting it off? |
3252 | Who but myself shall cloud my soul with fear? |
3252 | Who can fail to see one common spirit in the radical ecclesiastic and the reforming court- physician? |
3252 | Who can give better counsels on"Culture"than Emerson? |
3252 | Who can tell what we owe to the Mutual Admiration Society of which Shakspeare, and Ben Jonson, and Beaumont and Fletcher were members? |
3252 | Who can this man be but the boy of that story? |
3252 | Who cares how many stamens or pistils that little brown flower, which comes out before the leaf, may have to classify it by? |
3252 | Who could blame her? |
3252 | Who could know all these things, except the few people of the household? |
3252 | Who could say? |
3252 | Who could say? |
3252 | Who did not do just the same thing, and does not often do it still, now that the first flush of the fever is over? |
3252 | Who did you say was sick and wanted to see me, Fordyce?" |
3252 | Who do you think is coming?" |
3252 | Who does not remember odious images that can never be washed out from the consciousness which they have stained? |
3252 | Who forged in roaring flames the ponderous stone, And shaped the moulded metal to his need? |
3252 | Who forgets the great muster- day, and the collision of the classic with the democratic forces? |
3252 | Who found the seeds of fire and made them shoot, Fed by his breath, in buds and flowers of flame? |
3252 | Who furnished your parlors?" |
3252 | Who gave the dragging car its rolling wheel, And tamed the steed that whirls its circling round? |
3252 | Who is ahead? |
3252 | Who is he, The one ye name and tell us that ye serve, Whom ye would call me from my lonely tower To worship with the many- headed throng? |
3252 | Who is he? |
3252 | Who is it? |
3252 | Who is the city correspondent of this place?" |
3252 | Who is the owner? |
3252 | Who is there here that I can have any true society with, but you? |
3252 | Who is there of English descent among us that does not feel with Cowper,"England, with all thy faults, I love thee still"? |
3252 | Who is this Number Five, so fascinating, so wise, so full of knowledge, and so ready to learn? |
3252 | Who knows And what shall I say if a wretch should propose? |
3252 | Who knows a woman''s wild caprice? |
3252 | Who knows? |
3252 | Who knows? |
3252 | Who or what set you to reading that, I should like to know?" |
3252 | Who puts the key in the desk and fastens it tight with the spring lock? |
3252 | Who said he was a man? |
3252 | Who says we are more? |
3252 | Who shall say? |
3252 | Who that has ever been at the old Anchor Tavern forgets Miranda''s"A little of this fricassee?-it is ver- y nice;"or"Some of these cakes? |
3252 | Who was she? |
3252 | Who will I tell him wants to ask him about old coin?" |
3252 | Who wishes to destroy the Union? |
3252 | Who would dare to marry Elsie? |
3252 | Who would have expected to meet my maternal uncle in the guise of a schoolboy? |
3252 | Who would have looked for it under the Italian word cantare? |
3252 | Who would have thought that the saucy question,"Does your mother know you''re out?" |
3252 | Who would it be? |
3252 | Who would not pray that my last gleam of light and hope may be that of dawn and not of departing day? |
3252 | Who would not rather wear his decorations beneath his uniform than on it? |
3252 | Who would not wish that he were wrong in such a suspicion? |
3252 | Who would not, will not, if he can, Bathe in the breezes of fair Cape Ann, Rest in the bowers her bays enfold, Loved by the sachems and squaws of old? |
3252 | Who wrote that"I Like You and I Love You,"which we found in the sugar- bowl the other day? |
3252 | Who''s gon- to run,''n''wher''s''t gon- to be? |
3252 | Who''s that you call old,--not Byles Gridley, hey? |
3252 | Who, on the whole, constitute the nobler class of human beings? |
3252 | Who?" |
3252 | Whom do we trust and serve? |
3252 | Whose hand protect me from myself but Thine? |
3252 | Whose works was I going to question him about, do you ask me? |
3252 | Why are we not all in love with Number Five? |
3252 | Why ca n''t somebody give us a list of things that everybody thinks and nobody says, and another list of things that everybody says and nobody thinks? |
3252 | Why ca n''t you go over to the shop and make''em trot her out?" |
3252 | Why ca n''t you make her acquaintance and be civil to her? |
3252 | Why ca n''t you pick me out a couple of what you think are the best of''em? |
3252 | Why could not she have done something to prevent it? |
3252 | Why did n''t I tell him he had nothing to do with it, yet awhile? |
3252 | Why did n''t I warn him about love and all that nonsense? |
3252 | Why did n''t Job ask where the flies come from and where they go to? |
3252 | Why did not you think of a railway- station, where the cars stop five minutes for refreshments? |
3252 | Why do n''t I describe her person? |
3252 | Why do n''t they now? |
3252 | Why do n''t they now? |
3252 | Why do n''t they wear a ring in it? |
3252 | Why do n''t those talking ladies take a spider as their emblem? |
3252 | Why do n''t you get that lady off from Battle Monument and plant a terrapin in her place? |
3252 | Why do n''t you interview this mysterious personage? |
3252 | Why do n''t you put a canvas- back- duck on the top of the Washington column? |
3252 | Why do n''t you send your manuscript by mail?" |
3252 | Why does iron rust, while gold remains untarnished, and gold amalgamate, while iron refuses the alliance of mercury? |
3252 | Why does n''t a man always strike out the first of the two words, to gratify his diabolical love of injustice? |
3252 | Why does not somebody come and carry off this noble woman, waiting here all ready to make a man happy? |
3252 | Why doubt for a moment? |
3252 | Why had she quitted the city so abruptly, and fled to her old home, leaving all the gayeties behind her which had so attracted and dazzled her? |
3252 | Why has she never been in love with any one of her suitors? |
3252 | Why has that excellent old phrase gone out of use? |
3252 | Why have you not told me that we thought alike? |
3252 | Why may not some one of the lady Teacups have played the part of a masculine lover? |
3252 | Why mourn that we, the favored few Whom grasping Time so long has spared Life''s sweet illusions to pursue, The common lot of age have shared? |
3252 | Why no, of course not; had not he made all proper inquiries about that when Susan came to town? |
3252 | Why not apply Mr. Galton''s process, and get thirty- eight stories all in one? |
3252 | Why not as well die in the attempt to break up a wretched servitude to a perverted nervous movement as in any other way? |
3252 | Why not say a boy, if it was a boy? |
3252 | Why not, I should like to know? |
3252 | Why not? |
3252 | Why not? |
3252 | Why question? |
3252 | Why should Hannah think herself so much better than Bridget? |
3252 | Why should I any longer be the slave of a foolish fancy that has grown into a half insane habit of mind? |
3252 | Why should I call her"poor little Helen"? |
3252 | Why should I consider it worth while to say that we went there at all? |
3252 | Why should I cumber myself with regrets that the receiver is not capacious? |
3252 | Why should I go mousing about the place? |
3252 | Why should I go over the old house again, having already described it more than ten years ago? |
3252 | Why should I hope or fear when I send out my book? |
3252 | Why should I provoke a catastrophe which appears inevitable if I invite it by exposing myself to its too well ascertained cause? |
3252 | Why should her fleeting day- dreams fade unspoken, Like daffodils that die with sheaths unbroken? |
3252 | Why should it be? |
3252 | Why should n''t he make up to the Jedge''s daughter? |
3252 | Why should n''t they, I should like to know? |
3252 | Why should n''t we get a romance out of all this, hey? |
3252 | Why should n''t you want to revisit your old home sometimes?" |
3252 | Why should not Maurice-- you both tell me to call him so-- take the diplomatic office which has been offered him? |
3252 | Why should not he be writing a novel? |
3252 | Why should not human nature be the same in Arrowhead Village as elsewhere? |
3252 | Why should not the Counsellor fall in love and write verses? |
3252 | Why should not the coming question announce itself by stirring in the pulses and thrilling in the nerves of the descendant of all these grandmothers? |
3252 | Why should not the rising tide of life have drowned out the feeble growths that infested the shallows of childhood? |
3252 | Why should not this happen, when we know that a sudden mental shock may be the cause of insanity? |
3252 | Why should not we also enjoy an original relation to the universe? |
3252 | Why should not we have a poetry and philosophy of insight and not of tradition, and a religion by revelation to us, and not the history of theirs?" |
3252 | Why should that be his real name? |
3252 | Why should we be more shy of repeating ourselves than the spring be tired of blossoms or the night of stars? |
3252 | Why should you renounce your right to traverse the starlit deserts of truth, for the premature comforts of an acre, house, and barn? |
3252 | Why the diavolo did n''t he break it off, then? |
3252 | Why tremble? |
3252 | Why two baths?" |
3252 | Why was it that no one of them had the look and bearing of that young man she had seen but a moment the other evening? |
3252 | Why was the A self like his good uncle in bodily aspect and mental and moral qualities, and the B self like the bad uncle in look and character? |
3252 | Why will you ask for other glories when you have soft crabs? |
3252 | Why you ask? |
3252 | Why you floor the cellar with cement, do n''t you? |
3252 | Why, did n''t President Wheelock say to a young man who consulted him, that some persons might be true Christians without suspecting it? |
3252 | Why, what did she do? |
3252 | Why, what did the great Richard Baxter say in his book on Infant Baptism? |
3252 | Why? |
3252 | Why?" |
3252 | Will Elsie be easily taken with such a fellow? |
3252 | Will he be duly grateful for the correction?] |
3252 | Will he die? |
3252 | Will it be enough?" |
3252 | Will no_ Angel_ body himself out of that; no stalwart Yankee_ man_, with color in the cheeks of him and a coat on his back?" |
3252 | Will nobody block those wheels, uncouple that pinion, cut the string that holds those weights, blow up the infernal machine with gunpowder? |
3252 | Will not the rays strike through to his brain at last, and send him to a narrower cell than this egg- shell dome which is his workshop and his prison? |
3252 | Will she come by the hillside or round through the wood? |
3252 | Will she come? |
3252 | Will she pass through it unharmed, or wander from her path, and fall over one of those fearful precipices which lie before her? |
3252 | Will she wear her brown dress or her mantle and hood? |
3252 | Will the Man be of the Indian type, as President Samuel Stanhope Smith and others have supposed the transplanted European will become by and by? |
3252 | Will the needle swing back from the east or the west? |
3252 | Will the ring- dove return to her nest? |
3252 | Will you ask a portrait- painter how many of those who sit to hint have both sides of their faces exactly alike? |
3252 | Will you be so good as to come at once to the facts on which you found your suspicions, and which lead you to put these questions to me?" |
3252 | Will you believe that I saw Number Five, with a sweet, approving smile on her face all the time, brush her cheek with her hand- kerchief? |
3252 | Will you do this at once, or will you compel me to show you the absolute necessity of your doing it, at the expense of pain to both of us? |
3252 | Will you go over to his house with me at noon, when he comes back after his morning visits, and have a talk over the whole matter with him? |
3252 | Will you let me know what keeps you so busy when you ought to be asleep, or taking your ease and comfort in some way or other?" |
3252 | Will you look at the paper I hold?" |
3252 | Will you not indulge me in telling you something of my own story? |
3252 | Will you show me the double star you said I should see? |
3252 | Will you take the offered gift?" |
3252 | Will you take the trouble to ask your tailor how many persons have their two shoulders of the same height? |
3252 | Will you tell me how it is you seem to be acquainted with everybody you are introduced to, though he evidently considers you an entire stranger? |
3252 | Will you trust your life and happiness with one who can offer you so little beside his love? |
3252 | William-- writing once more-- after an exclamation in strong English of the older pattern,--"Whether''t is nobler-- nobler-- nobler--"To do what? |
3252 | Willing? |
3252 | Without thee, what were life? |
3252 | Wonder if angels breathe like mortals? |
3252 | Wordsworth''s"Ode"is a noble and beautiful dream; is it anything more? |
3252 | Would he not call at Hyacinth Cottage, and let her thank him again there? |
3252 | Would he or I be the listener, if we were side by side? |
3252 | Would it be a surprise to you, if he had carried his acuteness in some particular case like the one I am to mention beyond the prescribed limits?" |
3252 | Would it be fair for a parent to put into a child''s hands the title- deeds to all its future possessions, and a bunch of matches? |
3252 | Would it be one of the great Ex- Presidents whose names were known to, all the world? |
3252 | Would it be the silver- tongued orator of Kentucky or the"God- like"champion of the Constitution, our New- England Jupiter Capitolinus? |
3252 | Would it ever be bridged over? |
3252 | Would it wake her from her trance? |
3252 | Would n''t he forgive me for telling him he was free? |
3252 | Would n''t it be fun to look down at the bores and the duns? |
3252 | Would one take no especial precautions if his wife, about to become a mother, had been bitten by a rabid animal, because so many escape? |
3252 | Would you have any objection to showing your case to the Societies of Medical Improvement and Medical Observation? |
3252 | Would you lecture to us; if you were a professor in one of the great medical schools?" |
3252 | Would you venture to take charge of the case?" |
3252 | Would you, then, banish all allusions to matters of this nature from the society of people who come together habitually? |
3252 | Y''ha''n''t heerd noth''n''abaout it?" |
3252 | Yes, where are our cats?" |
3252 | Yes? |
3252 | Yet why with coward lips complain That this must lean and that must fall? |
3252 | You ai n''t such a fool as to think that is new,--are you? |
3252 | You are clear, I suppose, that the Omniscient spoke through Solomon, but that Shakespeare wrote without his help?" |
3252 | You are familiar with Vasari, of course?" |
3252 | You are in independent circumstances, perhaps? |
3252 | You are quite welcome to the lines"To the Rhodora;"but I think they need the superscription["Lines on being asked''Whence is the Flower?''"]. |
3252 | You are specialist enough to take care of a sprained ankle, I suppose, are you not?" |
3252 | You believe, do you not? |
3252 | You believe, do you not? |
3252 | You broke down in your great speech, did you? |
3252 | You did n''t think he was my''Literary Celebrity,''did you?" |
3252 | You do n''t believe in presentiments, do you?" |
3252 | You do n''t suppose Adam had the cutaneous unpleasantness politely called psora, do you? |
3252 | You do n''t suppose there was a special act of creation for the express purpose of bestowing that little wretch on humanity, do you? |
3252 | You do n''t think I should expect any woman to listen to such a sentence as that long one, without giving her a chance to put in a word? |
3252 | You do n''t think the idea adds to the sublimity and associations of the cataract? |
3252 | You do not know who she is, then?" |
3252 | You don''think I care for Dick? |
3252 | You found it accurate, I hope, in its descriptions?" |
3252 | You have heard of Alphonse Karr?'' |
3252 | You have not forgotten the double star,--the two that shone for each other and made a little world by themselves? |
3252 | You have sometimes been in a train on the railroad when the engine was detached a long way from the station you were approaching? |
3252 | You know about the caddice- worm? |
3252 | You know that young lady, doctor?" |
3252 | You know the Esquimaux kayak,( if that is the name of it,) do n''t you? |
3252 | You know who the Fire- hang- bird is, do n''t you? |
3252 | You know your Horace and Virgil well, I take it for granted?" |
3252 | You know, I suppose,--he said,--what is meant by complementary colors? |
3252 | You may call the story of Ulysses and the Sirens a fable, but what will you say to Mario and the poor lady who followed him? |
3252 | You may read in the parable,"Friend, how camest thou in hither not having a wedding garment?" |
3252 | You mean she''s gone an''run off with some good- for- nothin''man or other? |
3252 | You modelled this piece on the style of a famous living English poet, did you not?" |
3252 | You never remarked anything curious about her ornaments? |
3252 | You never wrote in verse, did you, Cyprian?" |
3252 | You read your Bible, Doctor, do n''t you? |
3252 | You reject my offer unconditionally?" |
3252 | You remember Myrtle Hazard? |
3252 | You remember Rachel, my first wife,--don''t you, Fordyce?" |
3252 | You remember Thomas Prince''s"Chronological History of New England,"I suppose? |
3252 | You remember how she won us the boat- race?" |
3252 | You remember that dear friend of ours who left us not long since? |
3252 | You remember the boat- race? |
3252 | You remember those beautiful lines out of our newspaper I sent you? |
3252 | You remember, perhaps, in some papers published awhile ago, an odd poem written by an old Latin tutor? |
3252 | You settled the estate of the late Malachi Withers, did you not?" |
3252 | You smile,--I said.--Perhaps life seems to you a little bundle of great things? |
3252 | You will be indulgent to my mistakes and shortcomings,--and who can expect to avoid them? |
3252 | You wish to correct an error in my Broomstick poem, do you? |
3252 | You would not attack a church dogma-- say Total Depravity-- in a lyceum- lecture, for instance? |
3252 | You would not leave us for another school, would you?" |
3252 | You''ll confess to a rhyming dictionary anyhow, wo n''t you? |
3252 | You''ll see to it,--won''t you, Abel?" |
3252 | You''re equal to that, are n''t you?" |
3252 | You''re pious? |
3252 | You''ve heard about her going to school at that place,--the''Institoot,''as those people call it? |
3252 | You''ve heard, no doubt, of PARSON TURELL? |
3252 | You''ve seen a blind man with a stick, feeling his way along? |
3252 | ["Depind on Kitty, is it? |
3252 | [--Now is n''t this the drollest world to live in that one could imagine, short of being in a fit of delirium tremens? |
3252 | _ New England Reformers_.--Would any one venture to guess how Emerson would treat this subject? |
3252 | a thousand times, no!--Yet what is this which has been shaping itself in my soul?--Is it a thought?--is it a dream? |
3252 | against all human and divine authority? |
3252 | and Mrs. Hopkins, and Gifted, and Susan, and everybody? |
3252 | and President Buchanan? |
3252 | and Whereto? |
3252 | and in what do all emotions shared by a young man with such a young girl as this tend to find their last expression? |
3252 | and is not my thought the abstract of ten thousand of these crumbs of truth with which you would choke off my speech? |
3252 | and that the American eagle screams with delight to see three drachms of calomel given at a single mouthful? |
3252 | and the Boston State- House? |
3252 | and the financial question, WHO PAID FOR IT? |
3252 | and the old lady by him, and the three girls, what are they all covering their eyes for? |
3252 | and to what could it be owing, but to an innate organic tendency? |
3252 | and we have already taken our hats off and are answering it with our own How d''ye do? |
3252 | and what are the qualifications? |
3252 | and what''s all this noise about?" |
3252 | and would she see me in the flush of my stolen triumph, and hate and despise me ever after? |
3252 | and, Do you take this woman? |
3252 | and, Where do the pins go to? |
3252 | are the southern curtains drawn? |
3252 | arrive at distinction? |
3252 | as your Dr. Rabelais has it,--answers the iconoclast,--"what is that to me and my colic, to me and my strangury? |
3252 | cast away the flower I took in the bud because it does not show as I hoped it would when it opened? |
3252 | complimentary to our party? |
3252 | did you never read any novels?" |
3252 | do you ask me? |
3252 | do you hear anything now?" |
3252 | do you know what has got hold of you? |
3252 | do you think it''s safe to put that cold stuff into your stomick?" |
3252 | fill a fresh bumper,--for why should we go While the[ nectar][ logwood] still reddens our cups as they flow? |
3252 | ha''n''t I tol''y''a dozen times?" |
3252 | has he come yet? |
3252 | has my stove and pepper- pot a false bottom? |
3252 | he asked, curiously.--Why, the parenthesis, said I.--Parenthesis? |
3252 | he called out,"what have you got there? |
3252 | he said to himself;"what are you about making phrases, when you have got a piece of work like this in hand?" |
3252 | he said, talking to himself in his usual way,"is n''t that good? |
3252 | heard I not that ringing strain, That clear celestial tone? |
3252 | here?" |
3252 | how do you do? |
3252 | how do you think the officiating clergyman put the questions? |
3252 | how many remember anything they read but once, and so long ago as that? |
3252 | how-- do-- you-- do Johnny?! |
3252 | hush!--that whisper,-"Where is Mary''s boy?" |
3252 | it was too horrible, was that the face which had been so close to hers but yesterday? |
3252 | look at me, my child; do n''t you know your old friend Byles Gridley?" |
3252 | of Number Five and the young Tutor who is so constantly found in her company? |
3252 | or any unpardonable cabal in the literary union of Verplanck and Bryant and Sands, and as many more as they chose to associate with them? |
3252 | or do you want to make me kill myself?" |
3252 | or is he going to be late, with the other great folks?" |
3252 | or is it a mere fancy that such a power belongs to any human being? |
3252 | or"Come, naow, a''n''t ye''shamed?" |
3252 | or"Out of what great picture have these pieces been cut?" |
3252 | or, How are you? |
3252 | or, worse than any body, is----? |
3252 | presents!--said I.--What tickets, what presents has he had the impertinence to be offering to that young lady? |
3252 | said Miss Matilda,--"what''s that rumblin''?" |
3252 | said the Doctor, with a pleasant, friendly look,--"have you stay? |
3252 | said the Doctor,--"catching? |
3252 | said the fellow,--but softly, so that Saint Christopher should not hear him,--''do you think I''m in earnest? |
3252 | said the good minister,"is this you?" |
3252 | said the old Doctor, one morning,"after you''ve harnessed Caustic, come into the study a few minutes, will you?" |
3252 | should n''t she be real happy to see him? |
3252 | supper and all?" |
3252 | the old mystery remains, If I am I; thou, thou, or thou art I?" |
3252 | this is the game, is it? |
3252 | to color meerschaums? |
3252 | to dredge our maidens''hair with gold- dust? |
3252 | to flaunt in laces, and sparkle in diamonds? |
3252 | to float through life, the passive shuttlecocks of fashion, from the avenues to the beaches, and back again from the beaches to the avenues? |
3252 | to reduce the speed of trotting horses a second or two below its old minimum? |
3252 | was the very same that Horace addressed to the bore who attacked him in the Via Sacra? |
3252 | what is it? |
3252 | what is life while thou''rt away? |
3252 | what is this my frenzy hears? |
3252 | where is she? |
3252 | who cares? |
3252 | who teaches better than some of our living contemporaries who divide their time between city and country schools? |
3252 | who will be my pupils in a Course,--Poetry taught in twelve lessons? |
3252 | you know,--oh, tell me, darlin'', don''you love to see the gen''l''man that keeps up at the school where you go? |
3254 | ''Ave you an appointment? 3254 ''Aven''t you never noticed, sir, that there''s two worlds-- the world as it is, and the world as it seems to the public man?" |
3254 | ''During coverture,''quoted Mr. Paramor, pausing again,"you understand, of course, if you do n''t get on, and separate, she goes on taking?" |
3254 | ''Ello? |
3254 | ''Having''? 3254 ''Not a dog in the streets more lost,''"thought he;"now what did he mean by that?" |
3254 | ''Ow''s yours? |
3254 | ''Still here?'' 3254 ''What do you think you''ll get by staying?'' |
3254 | ''What do you want?'' 3254 ''What will you go for?'' |
3254 | ''Who''s that with you?'' 3254 ''Why do you wear a wig?'' |
3254 | ''Will,''Greta--''will''; how often must I tell you? 3254 ''You come into my house like thieves in the night,''he said,''and give me the lie, do you?'' |
3254 | ''You refuse?'' 3254 A fund? |
3254 | A gentleman either is a gentleman or he is n''t; what has it to do with the way other people behave? |
3254 | A great painter, my husband, is he not? |
3254 | A little bit? |
3254 | A soldier, was n''t he? |
3254 | A wigging? |
3254 | A woman? 3254 About the bulletin?" |
3254 | Afraid of being connected with a woman, Joe? |
3254 | Afraid-- how-- afraid? |
3254 | After twelve years? 3254 Age and Youth-- Past and Present--"MRS. L. Were yu talkin''about Fred? |
3254 | Ah, George,he said,"your mother''s here, is n''t she? |
3254 | Ah, Vigil, how are you? 3254 Ah, yes,"I said,"and do you think you''ll get it?" |
3254 | Ai n''t you never lived in the country, sir? |
3254 | All right, sir? |
3254 | All? 3254 Alone?" |
3254 | Alone? |
3254 | Already? |
3254 | Also ran:''Michael Mont''? |
3254 | Always the same rooms? |
3254 | Am I disturbing you? |
3254 | Am I her father? 3254 Am I of any use up there?" |
3254 | Am I right in thinking that it was my young sister who sent you on this crusade? |
3254 | Am I? 3254 America, then?" |
3254 | An interest in life? |
3254 | An''what would yu take for dinner to- day? 3254 And Alan? |
3254 | And Captain Pearse? |
3254 | And I suppose you do not like us, either? |
3254 | And Miss Sheila? |
3254 | And Pippin? |
3254 | And Soames was with her? |
3254 | And Willie? 3254 And are n''t you going to put any by for a rainy day?" |
3254 | And are n''t you going up yourself this season? |
3254 | And are n''t you? |
3254 | And are people happier now than they were then? |
3254 | And are you happier for that? |
3254 | And are you? |
3254 | And damn the consequences? 3254 And did he give it her back?" |
3254 | And did he tell you my grandfather Carfax''s dictum in the Banstock case? |
3254 | And did it? |
3254 | And do you find it interesting? |
3254 | And do you give pecuniary assistance, too? |
3254 | And do you like her very much? |
3254 | And do you remember the first night? |
3254 | And do you suppose that he''ll tell you what he wants? 3254 And do you think that I do n''t long for you?" |
3254 | And does n''t comfort also destroy the power of action? |
3254 | And does your daughter despise it, too? |
3254 | And have you any other news, dear? 3254 And have you business at the house?" |
3254 | And have you? |
3254 | And have you? |
3254 | And he wants you to live on cocoa too? |
3254 | And he was short, and had whiskers? |
3254 | And he? |
3254 | And how about drawing? 3254 And how are you going to get back?" |
3254 | And how d''you like it after Wales? |
3254 | And how do you tell them, may I ask? |
3254 | And how is dear Irene? |
3254 | And how is your sciatica? |
3254 | And how long does that take you generally? |
3254 | And how long was it before he came back? |
3254 | And how long? |
3254 | And how''s your brother Claud? |
3254 | And if I do not? |
3254 | And if we lose? |
3254 | And if-- if they wo n''t? |
3254 | And in love with you? |
3254 | And in spite of myopia? |
3254 | And in the meantime? |
3254 | And is Society never right? 3254 And little Gyp?" |
3254 | And love everybody? |
3254 | And mademoiselle? |
3254 | And married? |
3254 | And naturally, for others? |
3254 | And safe? |
3254 | And shall you try to hurt them? |
3254 | And she is coming back to- morrow? 3254 And so,"Miltoun went on, looking him through and through;"to- morrow is to be your last day, too? |
3254 | And suppose in the end he''s proved innocent? |
3254 | And that? |
3254 | And the archway? |
3254 | And the daughter? |
3254 | And then? |
3254 | And then? |
3254 | And then? |
3254 | And then? |
3254 | And thirsty? |
3254 | And turns,he said,"on what is the unit of national feeling and intelligence? |
3254 | And what are you going to have? 3254 And what became of the poor dog?" |
3254 | And what became of your friend? |
3254 | And what becomes of the woman and the children in a case like that? |
3254 | And what did you do? |
3254 | And what do you think of the engagement? |
3254 | And what do you think, Nollie? |
3254 | And what has become of Captain Pearse? |
3254 | And what if it were? |
3254 | And what if you hurt me now, Nollie? |
3254 | And what is he going to say about you? |
3254 | And what is that? |
3254 | And what is the something, please? |
3254 | And what is to be your contribution to its renovation? |
3254 | And what part do you know best? |
3254 | And what sort of a heart? |
3254 | And what sort of picture did you think of? |
3254 | And what time did you have breakfast? |
3254 | And what''s her position to be,I said,"while you''re away? |
3254 | And what''s your name? |
3254 | And when are you going? |
3254 | And when will you be able---? |
3254 | And when you go to bed? |
3254 | And where are you living now? |
3254 | And where do you live? |
3254 | And where have you been meeting this-- er-- anonymous creature? |
3254 | And where is that? |
3254 | And where may you have been? |
3254 | And where might yu be goin''in that old trampin''smut factory? |
3254 | And where the law is unjust? |
3254 | And where was the room? |
3254 | And who are those who know better? |
3254 | And who has the rest? |
3254 | And who was she? |
3254 | And why clove pinks? |
3254 | And why clove pinks? |
3254 | And will you? |
3254 | And wo n''t you sit down, please? |
3254 | And would you like me to let your flat? |
3254 | And yet you do n''t mind having tea with me? |
3254 | And yet you never thought of emigrating? |
3254 | And yet you persist in that statement? |
3254 | And yet,he said,"I suppose you would give a good deal to be free, too?" |
3254 | And yet,he said,"I suppose, with your full- blooded habit, your life hangs by a thread, does n''t it?" |
3254 | And you are fond of-- my brother? |
3254 | And you do n''t know anything about her? |
3254 | And you do n''t? |
3254 | And you know he''s got nothing? |
3254 | And you love him? |
3254 | And you really do think it was there? |
3254 | And you think a ghost means trouble, do you? |
3254 | And you thought that would bring him? |
3254 | And you were pleased to answer? |
3254 | And you would n''t try reasoning? |
3254 | And you''ll sit to him, wo n''t you? |
3254 | And you, mon cher? |
3254 | And you,said Miltoun,"are the man who is never on the side of the majority?" |
3254 | And you-- won''t you let this dreadful experience move your heart? 3254 And your brother Richard?" |
3254 | And your brothers and sisters? |
3254 | And your uncle''s? |
3254 | Another little cup of very special coffee, monsieur; a liqueur, Grand Marnier? |
3254 | Another little cup? |
3254 | Another penny? 3254 Another? |
3254 | Any Post- Impressionists? |
3254 | Any letters for me? |
3254 | Any message to your mother, Gertrude? |
3254 | Any more? |
3254 | Any news of him? |
3254 | Any particular row,he said,"or only just the ordinary?" |
3254 | Any proof? |
3254 | Any sort of farmer? |
3254 | Anything else I can do for you, sir? |
3254 | Anything else? |
3254 | Anyway, you do admit them-- if you believe you had not the right to rescue her, on what principle do you base that belief? |
3254 | Are all people dangerous who do n''t think like others, Daddy? |
3254 | Are n''t I? |
3254 | Are n''t they coming to town this season? |
3254 | Are n''t they really in earnest, then? |
3254 | Are n''t they sweet? |
3254 | Are n''t we glad the mate is n''t hurt, mum? |
3254 | Are n''t you an Imperialist? |
3254 | Are n''t you ashamed of yourself, sir,she said severely,"talking to a young lady like that in your dressing- gown? |
3254 | Are n''t you coming in with me? |
3254 | Are n''t you coming to tea, Edward? |
3254 | Are n''t you coming? |
3254 | Are n''t you early, my child? |
3254 | Are n''t you glad to see me? |
3254 | Are n''t you going to dine, Pendyce? |
3254 | Are n''t you sleepy? |
3254 | Are n''t you sorry for them? |
3254 | Are n''t you well, Mr. Scorrier? 3254 Are n''t you?" |
3254 | Are the boughs of those trees the dark earth over me? 3254 Are the kids all right?" |
3254 | Are there attacks very often? |
3254 | Are there many of these, Gustav? |
3254 | Are they ever going back onto the land? |
3254 | Are they liked? |
3254 | Are they making speeches? |
3254 | Are things so very bad? |
3254 | Are you Oxford men, by any chance? |
3254 | Are you a Devonshire girl? |
3254 | Are you a German? |
3254 | Are you a musician? |
3254 | Are you a partner? |
3254 | Are you a relation of theirs, sir? |
3254 | Are you a well- educated man? |
3254 | Are you alone here? |
3254 | Are you angry with me, Chris? |
3254 | Are you angry? 3254 Are you any the worse, child?" |
3254 | Are you cold, darling? 3254 Are you coming to see my studio? |
3254 | Are you content to go on working for an Utopia that you will never see? |
3254 | Are you convinced,asked Soames with sudden energy,"that there is enough?" |
3254 | Are you cur enough to deny that you''ve married her? |
3254 | Are you facing it, Jo? 3254 Are you fit to go? |
3254 | Are you fond of birds, Uncle Nic? |
3254 | Are you fond of music? |
3254 | Are you going a journey, gnadiges Fraulein? |
3254 | Are you going my way? |
3254 | Are you going to awaken her? |
3254 | Are you going to build? |
3254 | Are you going to burn me? |
3254 | Are you going to do what I say? |
3254 | Are you going to spend the night here? |
3254 | Are you going to stay there all night? |
3254 | Are you going? 3254 Are you going?" |
3254 | Are you good at argument? |
3254 | Are you happy; Dad? |
3254 | Are you his cousin? |
3254 | Are you hungry? |
3254 | Are you hurt? |
3254 | Are you hurt? |
3254 | Are you ill, man? |
3254 | Are you in training? |
3254 | Are you in your senses, man? |
3254 | Are you looking for something? |
3254 | Are you lunching anywhere? 3254 Are you my servant or not?" |
3254 | Are you one of us, or are you not? |
3254 | Are you prepared to deny that it is a contradiction in terms? |
3254 | Are you prepared,he said,"to put a bullet in the donkey, or are you not?" |
3254 | Are you proposing to stay, Mother? |
3254 | Are you ready? |
3254 | Are you really going to Persia? |
3254 | Are you right, sir? |
3254 | Are you staying here much longer? |
3254 | Are you staying long? |
3254 | Are you still as fond of him as ever, then? |
3254 | Are you still set on this divorce? 3254 Are you sure that Mrs. Bellew requires protection? |
3254 | Are you sure you''re feeling quite the thing? 3254 Are you sure?" |
3254 | Are you taking her? |
3254 | Are you telling me the truth, Babs? 3254 Are you the Mr. Shelton who used to play the''bones''at Eton?" |
3254 | Are you tired of sitting for your portrait, Fraulein Christian? |
3254 | Are you tired? |
3254 | Are you waiting to sit down, sir? |
3254 | Are you, Greta? |
3254 | Are you, then,he said,"the victim of some religious or political plot?" |
3254 | Are you,he stammered--"you are not-- you can not be a Conscientious Objector?" |
3254 | Are you-- are you leaving him? |
3254 | Are you? |
3254 | As advertisement? |
3254 | As now? |
3254 | As regards the government of this country, Joe,he said, on the last evening of his retirement,"who do you consider really rules? |
3254 | At home? |
3254 | Auntie Babs, it was n''t a very strong house, was it? |
3254 | Awful, is n''t it? |
3254 | Babs,he said;"have you forgiven me?" |
3254 | Bad as that? 3254 Badly?" |
3254 | Baronight,repeated Soames;"what may that be?" |
3254 | Because it is the truth? |
3254 | Because my name was Forsyte, I suppose? 3254 Because my name was Forsyte, I suppose? |
3254 | Because of what, Gracie? |
3254 | Because-- because-- why should n''t I? |
3254 | Been to his rooms? 3254 Before I can become a man of it?" |
3254 | Before he came here last night, how long since you saw him? |
3254 | Bellew? 3254 Better to- day, Uncle?" |
3254 | Black? |
3254 | Blame yourself? 3254 Bob,"said the boy suddenly,"do you LIKE being a dog; put to what company your master wishes?" |
3254 | Brandy, sir? 3254 Brave?" |
3254 | Breathe? 3254 Business is business-- eh, what?" |
3254 | But I do n''t,said Shelton,"is it likely? |
3254 | But I wrote to you,he said;"did n''t you get my letter?" |
3254 | But about Joyfields? |
3254 | But all the people he helps? |
3254 | But are n''t you? 3254 But are we, Daddy?" |
3254 | But are you fit to see her? |
3254 | But ca n''t I borrow the money? |
3254 | But do n''t you believe Christ was divine? |
3254 | But do n''t you believe in survival, Dad? |
3254 | But do you ever hit the fly? |
3254 | But do you think he will? |
3254 | But do you think they would? |
3254 | But do you want the time to pass? |
3254 | But every one is not like that? |
3254 | But has he thought? |
3254 | But have I ever written anything without feeling a little- abnormal, at the time? 3254 But how are you going to get your hat?" |
3254 | But how did you live without money? |
3254 | But how do you feel, dear? |
3254 | But how do you reconcile such marriages as I speak of, with the spirit of Christ''s teaching? 3254 But if you have n''t got him, Uncle Timothy?" |
3254 | But if you were to love again? |
3254 | But is it humbug? |
3254 | But is n''t there anybody,asked Shelton,"of whom I can make inquiry?" |
3254 | But is there nothing to be done for that poor girl? |
3254 | But it was very early; how did you know that? |
3254 | But it''s rather scrummy, is n''t it? |
3254 | But looking at the question broadly, sir,said Dawney;"if a husband always lets his wife do as she likes, how would the thing work out? |
3254 | But someone? |
3254 | But suppose she really loathed you? |
3254 | But suppose they get into real trouble? 3254 But suppose they were engaged?" |
3254 | But suppose you ca n''t? |
3254 | But surely-- letters? |
3254 | But the condition of the poor....Is that Mr. Balladyce? |
3254 | But there''s something wanting, is n''t there? |
3254 | But these are n''t ordinary times, are they? 3254 But was n''t that just selfish emotion, really?" |
3254 | But was she all alone in London? |
3254 | But were n''t the flowers nice? |
3254 | But what about Ferrand? |
3254 | But what are you doing in town? |
3254 | But what did become of Aunt Irene? 3254 But what else can one go by?" |
3254 | But what has it to do with politics? 3254 But what is his what?" |
3254 | But what is one''s business, sir? 3254 But what is the matter, ma''moiselle?" |
3254 | But what''s the use of keepin''fit? |
3254 | But which is it to me? |
3254 | But which is the greater, which is the nobler, Joe? 3254 But who are''you''?" |
3254 | But why did he choose such a horrid, common girl? 3254 But why did n''t you come to us?" |
3254 | But why not tell them? 3254 But why out here?" |
3254 | But why should I suffer? |
3254 | But why should n''t I be happy, Dad? |
3254 | But why should one wish to live again, if one is n''t going to? |
3254 | But why? |
3254 | But why? |
3254 | But why? |
3254 | But why? |
3254 | But why? |
3254 | But you had''Auntie''June? |
3254 | But you know where she lives, I suppose? |
3254 | But you love me-- don''t you? |
3254 | But you wanted to see me about something else too, perhaps? |
3254 | But you will be kind? |
3254 | But your uncle was a Devonshire man? |
3254 | But, Chris, how shall we get back again? |
3254 | But, Dad, why? 3254 But, George, is that right?" |
3254 | But, Hilary,she said at last,"are you satisfied about the girl-- I mean, are you satisfied that she really is worth helping?" |
3254 | But, Mr. Vigil, why is there no choice? 3254 But, Wilfred,"said the old lady,"will our man- power stand it? |
3254 | But, dear Fraulein, will you be rich? |
3254 | But, dear; how can you come with me? 3254 But, my dear boy,"said Thirza feebly,"do you think it''s fair to such a child as Noel?" |
3254 | But, my dear,exclaimed Herr Paul,"how should you know? |
3254 | By the by,he said,"could you tell me if there are likely to be any more of you coming down? |
3254 | By the way, I do n''t know your name now? |
3254 | By the way, you ca n''t borrow on a settlement, can you? 3254 By the way,"he went on,"can you prove cruelty?" |
3254 | By what right do you ask me that? |
3254 | Ca n''t I do anything for your head, Mother? |
3254 | Ca n''t it be done quietly somehow? 3254 Ca n''t it be managed?" |
3254 | Ca n''t mother be protected without? |
3254 | Ca n''t the dead past bury its dead? |
3254 | Ca n''t we keep it from him? |
3254 | Ca n''t you do anything to ease his breathing? |
3254 | Ca n''t you put it off? |
3254 | Ca n''t you see that this poor devil suffers tortures? |
3254 | Ca n''t you separate? |
3254 | Ca n''t you stop and have lunch with us? |
3254 | Ca n''t? |
3254 | Came to talk about her lover, I suppose? |
3254 | Can I be of any use? |
3254 | Can I come? |
3254 | Can I do anything to help you? |
3254 | Can I do anything? |
3254 | Can I get you anything? |
3254 | Can I look? |
3254 | Can I offer you some tea? |
3254 | Can I see it, for instance? |
3254 | Can I see the President? |
3254 | Can I speak to you for a minute, Uncle Jolyon? |
3254 | Can it be that we are to adventure above them? |
3254 | Can nothing be done? |
3254 | Can we go at once, then, Uncle? |
3254 | Can we go over to Joyfields to- morrow? 3254 Can you attend to me a minute? |
3254 | Can you find me a sheet of paper, then? |
3254 | Can you get to bed by yourself? |
3254 | Can you manage? |
3254 | Can you see any connection between a sucking baronet and publishing? |
3254 | Can you swim far? |
3254 | Can you tell if anyone saw him carrying the-- the thing away? |
3254 | Can you tell me what this is? |
3254 | Can you tell me where I can find the Minister? |
3254 | Can you tell me why? |
3254 | Can you tell me,he said to a dustman,"where the market- place is?" |
3254 | Can you understand it, Dad? |
3254 | Certainly; will you come in? |
3254 | Changing? 3254 Changing?" |
3254 | Chinese? 3254 Chivalry the better part of discretion?" |
3254 | Chivalry? 3254 Christian?" |
3254 | Clever? |
3254 | Come in,he said;"have you had tea?" |
3254 | Come, what did she tell you? |
3254 | Come, will you tell her, sir,he said,"or shall I?" |
3254 | Cosy? |
3254 | Could I see Jon here to- morrow on his way down to Holly''s? 3254 Could n''t I?" |
3254 | Could n''t you find anything better than this to do? |
3254 | Could you get your Law Courts,he said,"to settle up the affairs of mankind for good and all by Wednesday?" |
3254 | Could you give me her waist measurement? |
3254 | Count Rosek says the world is waiting for me--She paused with a sugar- plum halfway to her lips, and added doubtfully:"Do you think that''s true?" |
3254 | Cruel? |
3254 | Cubbing? |
3254 | D''Annunzio? 3254 D''you know what I should simply revel in?" |
3254 | D''you think it''s ketchin''? 3254 D''you think they would?" |
3254 | D''you want a row? |
3254 | D''you''ear, Alf? |
3254 | D''yu think''e might want to take me away? 3254 DEAR HORACE,"What the deuce and all made you send that telegram? |
3254 | DEAREST UNCLE DENNIS,May I come down to you a little before time and rest? |
3254 | Dad, is it true that I absolutely ca n''t get at any of my money? |
3254 | Dad, ought I to back him whatever he does? |
3254 | Dan,I said,"is it true?" |
3254 | Dare me? |
3254 | Dare? |
3254 | Dark? 3254 Day off, my dear fellow? |
3254 | Dead March in Saulor"When the fields was white wiv dysies"? |
3254 | Dead? |
3254 | Dead? |
3254 | Dear Don Pickwixote,cried the young lady, assisting him to rise,"have you hurt your nose?" |
3254 | Dear Grig,she said,"where do you go about your hair? |
3254 | Dear me, but how can it be wrong? |
3254 | Dear me, do you indeed? 3254 Decided characters are charming, do n''t you think so, Christian?" |
3254 | Delighted,said Shelton;"do you often go to that club?" |
3254 | Des oeillets rouges? 3254 Desperate?" |
3254 | Diana? 3254 Dick, an egg?" |
3254 | Dick, how can you? |
3254 | Dick, may I introduce you to Mr. Wilfrid Curly? |
3254 | Did I hurt you last night? |
3254 | Did I say that? |
3254 | Did Profond ever get off? |
3254 | Did anyone see you come in? |
3254 | Did anyone see you going in last night, when you first went to her? |
3254 | Did he do it in the week? |
3254 | Did he mean us? |
3254 | Did he sell it? |
3254 | Did he tell you that he had a picture? |
3254 | Did he want a little attention? |
3254 | Did his dog bite you? |
3254 | Did his face look as if he had been strangled? |
3254 | Did it win? |
3254 | Did it? |
3254 | Did my brother ever see this man before last night? |
3254 | Did n''t I? 3254 Did n''t you ever make love?" |
3254 | Did n''t you hear, Father? 3254 Did n''t you understand? |
3254 | Did n''t you want to speak to her, miss? |
3254 | Did she bring our young Sanitist in too? |
3254 | Did she love you at first sight, too? |
3254 | Did she rise from the foam in Glensofantrim? |
3254 | Did we never tell you,Bianca answered softly,"that my father was a rather well-- known man of science before his illness?" |
3254 | Did you ask him again, Bob? |
3254 | Did you back George''s horse? 3254 Did you come at once, Biddy?" |
3254 | Did you come down to tell him that? |
3254 | Did you do any good out there? |
3254 | Did you do anything? 3254 Did you ever know a publisher?" |
3254 | Did you ever know anybody living, my dear, improved by having his name made? |
3254 | Did you ever meet her before- er- before the flood? |
3254 | Did you ever see such a collection of rumty- too people? |
3254 | Did you ever,he said drily,"hear of what''s called collusion?" |
3254 | Did you ever,said Jolyon with whimsical intention,"hear our family history, my dears? |
3254 | Did you hear about this arson case? |
3254 | Did you hear him your own self? |
3254 | Did you hear what a bag we made on the twelfth, Sir James? |
3254 | Did you know I was here, then, Captain Fort? |
3254 | Did you look pretty natural as you went out? |
3254 | Did you look to see if his clothes were marked? |
3254 | Did you never hear of a''grande passion''? |
3254 | Did you pump Holly? |
3254 | Did you rise from it every day, Mum? |
3254 | Did you say the children wanted looking after badly? 3254 Did you see him?" |
3254 | Did you take anything from the-- body? |
3254 | Did you think I dropped my handkerchief on purpose? |
3254 | Did you''ear me say''Move on,''said the officer;"or must I make you an example?" |
3254 | Did you? 3254 Did you?" |
3254 | Did your uncle see us? 3254 Dine?" |
3254 | Do I hurt him very much still? |
3254 | Do I look like it? |
3254 | Do I understand you to say, Berryman, that you do n''t enjoy a spicy book? |
3254 | Do I? |
3254 | Do YOU think England is done for, Uncle-- I mean about''the Land''? |
3254 | Do n''t I? |
3254 | Do n''t believe in it? 3254 Do n''t you believe in the Bible at all, then?" |
3254 | Do n''t you even know which way it was? |
3254 | Do n''t you know me, sir? |
3254 | Do n''t you know what you are doing? |
3254 | Do n''t you like them? |
3254 | Do n''t you like this part? 3254 Do n''t you long for the sun, Jimmy? |
3254 | Do n''t you think her face really rather perfect? |
3254 | Do n''t you think it''s smart, the bridesmaids having no hats? |
3254 | Do n''t you think that he''s improved? |
3254 | Do n''t you think that we live in the most interesting days? 3254 Do n''t you think that''s rather nice?" |
3254 | Do n''t you think you ought to keep quiet in bed? |
3254 | Do n''t you think,he said at last,"that it would be much better for you to go back into the country?" |
3254 | Do n''t you think,he said,"that for an artist to buy a Gallery is a bit dubious? |
3254 | Do n''t you think,said Barbara,"that we had better go back, at once-- the other way?" |
3254 | Do n''t you think,she said,"that, anyway, she had better not come here again?" |
3254 | Do n''t you want to see baby, Soames? 3254 Do n''t you wish you was comin'', old girl?" |
3254 | Do n''t you? |
3254 | Do officers run more risks than the men? |
3254 | Do they let you see the newspapers we send? 3254 Do they let you smoke?" |
3254 | Do they never hold public meetings here? |
3254 | Do with myself? |
3254 | Do you agree with me, my dear? |
3254 | Do you always know when people are n''t speaking the truth, then? |
3254 | Do you believe in God, Dad? 3254 Do you believe in a God?" |
3254 | Do you believe it? |
3254 | Do you call it moral so to imprison people that you drive them to sin in order to free themselves? |
3254 | Do you concern yourself to ask that which a well- bred woman leaves unanswered? |
3254 | Do you defend him? |
3254 | Do you defy me? |
3254 | Do you dislike her coming here? |
3254 | Do you ever have time to do anything for yourself? |
3254 | Do you ever see the other side to any question? |
3254 | Do you ever think of anybody but yourself? |
3254 | Do you ever wake up between two and four? 3254 Do you feel better?" |
3254 | Do you feel that? |
3254 | Do you feel the war much, Daddy? 3254 Do you feel your head, darling?" |
3254 | Do you find,he said suddenly,"that compulsory sacrifice is doing you good, Joe?" |
3254 | Do you get shelter? |
3254 | Do you hear? 3254 Do you hear?" |
3254 | Do you know anything about astronomy? |
3254 | Do you know her very well? |
3254 | Do you know his story? 3254 Do you know if he was known to the police?" |
3254 | Do you know many people? |
3254 | Do you know my people, Shelton? |
3254 | Do you know so much about them? |
3254 | Do you know that exercise? 3254 Do you know that means giving up India?" |
3254 | Do you know that we''re getting farther off, not nearer? 3254 Do you know these? |
3254 | Do you know this part? |
3254 | Do you know what I shall do to- night? |
3254 | Do you know what I think of you? |
3254 | Do you know what they say is going on? |
3254 | Do you know where he is? |
3254 | Do you know, darling, I''ve found the most splendid thing for eyebrows? 3254 Do you know,"he said weightily,"that he called me a pro- Boer last term? |
3254 | Do you know,he said,"you treat me very funnily?" |
3254 | Do you know,she said,"that you are very sweet?" |
3254 | Do you like it, Bob? |
3254 | Do you like it? |
3254 | Do you like living up there with your aunt? |
3254 | Do you like the people here, Uncle John? |
3254 | Do you like these week- ends, Granny? |
3254 | Do you love to dance? |
3254 | Do you mean Pirbright? |
3254 | Do you mean Swithin? |
3254 | Do you mean it? |
3254 | Do you mean she has told you? |
3254 | Do you mean that our journey is arrested? |
3254 | Do you mean that you are going to make him pay that towards this hateful, house? |
3254 | Do you mean to say, Turl, that you can stand that stuff? |
3254 | Do you mean to tell me there has been nothing-- nobody? |
3254 | Do you mean? |
3254 | Do you mind if I just ask at the Bishop''s Head for letters? |
3254 | Do you mind if I tell George? |
3254 | Do you mind if I walk with you? 3254 Do you mind putting aside that grey one for me?" |
3254 | Do you mind sculling? |
3254 | Do you never think before you act, Martin? |
3254 | Do you never''play''here? |
3254 | Do you notice how dark the rims of her eyes are, and how clear the whites? 3254 Do you realise whose daughter she is?" |
3254 | Do you really believe they do, Daddy? |
3254 | Do you really mean that marriage--? |
3254 | Do you really mean that? |
3254 | Do you really think we have stars? |
3254 | Do you really want it, Granny? |
3254 | Do you remember going to live at Mr. Freeland''s cottage? |
3254 | Do you remember that I was not half your age? |
3254 | Do you remember,he said, halting in front of her,"what you were when I married you? |
3254 | Do you remember,his companion asked,"those''jaws''you used to have with Busgate and old Halidome in my rooms on Sunday evenings? |
3254 | Do you say, then, that this guarantees that they have themselves suffered, so that in spirit they are identified with their teaching? |
3254 | Do you see that fly? |
3254 | Do you see that? |
3254 | Do you smoke? |
3254 | Do you still think that in any case she ca n''t have another? |
3254 | Do you swear it? |
3254 | Do you think I belong to''our world,''Dad? |
3254 | Do you think I can be happy if you hurt things because they love me? |
3254 | Do you think I might sit down, or shall I go through? |
3254 | Do you think I mind that? |
3254 | Do you think I''m very bad? |
3254 | Do you think he ought to have a man about him? |
3254 | Do you think he was known to the police? |
3254 | Do you think he will come back here? 3254 Do you think he''ll be a good Member of Parliament?" |
3254 | Do you think he''s good- looking? |
3254 | Do you think he''s really gone, Soames? 3254 Do you think so, Martin?" |
3254 | Do you think so? 3254 Do you think so?" |
3254 | Do you think that''s fair by me, Nollie? 3254 Do you think the next puppies will be spotted quite all over?" |
3254 | Do you think they would want to see me? |
3254 | Do you think we can win this war? |
3254 | Do you think you ought to leave Father? |
3254 | Do you think you ought to tell us? |
3254 | Do you understand? |
3254 | Do you wand any boods? |
3254 | Do you want me to tell you everything? |
3254 | Do you want the pictures badly, Chris? |
3254 | Do you want to dictate to her this afternoon, sir? |
3254 | Do you want to talk of him? |
3254 | Do you wish me to see her about it? |
3254 | Do you, Mark? |
3254 | Do you, Mother? |
3254 | Do you? |
3254 | Does Charles think so? |
3254 | Does Jimmy Fort come to you-- often? |
3254 | Does Martin say that too? |
3254 | Does Mum? |
3254 | Does Soames never trouble you? |
3254 | Does Soames never trouble you? |
3254 | Does anybody ever''take to''prison? |
3254 | Does anyone second this? |
3254 | Does he annoy you? |
3254 | Does he know anything about pictures? |
3254 | Does he know there''s no one here? |
3254 | Does he leave his bed? |
3254 | Does he sit on you? |
3254 | Does he take any interest in things generally? |
3254 | Does he think of her? 3254 Does he? |
3254 | Does it fit? 3254 Does it hurt?" |
3254 | Does it work? |
3254 | Does it? 3254 Does n''t do anything else, I suppose?" |
3254 | Does n''t he look lovely now? 3254 Does n''t it smell good?" |
3254 | Does n''t it smell good? |
3254 | Does she bite? |
3254 | Does she come for any other? |
3254 | Does she copy better than any other girl could? |
3254 | Does she get news of her boy? 3254 Does she know Larry?" |
3254 | Does she know about me? |
3254 | Does she want you to? |
3254 | Does she write to you? |
3254 | Does that mean that if he wins I shall get eight? |
3254 | Does that mean that you''re against me? |
3254 | Does your daughter come to church? |
3254 | Does your devil ever get away with you? |
3254 | Does your firm work on those lines? |
3254 | Dogs there, too? |
3254 | Done? 3254 Doubts do n''t help you,"she said suddenly;"how can you get any good from doubts? |
3254 | Down by Belgravia? 3254 Dr. Edmund,"Greta whispered,"is it true?" |
3254 | Dress? |
3254 | Duty to what? |
3254 | Eh? 3254 Eh?" |
3254 | Eh? |
3254 | Eh? |
3254 | Eh? |
3254 | Eh? |
3254 | Eight thousand five hundred? |
3254 | Engaged? 3254 Enjoy, my dear? |
3254 | Er-- how are you? |
3254 | Er-- yes, quite,said he;"do n''t you take mint sauce? |
3254 | Euripides? 3254 Even for another?" |
3254 | Ever get the hump? 3254 Ever so?" |
3254 | Everybody''s kind,he thought;"the question is, What understanding is there, what real sympathy?" |
3254 | Excuse me, but which dooth did you say? |
3254 | Excuse me, sir,said the young German,"but do you wish a dooth oud?" |
3254 | Expect a practical remark from him? 3254 Expense?" |
3254 | Eyes look better, Biddy? |
3254 | Father, what is it? |
3254 | Feeding him yourself? |
3254 | Feud? 3254 Fey? |
3254 | Find? 3254 Fine, eh?" |
3254 | Five o''clock; are n''t you ready? |
3254 | Fleur, do you know anything you have n''t told me? |
3254 | Foliot? |
3254 | For how long? |
3254 | For instance-- I am quite impersonal-- I suffer; but do I talk about it? |
3254 | For what? |
3254 | Forgive me,struck in Ferrand;"do you know any anarchists?" |
3254 | Forsyte? 3254 Forsyte? |
3254 | France? |
3254 | Friends, acquaintances? |
3254 | From what town- crier did you hear that? |
3254 | From whom? |
3254 | Funny? |
3254 | Gentlemen, I wish to say--"Who are you? 3254 George? |
3254 | George? |
3254 | Germans? |
3254 | Germans? |
3254 | Ghita? 3254 Give her up, eh?" |
3254 | Give it back? |
3254 | Give it up? 3254 Give me a plain answer,"he said:"What are you going to do about her?" |
3254 | Give us a shilling, guv''nor, an''I''ll get it for yer? |
3254 | Giving up? 3254 Go and see her? |
3254 | Go? |
3254 | God? |
3254 | Goin''to''ave some rain? |
3254 | Going? |
3254 | Gone? 3254 Got a cigarette?" |
3254 | Granny, will you help me? |
3254 | Granny,she said,"are you sure you''re not shaken?" |
3254 | Greta, how can, you do such things? 3254 Gude? |
3254 | Guilty? 3254 Had a good meeting so far?" |
3254 | Had you a hard time in London, too? |
3254 | Had you a sympathy with the Turks? |
3254 | Haf I, Cicely? |
3254 | Hard hit? |
3254 | Harold, will you dance? |
3254 | Has Fleur got her summer dresses? |
3254 | Has any other gentleman anything to say before I move the adoption of the report? |
3254 | Has anybody been to see Bob Tryst? |
3254 | Has anybody else been to see me? |
3254 | Has anyone done you a harm? |
3254 | Has he got style? |
3254 | Has he made his will? 3254 Has he no servant?" |
3254 | Has he said anything important? |
3254 | Has he? |
3254 | Has it made you miserable, my Gyp? |
3254 | Has n''t anybody cut in? |
3254 | Has she one? |
3254 | Has she seen him? |
3254 | Has the man hurt her? |
3254 | Has the wind gone round? 3254 Has young Mont been bothering you again?" |
3254 | Has your candidate seen this? |
3254 | Hateful? 3254 Have I worried you much?" |
3254 | Have a cigar? |
3254 | Have a fill, Jim? |
3254 | Have a fill? |
3254 | Have a good time? |
3254 | Have my wishes anything to do with it? |
3254 | Have n''t you a young man? |
3254 | Have n''t you any feeling for others? |
3254 | Have n''t you any romance in you? 3254 Have n''t you ever heard them after dinner? |
3254 | Have n''t you? 3254 Have one of mine?" |
3254 | Have one of my cigarettes? |
3254 | Have they gone? |
3254 | Have they talked to you? |
3254 | Have we come far enough? |
3254 | Have you a Miss Barton lodging here? |
3254 | Have you a dog for us? |
3254 | Have you a dog for us? |
3254 | Have you a headache, dear? |
3254 | Have you a pain in your back? |
3254 | Have you a really trustworthy woman free? |
3254 | Have you a servant? |
3254 | Have you any more beef? |
3254 | Have you asked Hilary? |
3254 | Have you been at the front? |
3254 | Have you been long in England? |
3254 | Have you been out to- day? |
3254 | Have you done anything to stop Jon writing to me, Father? |
3254 | Have you ever been in Baghdad? |
3254 | Have you ever lived in London? |
3254 | Have you ever watched a dog looking at a fire? |
3254 | Have you found new lodgings? |
3254 | Have you got everything you want? |
3254 | Have you got it ready? |
3254 | Have you got money? |
3254 | Have you got the word''insane''? |
3254 | Have you had any adventures lately-- you and Samjoe? 3254 Have you had any more nightmares?" |
3254 | Have you had that notice? |
3254 | Have you heard from him? |
3254 | Have you heard, Uncle Tod? |
3254 | Have you lived here long? |
3254 | Have you missed us, Jon? |
3254 | Have you much pain? |
3254 | Have you nearly finished? |
3254 | Have you no defence? |
3254 | Have you prayed, my darling? |
3254 | Have you put your knee out, sir? 3254 Have you read that thing of Besom''s?" |
3254 | Have you seen her? |
3254 | Have you seen him since? |
3254 | Have you seen one without fur? |
3254 | Have you seen the new hybrid Algy''s brought me back from Kidstone? 3254 Have you seen the''Aftermath''? |
3254 | Have you seen this new play of Borogrove''s? |
3254 | Have you seen''The Buccaneer''? |
3254 | Have you seen? |
3254 | Have you signed the deed poll? |
3254 | Have you such a bad opinion of him, then? |
3254 | Have you the least idea what marriage means? |
3254 | Have you told June? |
3254 | Have you tried? |
3254 | Have you? |
3254 | He and George sometimes do n''t quite----"Hit it off? 3254 He gives me up? |
3254 | He has n''t gone out yet? |
3254 | He is living with you here now? |
3254 | He must not then consider other people? |
3254 | He owns next door, too, does n''t he? |
3254 | He rather cottons? |
3254 | He says he meant to take her--"Do you believe that? |
3254 | He was a silly man to build it, was n''t he, Ann? 3254 He was once a sort of gentleman,"she said;"why should n''t he become one again?" |
3254 | He''s a quack!--"Winifred? |
3254 | He''s a ruffian, is n''t he? |
3254 | He''s awfully dear and unselfish-- don''t you think, Jon? |
3254 | He''s not dead? |
3254 | He''s not told you, then, about the trial? |
3254 | He''s one of our blase ones; been in before, have n''t you, Simson? |
3254 | Helen? |
3254 | Help? 3254 Her? |
3254 | Here I am, Father:"Um-- what-- what news? 3254 Here, waiter, how''s this? |
3254 | Horace,she said,"you would never----"Mr. Pendyce turned from his wife, and said sharply:"Paramor, are you sure I ca n''t cut the entail?" |
3254 | Horses are ripping, are n''t they? 3254 How are her legs?" |
3254 | How are you getting on with my cousin''s house? |
3254 | How are you getting on with your book, sir? |
3254 | How are you getting on? |
3254 | How are you, Margery? |
3254 | How are you, Sylvanus? 3254 How are you, sir? |
3254 | How are you? |
3254 | How are you? |
3254 | How are you? |
3254 | How are you? |
3254 | How can I get over to the other side? |
3254 | How can I give them up, Mrs. Shortman? 3254 How can I stand clear, old man, if you are going to get into a mess? |
3254 | How can I tell you, when there''s nothing to tell? 3254 How can I tell?" |
3254 | How can he help wanting to? |
3254 | How can one love too much? |
3254 | How can that be, sir? |
3254 | How can they, indeed? |
3254 | How can we tell what they went through; what their lives were? |
3254 | How can you ask me, Paramor? 3254 How can you be let alone?" |
3254 | How can you bear to look at her, then? |
3254 | How can you call yourselves by that name and not let me in? |
3254 | How can you help thinking? |
3254 | How can you let things slide like that, Dick? 3254 How can you quote poetry, and hold the views you do? |
3254 | How can you tell what I should think? 3254 How can you tell what is happiness to her? |
3254 | How could I help getting tired? 3254 How could you come?" |
3254 | How d''you know? |
3254 | How d''you know? |
3254 | How d''you mean, do n''t know where she''s gone? 3254 How d''you think Noel is looking, Edward?" |
3254 | How dare he come after me? |
3254 | How dared you come? 3254 How deep?" |
3254 | How did he find out where she was? |
3254 | How did he get hold of her? |
3254 | How did he look? |
3254 | How did he take it? |
3254 | How did it happen? |
3254 | How did she know? |
3254 | How did you come to love her? 3254 How did you get in?" |
3254 | How did you get the job? |
3254 | How did you know me, if you''d never seen me before? |
3254 | How do I live when I am on the tramp? |
3254 | How do you do, Mr. Forsyte? 3254 How do you do? |
3254 | How do you do? |
3254 | How do you do? |
3254 | How do you do? |
3254 | How do you do? |
3254 | How do you know that, you little rascal? |
3254 | How do you know that? |
3254 | How do you know what it means to me? |
3254 | How do you like London? |
3254 | How do you mean,said Francie,"fatal?" |
3254 | How do you mean-- why? |
3254 | How do you mean? |
3254 | How do you mean? |
3254 | How do you mean? |
3254 | How does Mrs. Pendyce take it? |
3254 | How drunk were you? |
3254 | How far is it to this woman''s cottage? 3254 How far?" |
3254 | How has he been, Betty? |
3254 | How have you cared for Nollie, that she should have come to this? |
3254 | How is Cousin Leila? |
3254 | How is he? |
3254 | How is it, then,he said,"that you never go to sleep before two?" |
3254 | How is she? |
3254 | How is that, sir? |
3254 | How is that? |
3254 | How is this, Friend? |
3254 | How is this? |
3254 | How is your wife? |
3254 | How long am I going on like this? |
3254 | How long be I to go on wi''thiccy job? |
3254 | How long do you think before-- before it''ll begin again, nurse? 3254 How long do you think it''ll be before I can play again? |
3254 | How long does it take? |
3254 | How long has she been at the Soho place? |
3254 | How long has she been there? |
3254 | How long have I been ill? |
3254 | How long have they been as bad as this? |
3254 | How long have we got, Cyril? |
3254 | How long have you been at the Front, monsieur? |
3254 | How long have you known Oliver? |
3254 | How long will that last, Bryan? 3254 How long will you last at that rate?" |
3254 | How long? |
3254 | How many days did you say he went without food that time-- you know? |
3254 | How many to- day? |
3254 | How many yards''ll go round you? |
3254 | How many? |
3254 | How much does he owe altogether? |
3254 | How much had you drunk? |
3254 | How much money will you want for your ticket, and to make a start? |
3254 | How much? |
3254 | How old are those two? |
3254 | How old are you? |
3254 | How old is that? |
3254 | How old were you then? |
3254 | How old? |
3254 | How shall I bear to be away from you at this time? 3254 How shall we get him out?" |
3254 | How should I know what''s to be done? 3254 How should I know?" |
3254 | How should I know? |
3254 | How the deuce did he ever come to be Tod''s son? 3254 How was I to know they were going to fight a duel?" |
3254 | How was it they did n''t get on? |
3254 | How was she? |
3254 | How was that? |
3254 | How would things go on? |
3254 | How would you like to be looked at as a''case''? |
3254 | How''s Dartie behaving now? |
3254 | How''s Emily? |
3254 | How''s that? |
3254 | How''s that? |
3254 | How''s your father? |
3254 | How''s your leg, Gaunt? |
3254 | How''s your master? |
3254 | How''s your sister? |
3254 | How''s your wife? |
3254 | How''s your wife? |
3254 | How, then? |
3254 | How- how does Hughs treat the little girl who lives in the next room to you? |
3254 | How-- are-- you? |
3254 | How-- do you like being at the Front? |
3254 | How? |
3254 | How? |
3254 | How? |
3254 | How? |
3254 | How? |
3254 | However could you have given him such a thing? |
3254 | Hughs wounded out there? |
3254 | Hullo, Warmson, any dinner for me, d''you think? |
3254 | I am going to shut the door, do you mind? |
3254 | I am preparing a speech; must you hammer? |
3254 | I am to choose, you mean, between my daughter and my parish? |
3254 | I ask you plainly What position have you got to give her? |
3254 | I ca n''t, Father; how can I-- just because you say that? 3254 I can not show you what is wrong, there is nothing wrong-- but why do you paint?" |
3254 | I did n''t want to startle you; is this one of your haunts? |
3254 | I do n''t dislike you, Mr. Mont, but Fleur is everything to me: Everything-- do you understand? |
3254 | I do n''t feel sleepy; shall we stroll along the''High''a bit? |
3254 | I do n''t like this fellow Pearse, George,Dan said to me on the way;"I was fool enough to say I''d go, and so I must, but what''s he after? |
3254 | I go on to Halidome''s to- morrow; suppose I sha''n''t see you there? 3254 I have a letter from Greta, Uncle Nic; shall I read it?" |
3254 | I have done it,cried Herr Paul, staring dreadfully:"I have done it, I tell you, I have done it--""Very well, you have done it-- and why, pray? |
3254 | I have heard that he''s after you, Babs; is that true? |
3254 | I have n''t seen you for a long time, have I? |
3254 | I have to ask you something first: That young doctor-- what''s his name? 3254 I know nothing about anybody; nobody tells me anything...."Swithin fixed him with a stare:"What do you do for a pain there?" |
3254 | I know, from grandfather''s portrait; who painted that? |
3254 | I know; but Daddy was getting bored, were n''t you, dear? 3254 I made sure it was our friend Soa....""Did you?" |
3254 | I may take it she has a past, then? |
3254 | I mean, why this underhand, roundabout way? |
3254 | I must go right away now; it would n''t be safe, would it? |
3254 | I never let go,she said;"do you?" |
3254 | I pay cash,he said;"how much?" |
3254 | I propose to read it with the emendations necessary to the epistle of a gentleman who has been-- shall we say dining, me Lud? |
3254 | I remembers one day I said to''er:''What''s the matter, Megan?'' 3254 I said: Is n''t it very tiring?" |
3254 | I said: What is the use of our being what we are, if we ca n''t love whom we like? |
3254 | I said:''Good, is n''t it?'' 3254 I say, Uncle, you''re not going to let those beastly papers in, are you?" |
3254 | I say, do you think-- no hand himself, surely no real hand himself? |
3254 | I say, has it struck you? |
3254 | I say, what a ripper, is n''t she? 3254 I see; and she has n''t been very good?" |
3254 | I send her? |
3254 | I suppose Ann does n''t come down in the mornings? |
3254 | I suppose our friend Hemmings would call me foolish; he''s above the little weaknesses of imagination, eh? 3254 I suppose she ran off with someone?" |
3254 | I suppose that young Bosinney,he said,"will be getting married to June now?" |
3254 | I suppose the doctor comes? |
3254 | I suppose you do n''t remember? |
3254 | I suppose you have a love of fighting? |
3254 | I suppose you speak Arabic? |
3254 | I suppose you would n''t know whether the land about there was freehold? |
3254 | I suppose you''ll be meeting your people? |
3254 | I suppose you''ll be playing for Coldingham against us on Thursday? 3254 I suppose you''re comfortably off now?" |
3254 | I suppose you''ve had the same charming present? |
3254 | I suppose you''ve not heard anything of that fellow Fiorsen lately? |
3254 | I suppose,said Shelton,"you find a great deal of chaff?" |
3254 | I suppose,said the traveller,"small bad nuts are better than no bread; if you went out of this grove you would starve?" |
3254 | I suppothe you wo n''t thell your horse, Pendythe? |
3254 | I take a compound...."How are you, uncle? |
3254 | I think I''d better mark it,she said,"do n''t you? |
3254 | I thought the boy was at an agricultural college? |
3254 | I thought you were n''t friendly with him? |
3254 | I thought you were the chambermaid of the inn at High Barnet? |
3254 | I used to go racing with your father,George was saying:"How''s the stud? |
3254 | I want to talk to you about something serious: Will you come into the picture gallery? |
3254 | I wanted to ask you: Are you really happy nowadays? |
3254 | I wonder if Daddy was ever in a place like this? |
3254 | I wonder if he will understand, even now, Jolyon? 3254 I wonder if little Turl would remember us?" |
3254 | I wonder what''s coming? |
3254 | I wonder,she murmured,"what dear Soames will think? |
3254 | I''m afraid,I said to the guardian of the gate,"that I am rather late in availing myself-- the others, no doubt----?" |
3254 | I''m after everything; did n''t you know that, dear? |
3254 | I''m going to ask you something as a human being-- not a servant-- see? |
3254 | I''m married to him,she said,"d''you hear? |
3254 | I''m sorry, sir; but how can you expect women nowadays to have the same views as our grandmothers? 3254 I''m sure you appreciate, my friends, the enormous importance of your own futures?" |
3254 | I''ve suffered too much,he stammered;"what do I care now what becomes of me?" |
3254 | I, sir? 3254 I? |
3254 | I? 3254 I? |
3254 | I? 3254 I? |
3254 | I? 3254 I?" |
3254 | I? |
3254 | I? |
3254 | I? |
3254 | I? |
3254 | I? |
3254 | I? |
3254 | If George refuses to give you that promise, what will you do, Horace? |
3254 | If I go now,he said,"will you promise me to stop till you''ve seen Leila?" |
3254 | If I heave you up,he said,"can you get hold again above?" |
3254 | If I let you come within three yards, will you be good? |
3254 | If I owned that''orse, like Mr. George, and had such a topper as this''ere Mrs. Bellew beside me, would I be sittin''there without a word? |
3254 | If I was a lady,she repeated simply,"I should n''t be livin''there, should I?" |
3254 | If I were to let you come with me,said Hilary,"what then? |
3254 | If Nollie will let us, why should n''t we adopt it? 3254 If it had been a little thing to me, should I have left you at Monkland, and spent those five weeks in purgatory before my illness? |
3254 | If the worst comes to the worst, and this man is traced to you, can you trust yourself not to give my brother away? |
3254 | If the worst comes to the worst, can I cut the entail, Paramor? |
3254 | If they discover who he was, they will look for his wife? |
3254 | If they''d said, now,he remarked jocosely,"that the frost had nipped the partridges, there''d have been some sense in it; but what can you expect? |
3254 | If you are not too tired,he said,"can you give me ten minutes?" |
3254 | If you dance before her,said Bianca, with her face averted,"ca n''t you even talk to me?" |
3254 | If you die and she marries again,said Mr. Paramor,"she forfeits her life interest-- see?" |
3254 | If you know,he said coldly,"why do you plague me?" |
3254 | If you like-- why not? 3254 If you love me, why do you try to hurt the people who love me too?" |
3254 | If you were in my place,said Harz,"would you give her up?" |
3254 | In Fitzroy Street? |
3254 | In our time? |
3254 | In that case, you would propose to live on air? |
3254 | In the F.H.M.P., of course, I see a lot of young girls placed in delicate positions, just on the borders, do n''t you know? 3254 In the Groceries?" |
3254 | In the stalls? |
3254 | In what? |
3254 | In what? |
3254 | In what? |
3254 | In what? |
3254 | In your rooms? |
3254 | Indeed, how''s that? |
3254 | Indeed? |
3254 | Inn? 3254 Intentions?" |
3254 | Irene, will you swear it? |
3254 | Is Captain Bellew at home? |
3254 | Is Father like him? |
3254 | Is Granny still here? |
3254 | Is Miss-- Miss Daphne Wing at home? |
3254 | Is Mr. Cuthcott in? |
3254 | Is Susie and Billy to go? |
3254 | Is Uncle Eustace a crank? |
3254 | Is Uncle Eustace sure to be elected? |
3254 | Is anybody coming in this afternoon? |
3254 | Is anything the matter? |
3254 | Is anything the matter? |
3254 | Is anything up? |
3254 | Is everything a matter of health with you? |
3254 | Is he a prig? |
3254 | Is he alive? |
3254 | Is he at home? |
3254 | Is he in? |
3254 | Is he is he safe now? |
3254 | Is he out of his mind? |
3254 | Is he so very ill? |
3254 | Is he? 3254 Is he? |
3254 | Is he? 3254 Is he?" |
3254 | Is he? |
3254 | Is it a Cabinet meeting? |
3254 | Is it a protegee-- Belgian or something? |
3254 | Is it a row? |
3254 | Is it dangerous all the time? |
3254 | Is it like this in the grave? |
3254 | Is it likely,she said,"that I should listen? |
3254 | Is it likely? 3254 Is it my husband?" |
3254 | Is it nice? 3254 Is it possible that you love me?" |
3254 | Is it possible they ca n''t stand that? |
3254 | Is it possible, madam? |
3254 | Is it possible? 3254 Is it possible? |
3254 | Is it really necessary, Grig, to see him at all? 3254 Is it really necessary,"he said,"for you to express yourself thus?" |
3254 | Is it so very unnatural? |
3254 | Is it that girl? |
3254 | Is it the first time you see that, my friend? 3254 Is it time again? |
3254 | Is it true that he is going to leave me behind? |
3254 | Is it very horrid in the trenches, Captain Fort? |
3254 | Is it very unlikely? 3254 Is it"--Nedda rushed the words out--"is it always to be sacrificing yourself, or is it-- is it always to be-- to be expressing yourself?" |
3254 | Is it,said Greta,"that you are a friend of Herr Harz? |
3254 | Is it? 3254 Is it?" |
3254 | Is my daughter happy? |
3254 | Is my nurse with her? |
3254 | Is n''t beauty terribly alive,she murmured,"like a lovely person? |
3254 | Is n''t he a great cat? |
3254 | Is n''t it a lovely day? 3254 Is n''t it jolly?" |
3254 | Is n''t it nasty? |
3254 | Is n''t it sweet? |
3254 | Is n''t it your simple duty to put your scruples in your pocket, and do the best you can for your country with the powers that have been given you? |
3254 | Is n''t there any place,cried Jon,"in all this beastly London where we can be alone?" |
3254 | Is n''t there anything I can do for you, Nollie? |
3254 | Is n''t this rather sudden? |
3254 | Is n''t this work horrid,she said--"prying into people''s houses?" |
3254 | Is not love enough? 3254 Is not peace enough?" |
3254 | Is not then their teaching born of forms, and not of the spirit? |
3254 | Is she a lady? |
3254 | Is she alive? |
3254 | Is she in trouble? |
3254 | Is she very pretty? |
3254 | Is that a race? |
3254 | Is that all right? |
3254 | Is that all you have to say to a fellow? |
3254 | Is that all you have to say? |
3254 | Is that all,murmured Fleur,"from a bad parent?" |
3254 | Is that all? |
3254 | Is that all? |
3254 | Is that all? |
3254 | Is that chap,said Soames,"really going to the South Seas?" |
3254 | Is that enough? |
3254 | Is that not,he said,"perhaps rather a matter for HER decision?" |
3254 | Is that possible? |
3254 | Is that the girl I saw? |
3254 | Is that true, Miss Mallow? |
3254 | Is that what they call putting into words things that ca n''t be put in words? |
3254 | Is that why you wo n''t do what I ask you? |
3254 | Is that you, Bessie? |
3254 | Is that you, Mr. Scorrier? 3254 Is that your future brother- in- law?" |
3254 | Is the baby well? |
3254 | Is the foreground right, Frank? |
3254 | Is the house there? |
3254 | Is there a stream where we could bathe? |
3254 | Is there any difference, my dear? |
3254 | Is there any lunch? |
3254 | Is there any other topic you''d like to mention? 3254 Is there anyone living in that house or street who would be likely to know her as his wife?" |
3254 | Is there anything I can do to stop the harm to you? |
3254 | Is there anything else you would like to squash, dear? |
3254 | Is there anything you want for him? 3254 Is there anything you would like left out?" |
3254 | Is there mania in his family? |
3254 | Is there more than one sort? |
3254 | Is there never to be any life for her? 3254 Is there never to be any purity in her life?" |
3254 | Is there no one with a lanthorn in this street? |
3254 | Is there no release? |
3254 | Is there no way of getting at him through his consul? |
3254 | Is there nothing to be done for it? |
3254 | Is this your room? 3254 Is your dad like him?" |
3254 | Is your leg hurting you? |
3254 | Is your leg quite hopeless? |
3254 | It does n''t twist your neck, does it? |
3254 | It is perhaps the colouring which does not please you, monsieur? |
3254 | It pricks you? |
3254 | It was n''t anything, really, was it? |
3254 | It wo n''t be public, will it? |
3254 | It''s Jon Forsyte''s mother, is n''t it? 3254 It''s all right,"she said, gently;"only, what''s to be done?" |
3254 | It''s all very well, all this,he said,"but what''s it going to cost?" |
3254 | It''s an east wind, father; are n''t you terribly cold without a fire? |
3254 | It''s awfully funny, is n''t it? |
3254 | It''s her blasted independence-- I beg pardon-- but who would n''t? |
3254 | It''s his face,she said:"And why? |
3254 | It''s nice, is n''t it, Granny? 3254 It''s not hydrophobia, is it?" |
3254 | It''s queer, is n''t it? 3254 It''s quite a new perfume; is n''t it delicious?" |
3254 | It''s supposed to be satiric, is n''t it? |
3254 | It''s too jolly to sleep, is n''t it? |
3254 | Jack,cried Imogen, enchanted,"what do you keep fit for?" |
3254 | Joe,he said, leaning out and down;"must you?" |
3254 | Joe,he said;"where are you"? |
3254 | John,she murmured,"are n''t you glad to see me, dear?" |
3254 | Joke about-- about such things; ought you? |
3254 | Joking? |
3254 | Just,replied Jolyon, puffing the mild cigarette to which he was reduced,"as Mr. Paul Post puts his art, eh? |
3254 | Kestrel; would you like to go there? 3254 Lady Barbara down yet?" |
3254 | Lady Malloring, will you please let the Gaunts stay in their cottage and Tryst''s wife''s sister come to live with the children and him? |
3254 | Least drop of liquor goes to it, I suppose? |
3254 | Left you? |
3254 | Leila''s lucky, is n''t she? 3254 Let me see the letter, wo n''t you?" |
3254 | Let me see,he mused,"how will they run?" |
3254 | Let me see-- how long is it since you----? |
3254 | Let me send for Dr. Dawney, Uncle? |
3254 | Let you go? 3254 Let''s see, what has he done?" |
3254 | Let? 3254 Like any common fellow?" |
3254 | Like him? 3254 Like what, dear?" |
3254 | Liked? 3254 Listen to me,"said Hilary;"has Mrs. Hughs been talking to you about her husband?" |
3254 | Little Turl? |
3254 | Little lamb, a made''ee? |
3254 | Live? |
3254 | Look here, Hal,he said:"what should you do if your wife got tired of you?" |
3254 | Lovely chap, is n''t he? |
3254 | M''mselle Chris, are you ill? |
3254 | M''mselle Chris, what is this?--to run about all night? |
3254 | Maam''selles,he began,"er-- bong jour- er, your father-- pare, comment?" |
3254 | Madame? |
3254 | Made ofhe wheezed out slowly,"what should it be made of?" |
3254 | Made of? |
3254 | Mademoiselle has deserted me? |
3254 | Matter? |
3254 | May I ask if you knew my friends, Doctor and Mrs. Laird, and Miss Pierson? |
3254 | May I ask why, Freeland minimus? |
3254 | May I ask you why, sir? |
3254 | May I ask,said Shelton,"how your club is made up?" |
3254 | May I come in? |
3254 | May I come to- morrow? |
3254 | May I get you a cab? |
3254 | May I give you some? |
3254 | May I have one of those green things? |
3254 | May I have the pleasure of giving you some tea? |
3254 | May I look? |
3254 | May n''t I come?. |
3254 | May n''t I say what I like? |
3254 | May we ask why? |
3254 | Mercy? 3254 Might I see your wife for a minute, I have a message for her?" |
3254 | Mind? 3254 Ministry of Propagation? |
3254 | Miss Mallow, is Mrs. Shortman right? 3254 Missis well?" |
3254 | Mixed up with what? |
3254 | Monsieur will have supper with us? 3254 Monsieur,"he stammered,"you speak of a lady so, in a public place?" |
3254 | Monsieur,said the girl, with a tremble in her voice,"I am very unhappy; can you tell me what to do? |
3254 | Monsieur,she asked,"do you speak French?" |
3254 | More than I thought you did? |
3254 | More work? |
3254 | Mr. Dallison, am I to get more than one set of-- underthings? |
3254 | Mr. Dallison, please-- about my hat? |
3254 | Mr. Gessler in? |
3254 | Mr. Jolyon Forsyte still a member here? |
3254 | Mr. Jolyon Forsyte? 3254 Mr. Pillin, sir; and will you wait lunch, or will you have it in the dining- room?" |
3254 | Mr. Scarlet, then? |
3254 | Mr. Shelton, do you know anything about these periscopic binoculars? |
3254 | Mr. Soames? 3254 Mrs. Blanch in? |
3254 | Mrs. Dennant at home, Dobson? |
3254 | Mrs. Fiorsen here? |
3254 | Mrs. Jaspar Bellew? |
3254 | Mrs. Jolyon Forsyte at home? |
3254 | Mrs. Peacock well, I hope? 3254 Mrs. Shortman,"said Gregory,"do n''t you think we''re all a little mad?" |
3254 | Mrs. Tallents Smallpeace? 3254 Mum, is Daddy in your room?" |
3254 | Must I, Granny? |
3254 | Must you have her here? 3254 Must you read to- day, sir?" |
3254 | My brother? |
3254 | My child, how could I possibly live on YOU there? 3254 My child, where have you been?" |
3254 | My child,he said softly,"what have you brought the old boy here for? |
3254 | My dear Angel, why? 3254 My dear George, is not man the highest work of God, and mercy the highest quality in man?" |
3254 | My dear boy, what is the matter? 3254 My dear child,"murmured Jolyon,"would n''t it come to the same thing?" |
3254 | My dear girl, how can I? 3254 My dear, how can I tell? |
3254 | My dear,he said,"I do n''t want to intrude upon your feelings; but-- but is there anything I can do? |
3254 | My dear,he said,"are you unwell?" |
3254 | My dear-- I? |
3254 | My father is a clergyman; would you care to come and see him? 3254 My grandson is not here, is he?" |
3254 | My wife? 3254 Names? |
3254 | Need he ever know? |
3254 | Nell? |
3254 | Nemesia? |
3254 | Never have? |
3254 | Nicholas, what is to be done? |
3254 | Ninety? 3254 No one saw you going back to her the second time?" |
3254 | No one saw you leave her in the morning? |
3254 | No one? |
3254 | No reason he should n''t go on helping people, is there? |
3254 | No tea? |
3254 | No!? |
3254 | No, but really? |
3254 | No, but what WAS it? |
3254 | No, but what was she like? |
3254 | No, not ill. Oh, Horace, do n''t you understand? 3254 No, sir?" |
3254 | No, sirr; who would send me one, then? |
3254 | No, thanks,murmured Soames; and, nursing his hat, with the desire to say something suitable and sympathetic, added:"How''s your mother?" |
3254 | No,said the gentleman,"not at all-- on the contrary, Who the hell are you?" |
3254 | No; are you? |
3254 | No; only, how do you think it got back to you from here so quickly? |
3254 | No? 3254 No? |
3254 | No? |
3254 | No? |
3254 | Nobody knows, Gyp? |
3254 | Noc? |
3254 | Noel- if you do n''t mind me calling you that? |
3254 | Nor coming back? |
3254 | Nor going out in the morning? |
3254 | Nor to- morrow? |
3254 | Nor your head? |
3254 | Not Soho? |
3254 | Not a bit like Holly or me, is he? |
3254 | Not been asleep, have I? 3254 Not been here this morning?" |
3254 | Not been out? |
3254 | Not going back to Paris? |
3254 | Not if I ask you, Horace? |
3254 | Not know his name? |
3254 | Not nice, is it? |
3254 | Not one? |
3254 | Not quite like that, are they-- human ears? 3254 Not really?" |
3254 | Not seen the girl? |
3254 | Not sleeping, sir? |
3254 | Not so good as yours,he said,"are they? |
3254 | Not till then? |
3254 | Not well? 3254 Not young Mr. Nicholas? |
3254 | Not your cousin, then? |
3254 | Not? 3254 Nothing definite, then?" |
3254 | Nothing found on him-- I think I read? |
3254 | Nothing from Soames? |
3254 | Nothing like it, is there? 3254 Nothing like it, is there? |
3254 | Nothing to make one anxious? |
3254 | Nothing? 3254 Now shall we go in?" |
3254 | Now what did this cost? |
3254 | Now what do you mean by that? |
3254 | Now what does he want? |
3254 | Now, Biddy, what time did you wake up the first morning? |
3254 | Now, at what age do you consider men develop discretion? 3254 Now, is n''t that provoking? |
3254 | Now, please, will you leave my room? |
3254 | Now, what did it cost to put up those columns? |
3254 | Now, what do you say, Mr. Bosinney? 3254 Now, what sort of living do those girls make?" |
3254 | Now, where was that? |
3254 | Now,I said to him,"where did you get it-- that''s the point?" |
3254 | O.K.? 3254 Of Mary''s? |
3254 | Of Merton? 3254 Of all things in the world, do n''t you think caution''s the most awful? |
3254 | Of course not,said the young man with a little smile at once proud and sad,"who does? |
3254 | Of course you do n''t have to take guinea- pigs about with you? |
3254 | Of course-- if you say so----"What time is the motor ordered? |
3254 | Of course; why not? |
3254 | Of old Heythorp''s? 3254 Of what, dear?" |
3254 | Oh yes, why? 3254 Oh, I expect I can make him--"She stopped, confused, then added hastily:"Are you sure you do n''t mind?" |
3254 | Oh, I''m making a mistake? 3254 Oh, I''m tired of it; are n''t you?" |
3254 | Oh, Mrs. Fiorsen--why did everything she said begin with"Oh"--"isn''t this room lovely? |
3254 | Oh, and have you thought that taking her away from where she is will only make those people talk the more? |
3254 | Oh, but, darling,she said very gravely,"have you thought?" |
3254 | Oh, did you like it? 3254 Oh, do you mind if we come in a minute?" |
3254 | Oh, do you think so? |
3254 | Oh, has she divorced you? |
3254 | Oh, may I? |
3254 | Oh, mine IS good; is n''t it, Mrs. Fiorsen? 3254 Oh, my dear, ca n''t you pull up? |
3254 | Oh, my dear, where HAVE you been? 3254 Oh, really?" |
3254 | Oh, yes sir!--what name shall I say, if you please, sir? |
3254 | Oh,he said dryly,"it''s you, is it?" |
3254 | Oh,she said,"did n''t you know? |
3254 | Oh? |
3254 | Oh? |
3254 | Oliver? 3254 On what grounds? |
3254 | On what grounds? |
3254 | One a year? |
3254 | One of those? |
3254 | One of those? |
3254 | Only let me do it all, wo n''t you? |
3254 | Only, Nollie, suppose, when all this is over, and we breathe and live naturally once more, you found you''d made a mistake? |
3254 | Opinion,he stammered,"of the poor? |
3254 | Or will it hurt the baby? |
3254 | Or, indeed, are they not both God or both Mammon? 3254 Outside our family, who''s likely to remember?" |
3254 | Over? |
3254 | Pasiance,he said,"did you want to leave me so much?" |
3254 | People have talked like that from time immemorial"But you''ll admit, sir, that the sense of property is dying out? |
3254 | People who have them are strong- willed, are n''t they? |
3254 | Perhaps it does n''t, because you live half in the next world, do n''t you? |
3254 | Perhaps you could tell me, sir, if my son is out? |
3254 | Perhaps you would like to go alone? |
3254 | Picture finished? |
3254 | Play? 3254 Please, am I right for the Tottenham Court Road?" |
3254 | Please, auntie says-- will you try a piece of our Mayday cake? |
3254 | Please, sir, the driver says can he have his fare, or do you want him again? 3254 Please?" |
3254 | Politically? |
3254 | Poor darlings, they want it-- don''t they? 3254 Precisely,"said Mr. Polteed;"divorce, I presume?" |
3254 | Pretty? |
3254 | Pretty? |
3254 | Principles? |
3254 | Promise? 3254 Psychology''s not in your line, Uncle Ted?" |
3254 | Pursue? |
3254 | Que desirez- vous, monsieur? 3254 Queer things?" |
3254 | R- restive? |
3254 | Rather a poseur, is he not? |
3254 | Rather boring, was n''t it? 3254 Rather fine, I think,"he said;"do you want to sell it?" |
3254 | Rather late in the day, is n''t it? |
3254 | Rays? |
3254 | Ready, boys? 3254 Ready, sir?" |
3254 | Really and truly? 3254 Really? |
3254 | Really? 3254 Really? |
3254 | Really? |
3254 | Really? |
3254 | Recovers? |
3254 | Remarkable for what? |
3254 | Revelation, then, means nothing to you? |
3254 | Rising? 3254 Risk? |
3254 | Rose dear, Rose, can I do anything? |
3254 | Roy, Roy, how can you, dear? |
3254 | Rozsi,he stammered,"what makes you afraid of me, now?" |
3254 | Safe? |
3254 | Salad, sir? |
3254 | Samjoe? |
3254 | Satiric? 3254 Say? |
3254 | See that hawk? |
3254 | Seen? |
3254 | Sha n''t I not''alf cop it from the Missis? |
3254 | Shall I bring you some more, sir? |
3254 | Shall I come to- morrow, then? |
3254 | Shall I drive? |
3254 | Shall I feel sick? |
3254 | Shall I get on with it? |
3254 | Shall I give you a hand, sir? |
3254 | Shall I knock for you? |
3254 | Shall I show you a thing or two? |
3254 | Shall I shut the door, Mother? |
3254 | Shall I take you round the house, sir, while I send Cook to break it to him? |
3254 | Shall I take your luggage up, miss? |
3254 | Shall I tell her to come in? |
3254 | Shall I tell you what I should like? |
3254 | Shall I tell you,she said,"what would give him pleasure?" |
3254 | Shall be? |
3254 | Shall we get ready for our walk? |
3254 | Shall we go down to tea? |
3254 | Shall we go into Grinnings''? |
3254 | Shall we go round the pictures? |
3254 | Shall we have a game, then? |
3254 | Shall we have a try at once to upset what evidence they''ve got? 3254 Shall we walk?" |
3254 | Shall we''sit down? |
3254 | Shall you show me? |
3254 | She can only take care of herself, Gracie, and will she? 3254 She told you so?" |
3254 | She wants to spoil our lives, just because--"Yes, of what? |
3254 | She''s not bringing anything into settlement, I understand; how''s that? |
3254 | She''s not sitting to your sister now? |
3254 | She''s still a young woman? |
3254 | She''s up to get herself some dresses, I suppose? 3254 She?" |
3254 | Shelton? 3254 Shut the door,"he said;"I am making cocoa; will you have a cup?" |
3254 | Sir? |
3254 | Sister? |
3254 | Six weeks? 3254 So Hughs ill- treats her?" |
3254 | So I saw; what ladies? |
3254 | So Soames has been worrying you? |
3254 | So long? |
3254 | So then you''re guilty, are you? |
3254 | So then,I said,"sacrifice or suffering is the coherent thread of Christian philosophy?" |
3254 | So you advise me to get off to- morrow, then? |
3254 | So you are going out again, Scorrier, for the other side? 3254 So you are going to give up your seat?" |
3254 | So you have some work? |
3254 | So you really think God merciful, sir? |
3254 | So you think me a''rotter''? |
3254 | So you wo n''t? |
3254 | So you''re going to Wales to- morrow to visit your young man''s aunts? 3254 So you''re going to become jealous, Gyp?" |
3254 | So you''re going to marry Antonia Dennant? |
3254 | So you''ve come back? |
3254 | So you''ve got here safe? |
3254 | So you''ve seen her? 3254 So''To- morrow we die''?" |
3254 | So,I said,"you failed?" |
3254 | Soames with her? 3254 Society? |
3254 | Soho? |
3254 | Some people called Hughs live in your house, I think? |
3254 | Soon? |
3254 | Soul on its back? 3254 Still a mystery, I see?" |
3254 | Still cooling your heels? 3254 Strike a lady? |
3254 | Stubbs? |
3254 | Stuff? 3254 Sugar? |
3254 | Summerhay? 3254 Suppose he says you''re not?" |
3254 | Suppose it''s my people? 3254 Suppose the more is accepted?" |
3254 | Suppose,he said--"I do n''t pretend to know, I only suppose-- what Ferrand really cares for is doing things differently from other people? |
3254 | Sure? |
3254 | Surely you are not Italian? |
3254 | Surely you do n''t believe in ghosts? |
3254 | Surely you would never have done such a thing without affection? 3254 Surely,"said he,"I sent a cheque?" |
3254 | Surely,said the parson, whose face regained its pallor,"you''re not a Little Englander?" |
3254 | Sylvia Doone? |
3254 | Take care? 3254 Talk? |
3254 | Talking of brotherhood, sir,he said dryly,"would you go so far as to say that a new potato is the brother of a bean?" |
3254 | Tar- brush? |
3254 | Tea? 3254 Tell me what you would have done if you had been given your fare and just sixpence over?" |
3254 | Tell me, did n''t she spoil your life too? |
3254 | Tell me,I asked him,"which do you consider most important-- the letter or the spirit of Christ''s teachings?" |
3254 | Tell me,said Boleskey,"what would you do if the French conquered you?" |
3254 | Tell them they need n''t be afraid; and sometimes when you''re at home think of me, eh? |
3254 | Tell us-- did you see the rat? |
3254 | Tell your father? 3254 Thank you-- what?" |
3254 | That Belgian chap? 3254 That all he has?" |
3254 | That dear doggie? |
3254 | That little model, now,she said,"what about her?" |
3254 | That man-- what was his name-- have you got rid of him? |
3254 | That was before he married Mother, was n''t it? |
3254 | That''s curable too, is n''t it? |
3254 | That''s old Uncle James, is n''t it? 3254 That''s your sister''s picture,''The Shadow,''they''re looking at, is n''t it?" |
3254 | That? |
3254 | The French succeed in doing it,replied Shelton,"and the Russians; why should n''t we?" |
3254 | The Leytons-- that''s Eaton Square, is n''t it? 3254 The Pied Witch, zurr?" |
3254 | The Public? |
3254 | The Sanitist? |
3254 | The Town Hall, then? |
3254 | The Watchfire? |
3254 | The balance of power? |
3254 | The dusky bees of passing years Canst see them, soul of mine-- From flower and flower supping tears, And pale sweet honey wine? 3254 The great thing is to save Daisy suffering, is n''t it?" |
3254 | The ground is level now,said Barbara;"can you run?" |
3254 | The men go down to- morrow,he said:"What did I tell you? |
3254 | The name? |
3254 | The news from the war is not so bad, is it? |
3254 | The old woman there fond of her? 3254 The son of your brother who was killed with his wife in that dreadful Alpine accident? |
3254 | The want of them? |
3254 | The younger generation does n''t think as you do, sir; does it, Fleur? |
3254 | Then can you tell me where they take the tickets? 3254 Then did he stay with you or did he go out?" |
3254 | Then do you mean to say, Father, that you were married before you married my mother? |
3254 | Then how? |
3254 | Then if we WERE all heroic,''the Land''could still be saved? |
3254 | Then what delays you-- if not that British sluggishness which we in public life find such a terrible handicap to our efforts in conducting the war? |
3254 | Then what is to be done? 3254 Then why did you ask me here? |
3254 | Then why did you go bird- nesting? 3254 Then why do n''t you tell him? |
3254 | Then why do you yacht? |
3254 | Then why does He give it a free rein? 3254 Then will you go up to Stephen''s dressing- room for hot water, or will you wash them in the lavatory?" |
3254 | Then you DO love me? |
3254 | Then you ca n''t believe in abstract right, or justice? |
3254 | Then you do believe in being good? |
3254 | Then you do n''t mean to do anything? |
3254 | Then you have n''t been getting work? |
3254 | Then you''ll stay to dinner, dear, wo n''t you? |
3254 | Then, it''s probably true,remarked young Jolyon unexpectedly;"and I suppose they''ve told you who she is?" |
3254 | Then, my dear-- he has n''t quite gone from you, you see? |
3254 | Then, you wo n''t let me go? |
3254 | Then-- who brought her? |
3254 | There is a man called Wagge, an undertaker-- the father of someone you know--"Daphne Wing? |
3254 | There is no God, Dad"My darling child, what are you saying? |
3254 | There is no bad news of his young lordship''s health, I hope? |
3254 | There''ll be nothing about those pearls, will there? |
3254 | There''s a fine view from here,he remarked;"you have n''t such a thing as a chair?" |
3254 | There''s got to be an example made,he thinks; and-- er-- he makes it, do n''t you know? |
3254 | There''s no such thing as moral asthma, I suppose? |
3254 | There''s nothing else to be, is there? |
3254 | They did n''t save the hay, did they? |
3254 | They had a guide, I think? |
3254 | They only want their independence,said June;"and why should n''t they have it?" |
3254 | They were very polite to one another,muttered Dan...."''Will you leave your message with me?'' |
3254 | They wo n''t want me to give evidence or anything? |
3254 | They''re a great comfort in London, are n''t they? |
3254 | They? 3254 Things have come to a head at home, have n''t they?" |
3254 | Think-- think who will? 3254 Think?" |
3254 | Thinner? 3254 This all you have?" |
3254 | This beetle lives in rotten wood; nice chap, is n''t he? |
3254 | This closes my connection with the campaign,he said:"What''s the address of this paper?" |
3254 | This is good stuff, though; have you much of it? |
3254 | This is just what''s really wanted, Jon, to convince them, do n''t you see? 3254 This is new, is n''t it, Nollie?" |
3254 | This is rather sudden,said Fleur calmly;"do you often do it?" |
3254 | This man, then-- your-- your husband-- was he a bad man? |
3254 | Thought, Barbi? 3254 Timothy? |
3254 | Tired? |
3254 | To Jon? |
3254 | To church? 3254 To grief?" |
3254 | To grief? |
3254 | To him? 3254 To rest in the waters of Lethe, Babs? |
3254 | To- day''s the twenty- third of May,said Fleur;"on the ninth of July I shall be in front of the''Bacchus and Ariadne''at three o''clock; will you?" |
3254 | To- morrow''s Saturday; may I meet you there? 3254 To- morrow? |
3254 | Tod in the plough works? 3254 Too awkward?" |
3254 | Touching Villa Rubein,he said,"shall I call for you? |
3254 | Truly? |
3254 | Truth and honour? |
3254 | Try buying pictures on that system,said Soames;"an offer accepted is a contract-- haven''t you learned that?" |
3254 | Twenty- two years to run? |
3254 | Uncle Charles, a dhrop of the craythur a wee dhrop of the craythur? |
3254 | Uncle Nic, wo n''t you give me news of him? |
3254 | Uncle Soames and your Dad-- bit awkward, is n''t it? |
3254 | Uncle Timothy,he said again,"is there anything I can do for you? |
3254 | Une belle azalee? |
3254 | V. A. D. Hospital,Mulberry Road, St. John''s Wood N. W."DEAR COUSIN EDWARD,"Do you remember me, or have I gone too far into the shades of night? |
3254 | Val Dartie? 3254 Val having Holly, too, is a sort of plaster, do n''t you know?" |
3254 | Very badly? |
3254 | Very disfigured? |
3254 | Very sad story; ca n''t they do anything for him? |
3254 | Victories? |
3254 | Want to go back, sir? |
3254 | Wants you? 3254 Was Uncle Soames awfully fond of her?" |
3254 | Was anyone-- did anyone see? |
3254 | Was he in Glensofantrim? |
3254 | Was he? 3254 Was he?" |
3254 | Was he? |
3254 | Was it from love of me that you made him drunk last night? |
3254 | Was it light when you woke up? |
3254 | Was it necessary? |
3254 | Was it really moonlight? |
3254 | Was it up to what you thought, last night? |
3254 | Was it wrong, Leila? |
3254 | Was it your son? 3254 Was it your son? |
3254 | Was she divorced? |
3254 | Was that early or late? |
3254 | Was that old Uncle Jolyon? 3254 Was there a moon?" |
3254 | Was''e? 3254 We also speak English,"said the elder girl;"will you come in, please?" |
3254 | We are so glad to know you; you are an artist too, perhaps? 3254 We kept it for you, but I suppose you was too busy in your brain to think o''such a thing as that?" |
3254 | We loved each other; and children are born, are n''t they, after you''ve loved? 3254 We never know ourselves, do we? |
3254 | We talked about the poor, do you remember? |
3254 | We will make a night of it,said Sarelli;"wine, brandy, kummel? |
3254 | We wo n''t talk about love, will we? 3254 We''re a wonderful family, are n''t we? |
3254 | We''ve come to ask what you''re going to do? |
3254 | We''ve seen about Tryst,Felix said:"You''ve not done anything?" |
3254 | Well, Aunt Ann? |
3254 | Well, Biddy? |
3254 | Well, Dad? |
3254 | Well, Dick, what''s your opinion? |
3254 | Well, Dick,said he,"how''s your mother?" |
3254 | Well, Fraulein Christian, are n''t we? |
3254 | Well, Gyp? |
3254 | Well, Jon, what can you expect if you eat macaroons after you''ve gone to bed? |
3254 | Well, Lennan, and how''s old Noll? 3254 Well, Margery?" |
3254 | Well, Mr. Gessler,I said,"how are you?" |
3254 | Well, Nick,he muttered,"how are you?" |
3254 | Well, Pettance, how are you? 3254 Well, Wilmet?" |
3254 | Well, and how should they be treated? |
3254 | Well, and what did they say to you? |
3254 | Well, are n''t you? |
3254 | Well, but why not? 3254 Well, dear-- tired?" |
3254 | Well, do n''t you think so? |
3254 | Well, doctor? |
3254 | Well, gentlemen? |
3254 | Well, gentlemen? |
3254 | Well, has he struck you, or anything? |
3254 | Well, have you finished kicking? |
3254 | Well, have you realized the mischief that you''ve done? |
3254 | Well, if you do n''t trust him, why do you employ him? |
3254 | Well, is it not the essence of His doctrine that the spirit is all important, and the forms of little value? 3254 Well, is it what Mrs. Shortman says?" |
3254 | Well, my Gyp, and are we not? |
3254 | Well, my dear fellow,said Lord Valleys,"you''re all right again evidently-- what''s the news?" |
3254 | Well, my dear,he said,"the War has n''t changed Robin Hill, has it? |
3254 | Well, my dear,he said;"hungry?" |
3254 | Well, my dear,they seemed to say,"what''s the matter?" |
3254 | Well, old man,said Jolyon,"so you thought you ought?" |
3254 | Well, old man? |
3254 | Well, shall we begin? |
3254 | Well, sir, we''re a democratic country, ai n''t we? 3254 Well, supposin''it is?" |
3254 | Well, then, why do you go on with it? |
3254 | Well, was his story very terrible? |
3254 | Well, we must n''t keep you, Mrs.--Mrs.--? |
3254 | Well, what abaht it, sir? |
3254 | Well, what are they for, sir? 3254 Well, what are you?" |
3254 | Well, what do you advise? |
3254 | Well, what do you think of the war? |
3254 | Well, what do you think? |
3254 | Well, what does Soames want in place of me now? |
3254 | Well, what does it amount to? 3254 Well, what is it you want?" |
3254 | Well, what made you? |
3254 | Well, what was it then? |
3254 | Well, what''s the good of anything while London and all these other big towns are sitting on the country''s chest? 3254 Well, who wants to? |
3254 | Well, wot abaht it, sir? 3254 Well, you are happy now?" |
3254 | Well, young man, and what have you done with my wife? |
3254 | Well,''e used to say,"what can I du, Mother? |
3254 | Well,Martin was saying,"what are you going to do? |
3254 | Well,he brought out with an effort,"do n''t you think it''s a pity to embroil your young people in village troubles? |
3254 | Well,he inquired,"what sort of a time have you had in India?" |
3254 | Well,he said in the street,"whom did you meet at Imogen''s?" |
3254 | Well,he said,"how are you? |
3254 | Well,he said,"what have you to say for yourselves?" |
3254 | Well,he said,"what news, poor exile?" |
3254 | Well,he said:"What would you like to do now-- drop into a theatre or music- hall, or what?" |
3254 | Well,he said;"you-- Irene?" |
3254 | Well,said Emily,"who would have imagined you wanted it? |
3254 | Well,said Mr. Cuthcott, and his eyes twinkled,"what''s your botheration? |
3254 | Well,said Shelton gruffly,"how can progress be imposed on nations from outside?" |
3254 | Well,said the voice behind him,"has n''t that shown you how things swell and grow; how splendid the world is?" |
3254 | Well,she said again;"what have you come for?" |
3254 | Well,she said,"it''s no good thinking about that, is it? |
3254 | Well,she said,"what are you going to do?" |
3254 | Well,she said,"what do you think of it?" |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Were you in the War? |
3254 | Were you known by that name before you were married? |
3254 | Were you married to father when he was alive? |
3254 | Were you talking about the house? 3254 Westminister, sir? |
3254 | What about George? 3254 What about Mr. Valerius, now he''s come home?" |
3254 | What about my treading on you, Billy? |
3254 | What about the women? |
3254 | What about the''fly,''Granny? |
3254 | What about you? |
3254 | What about your hat? |
3254 | What about? |
3254 | What am I to do if you wo n''t, Father? |
3254 | What am I to do then? |
3254 | What am I to do with Nell? 3254 What am I to do with him?" |
3254 | What am I to say to her when I go back? |
3254 | What are the realms of this earth, the dreams of statesmen, and all plots and policies,he said,"compared with the beauty of this little tree? |
3254 | What are they? |
3254 | What are we doing after lunch? |
3254 | What are you cultivating that young gaby for? 3254 What are you doing here?" |
3254 | What are you doing, Nollie? |
3254 | What are you doing? |
3254 | What are you going to do to- morrow, Mother? |
3254 | What are you going to do, then? 3254 What are you going to do, then?" |
3254 | What are you going to do? |
3254 | What are you going to say to him? |
3254 | What are you laughing at? |
3254 | What are you laughing at? |
3254 | What are you looking at? |
3254 | What are you reading? |
3254 | What are you thinking about, Bird? |
3254 | What are you writing to him about? |
3254 | What babies? |
3254 | What be they wantin''me fur now, mester? |
3254 | What boy? 3254 What brought you here?" |
3254 | What business,he thought, digging in his dummy spurs,"has our class to patronise? |
3254 | What can I do for you, sir? |
3254 | What can I do for you? |
3254 | What can I do for you? |
3254 | What can it be? |
3254 | What can one do,she thought,"for women like Mrs. Hughs, who always look like that? |
3254 | What class are you going? 3254 What could I say? |
3254 | What d''yer want? |
3254 | What d''you do with yourself all day? |
3254 | What d''you mean by that? |
3254 | What d''you mean by that? |
3254 | What d''you mean-- left you? 3254 What d''you mean?" |
3254 | What d''you think of her? 3254 What d''you think of this?" |
3254 | What d''you think they''ve been doing with themselves? |
3254 | What d''yu stay yere for? |
3254 | What did June want here? |
3254 | What did Mr. James say to you? |
3254 | What did he go to prison for? |
3254 | What did he say then? |
3254 | What did he say to make you laugh? |
3254 | What did he say? |
3254 | What did she do, then, Auntie? |
3254 | What did she mean? |
3254 | What did she want? |
3254 | What did she want? |
3254 | What did the old hag say? |
3254 | What did you do for it? |
3254 | What did you do with him? |
3254 | What did you do with that? |
3254 | What did you do? |
3254 | What did you hear? |
3254 | What did you put on that thing for? 3254 What did you say about me in there?" |
3254 | What did you say? |
3254 | What did you see in Glensofantrim? |
3254 | What did you think of? |
3254 | What did you think you would find away from here? |
3254 | What did you want to see me about? |
3254 | What did you-- what could you have done in those old days? |
3254 | What do they know of life? 3254 What do we care about the past? |
3254 | What do you advise me, then? |
3254 | What do you advise us to do, then, guv''nor? |
3254 | What do you advise? 3254 What do you care for?" |
3254 | What do you do all day? |
3254 | What do you do all day? |
3254 | What do you do for it? 3254 What do you do with yourself? |
3254 | What do you expect to get that''s better? |
3254 | What do you imagine he''s taking you for, girl? 3254 What do you know about it?" |
3254 | What do you make of it? |
3254 | What do you mean by God? |
3254 | What do you mean by Life, monsieur? 3254 What do you mean by love?" |
3254 | What do you mean? 3254 What do you mean?" |
3254 | What do you mean? |
3254 | What do you mean? |
3254 | What do you pay for an office like this? |
3254 | What do you say it means? |
3254 | What do you say to that, sir? |
3254 | What do you say, Bellby? |
3254 | What do you say, Mrs. Forsyde; do n''t you think human nature''s always the same? |
3254 | What do you say, gentlemen; shall we recommend him to mercy? |
3254 | What do you say? |
3254 | What do you think about? |
3254 | What do you think of it? |
3254 | What do you think of that Belgian fellow, Profond? |
3254 | What do you think of the street you''re living in? |
3254 | What do you think of this? |
3254 | What do you think ought to be done now, Horace? |
3254 | What do you think, old man? |
3254 | What do you want for it? |
3254 | What do you want me to do then? |
3254 | What do you want me to tell you? 3254 What do you want, Bester?" |
3254 | What do you want, making all this noise? |
3254 | What do you want, my dear? |
3254 | What do you want, you little beast? |
3254 | What do you want? |
3254 | What do you want? |
3254 | What do you wish me to do? |
3254 | What does he mean by it, with that leg? |
3254 | What does he say to it? |
3254 | What does he say? |
3254 | What does he say? |
3254 | What does he say? |
3254 | What does it mean-- how did he come? 3254 What does it mean?" |
3254 | What does it show you? |
3254 | What does that chap Profond do in England? |
3254 | What does that matter? 3254 What does that mean to say? |
3254 | What does that mean? |
3254 | What does your father say this morning? |
3254 | What else can I do? |
3254 | What else is there to do? |
3254 | What else? |
3254 | What enables you to decide what is for their good? |
3254 | What exactly do you mean by that? |
3254 | What exactly do you want? |
3254 | What exactly is beauty? |
3254 | What eyes? |
3254 | What figure would the young lady be? |
3254 | What for? |
3254 | What for? |
3254 | What friends? |
3254 | What gipsy bogie? |
3254 | What good does it do to anyone? 3254 What had gone on?" |
3254 | What had you done in between? |
3254 | What had young Jolly Forsyte to do with it? 3254 What happens now?" |
3254 | What happens to this house? |
3254 | What has Nemesis to do with flowers? 3254 What has come?" |
3254 | What has happened? |
3254 | What has he done? 3254 What has he to say for himself?" |
3254 | What has that to do with it? 3254 What have I done? |
3254 | What have I done? 3254 What have I done?" |
3254 | What have they to do with each other? 3254 What have you been doing?" |
3254 | What have you been hearing? |
3254 | What have you been talking of? 3254 What have you come for, old man?" |
3254 | What have you come for? |
3254 | What have you come here for, then-- blackmail? |
3254 | What have you done since? |
3254 | What have you done with Nedda? |
3254 | What have you done with her so far? |
3254 | What have you said to him? |
3254 | What have you said to him? |
3254 | What have you told him? |
3254 | What help did I get from London when I first came here? 3254 What house?" |
3254 | What in God''s name did you do it for? |
3254 | What in God''s name is this nonsense? |
3254 | What injury? |
3254 | What is B--- going to do? |
3254 | What is June like now? |
3254 | What is a crank? |
3254 | What is a man''s instinct compared with a mother''s? |
3254 | What is he like, Dick-- I mean, to look at? 3254 What is he, then?" |
3254 | What is her feeling about him? |
3254 | What is her name? |
3254 | What is her trouble, then? |
3254 | What is it that you''ve thought of? |
3254 | What is it to me if you''d murdered your mother? 3254 What is it you want? |
3254 | What is it, B.? |
3254 | What is it, Babs? |
3254 | What is it, Chris? 3254 What is it, Mr. Vigil? |
3254 | What is it, dear man? 3254 What is it, my poor old man?" |
3254 | What is it, sir? |
3254 | What is it, then? 3254 What is it, then? |
3254 | What is it, woman? 3254 What is it,"their envious, inquisitive glance had seemed to say,"that makes you so really''smart''?" |
3254 | What is it? 3254 What is it? |
3254 | What is it? 3254 What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is its mate? |
3254 | What is she like, Daddy? |
3254 | What is sweet? |
3254 | What is that to me? |
3254 | What is that? 3254 What is the good of talking?" |
3254 | What is the man''s name and regiment? 3254 What is the name of this street?" |
3254 | What is there to eat? |
3254 | What is this man going to do? 3254 What is this we hear, old man, about your lanthorn and the rat? |
3254 | What is to be done now, Horace? |
3254 | What is to be done with a child that goes about all day thinking and thinking and not telling anybody what she is thinking? |
3254 | What is your idea now? |
3254 | What is your name now? |
3254 | What is your name? |
3254 | What is your objection, sir? |
3254 | What is your recipe for youth, Irene? |
3254 | What is your wish? |
3254 | What is yours, Jon? |
3254 | What is? |
3254 | What jam? |
3254 | What made him build it here? |
3254 | What made you ask her? |
3254 | What made you promise to marry me? |
3254 | What made you think that? |
3254 | What made you write? |
3254 | What made you? |
3254 | What makes you say that? |
3254 | What makes you so cruel? |
3254 | What makes you want to paint us? |
3254 | What man? |
3254 | What more do I need? 3254 What more?" |
3254 | What name? |
3254 | What new disease? |
3254 | What of? |
3254 | What old woman? |
3254 | What on earth can you do, then? 3254 What on earth for?" |
3254 | What on earth have our ideas of justice or right got to do with India? |
3254 | What on earth is the poor dear doing now? |
3254 | What on earth will she do out there? |
3254 | What on earth''s that to do with it? |
3254 | What other end is possible? 3254 What ought I to have done?" |
3254 | What people? |
3254 | What people? |
3254 | What price that? |
3254 | What price will you lay against my horse? |
3254 | What principles can possibly be involved in going against the law? |
3254 | What put that into your head? |
3254 | What reason? |
3254 | What reasons? |
3254 | What right,he asked himself,"has she to be so certain? |
3254 | What says the voice- its clear- lingering anguish? 3254 What shall I do till then?" |
3254 | What shall I make my cheque for? |
3254 | What shall we talk about-- the running of Casetta? |
3254 | What should I be callinyou?" |
3254 | What should I want him for-- a man like that? 3254 What should you think?" |
3254 | What should you want to know about such things, at your age? |
3254 | What sort of a quarrel? |
3254 | What sort of customers have you just now? |
3254 | What sort of people are those old Stormers? |
3254 | What strikes you most about it, then? |
3254 | What subject can I choose for a Garden City? |
3254 | What then? |
3254 | What time is it? |
3254 | What time is it? |
3254 | What time is the funeral? |
3254 | What time? |
3254 | What tune does he play? |
3254 | What war paint have you? |
3254 | What was Joe saying to you, please? |
3254 | What was Winifred about,he said,"to let him take her pearls?" |
3254 | What was he like? |
3254 | What was he? |
3254 | What was he? |
3254 | What was her father? |
3254 | What was her name that Daddy believes in? 3254 What was it made of?" |
3254 | What was it? |
3254 | What was it? |
3254 | What was that noise, Clifton? |
3254 | What was that you said to him? |
3254 | What was that,he said,"about Bellew?" |
3254 | What was the man like? |
3254 | What were you at his age, dear? |
3254 | What whim? |
3254 | What will father say? 3254 What will he do?" |
3254 | What will it be called? |
3254 | What will the village think? |
3254 | What will they do to me? |
3254 | What will you do with yourself, Dad? 3254 What will you have for your room?" |
3254 | What will you have, mademoiselle? |
3254 | What woman? |
3254 | What would happen if I were to go in? |
3254 | What would have happened, Edward, if you had proposed to me that May week, when we were-- a little bit in love? 3254 What would life be without them?" |
3254 | What would the doctor say? 3254 What would you do,"he said, striking his chest,"if you had a devil- here? |
3254 | What would you do,she muttered,"if you wanted a thing, but were afraid of it? |
3254 | What would you have, Mark? |
3254 | What would you have? 3254 What would you like me to dance first? |
3254 | What''fly''? |
3254 | What''ll you drink? 3254 What''s Pan?" |
3254 | What''s all this about goin''out there? 3254 What''s all this?" |
3254 | What''s all this? |
3254 | What''s coming now? |
3254 | What''s he gone there for? |
3254 | What''s he like? |
3254 | What''s he like? |
3254 | What''s he saying? 3254 What''s her husband like? |
3254 | What''s his number? |
3254 | What''s his wife like now? |
3254 | What''s in that cow- house? |
3254 | What''s it like in prison, Daddy? |
3254 | What''s that got to do with it? 3254 What''s that to do with it?" |
3254 | What''s that-- that black----? |
3254 | What''s that? 3254 What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s the good of that? |
3254 | What''s the matter now, sir? |
3254 | What''s the matter with him, Warmson? |
3254 | What''s the matter with him? 3254 What''s the matter with me, eh?" |
3254 | What''s the matter with your wrists? |
3254 | What''s the matter, Gyp? |
3254 | What''s the matter, Mother? |
3254 | What''s the matter, Tom? |
3254 | What''s the matter, sir? |
3254 | What''s the matter? 3254 What''s the matter? |
3254 | What''s the matter? 3254 What''s the matter?" |
3254 | What''s the matter? |
3254 | What''s the meaning of it? |
3254 | What''s the meaning of that? |
3254 | What''s the noise? |
3254 | What''s the time? |
3254 | What''s the use? |
3254 | What''s the, matter with that? |
3254 | What''s this about Dartie? |
3254 | What''s this about Dartie? |
3254 | What''s this, Cis,he said,"about a baby dead? |
3254 | What''s this? 3254 What''s to be done?" |
3254 | What''s up with you? |
3254 | What''s wrong with your gates, man, I should like to know? |
3254 | What''s your baby''s name? 3254 What''s your line? |
3254 | What, Mrs. Shortman, you too, you too among the Pharisees? |
3254 | What, did she come down alone? |
3254 | What, then, is our duty? 3254 What, then, is the People, Joe?" |
3254 | What, then? 3254 What, then?" |
3254 | What-- what is the manner between them? |
3254 | What? 3254 What? |
3254 | What? 3254 What? |
3254 | What? 3254 What? |
3254 | What? 3254 What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | When Cis is gone it''ll be rather awful, wo n''t it? |
3254 | When Father got up, did he dress or did he go to bed again? |
3254 | When I go back to London, will you come and hear me? |
3254 | When are you going to let me be a nurse, Daddy? |
3254 | When are you going to see him next? |
3254 | When are you going? |
3254 | When did it happen? |
3254 | When did they start, please? |
3254 | When did you begin painting pictures? |
3254 | When did you leave this girl the second time? |
3254 | When did you see it? |
3254 | When did you see me for the first time? |
3254 | When do you start? |
3254 | When do you think, Hilary? |
3254 | When do you wand dem? |
3254 | When is self at peace, sir? 3254 When shall you be going?" |
3254 | When she lived with him last-- where was that? |
3254 | When was that? |
3254 | When will it be, Soames? |
3254 | When would she be coming in? |
3254 | When you were a boy, did you go after birds''nests, Uncle Nic? |
3254 | When''s this action coming on? 3254 When''s your case coming on? |
3254 | When? 3254 When?" |
3254 | When? |
3254 | Where are Miss Noel and Nurse, Susan? |
3254 | Where are the eggs? |
3254 | Where are we going first? |
3254 | Where are we going in this thing? |
3254 | Where are we now? |
3254 | Where are you goin'', then? |
3254 | Where are you going at this pace? |
3254 | Where are you going to live? 3254 Where are you going to take me?" |
3254 | Where are you going? |
3254 | Where are your eyes, sir? |
3254 | Where are your people going to stay? |
3254 | Where did you go? |
3254 | Where did you leave him? |
3254 | Where did you live when you saw him last? |
3254 | Where did you sleep, Biddy? |
3254 | Where do you get your information? 3254 Where do you get your things?" |
3254 | Where do you go for your mushrooms? |
3254 | Where do you go to give them? |
3254 | Where do you go to give them? |
3254 | Where do you live now? |
3254 | Where do you live? |
3254 | Where has it got you? |
3254 | Where has she gone? |
3254 | Where have they gone? 3254 Where have they gone?" |
3254 | Where have you been? 3254 Where have you come from?" |
3254 | Where have you sprung from? |
3254 | Where have you two sprung from? |
3254 | Where is Gyp? 3254 Where is Mrs. Freeland, Biddy?" |
3254 | Where is Robin Hill, Father? |
3254 | Where is he buried? |
3254 | Where is he-- your son? |
3254 | Where is he? |
3254 | Where is he? |
3254 | Where is it? |
3254 | Where is this desirable Gallery? 3254 Where is this place?" |
3254 | Where is your sister? |
3254 | Where is your ticket? |
3254 | Where is your uncle? |
3254 | Where then? |
3254 | Where there is no love, Dad,Bianca said,"there can be no life, can there?" |
3254 | Where was he taken? |
3254 | Where will you put him, Soames? |
3254 | Where''s George? |
3254 | Where''s Timothy? |
3254 | Where''s Warmson? |
3254 | Where''s grandfather? |
3254 | Where''s the doctor? |
3254 | Where''s the little girl?] |
3254 | Where''s your father, Wilmet? |
3254 | Where''s your mother, Annette? 3254 Where''s your seat? |
3254 | Where''s your sense of humour? |
3254 | Where, then, am I to go,he cried,"for knowledge of the truth? |
3254 | Where-- where are my daughters? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Which Mr. Freeland, miss, the young or the old? |
3254 | Which is Joe? 3254 Which is that?" |
3254 | Which is your hospital? |
3254 | Which is yours? |
3254 | Which side of the bed do you like, Mum? |
3254 | Which star is yours? 3254 Which way did she go?" |
3254 | Which? |
3254 | Which? |
3254 | Whiskers? |
3254 | Who are we? 3254 Who are we?" |
3254 | Who are you, sir? |
3254 | Who are you,she suddenly burst out,"to dispose of the poor, body and soul? |
3254 | Who are you? 3254 Who are you? |
3254 | Who are you? |
3254 | Who are you? |
3254 | Who are you? |
3254 | Who are you? |
3254 | Who are your unshaven friends? |
3254 | Who asked you to? |
3254 | Who cares what they say or feel? 3254 Who cares? |
3254 | Who cares? |
3254 | Who d''you want? |
3254 | Who farms it, then? |
3254 | Who gave you that? |
3254 | Who is it that governs, the country? |
3254 | Who is that girl with yellow hair and dark eyes? |
3254 | Who is that? |
3254 | Who is the young man with her? |
3254 | Who is this new person? |
3254 | Who is this person? |
3254 | Who killed Chica''s father, and blew her home to- rags? 3254 Who knows of your relations with her?" |
3254 | Who put you up to it? |
3254 | Who said I was going? |
3254 | Who said you were to keep it up? |
3254 | Who threw that stone? |
3254 | Who told him that? |
3254 | Who told you that? 3254 Who told you that?" |
3254 | Who told you to put them in? |
3254 | Who told you? |
3254 | Who told you? |
3254 | Who was his father? 3254 Who was it?" |
3254 | Who was that, Benson? |
3254 | Who was that? 3254 Who was the young man I saw yesterday on the lawn?" |
3254 | Who were those? |
3254 | Who were your visitors, Father? |
3254 | Who won? |
3254 | Who would mind? 3254 Who would n''t?" |
3254 | Who would not be ill for the pleasure of drinking from a cup held by her hand? |
3254 | Who''s been divorced? |
3254 | Who''s been seeing her? 3254 Who''s for a dhrop of the craythur? |
3254 | Who''s taken him? 3254 Who''s that fellow with the game leg-- I''m always seeing him about?" |
3254 | Who''s that mad? |
3254 | Who''s that? |
3254 | Who''s there? |
3254 | Who''s there? |
3254 | Who''s there? |
3254 | Who, do you think, has been to see you, Dad? 3254 Who, then, are you?" |
3254 | Who? |
3254 | Who? |
3254 | Who? |
3254 | Who? |
3254 | Who? |
3254 | Who? |
3254 | Whom else should I tell? 3254 Whom is he calling gentlemen?" |
3254 | Whom to, for Goodness''sake? |
3254 | Whose child are you? |
3254 | Whose child is he? 3254 Whose fault is it, then?" |
3254 | Whose wall do you think it is? |
3254 | Whose? |
3254 | Why am I doing what? |
3254 | Why am I their daughter, please? |
3254 | Why are n''t cats dogs; or pagans Christians? |
3254 | Why are you afraid? 3254 Why are you lending it?" |
3254 | Why are you looking at me like that? |
3254 | Why are you sitting here in the dark? |
3254 | Why are you sorry for her? 3254 Why are you taking this trouble for me?" |
3254 | Why ca n''t the poor thing be let out of her cage? |
3254 | Why could n''t you have made me a good wife? |
3254 | Why did he assault her? |
3254 | Why did he hate women? |
3254 | Why did he? |
3254 | Why did n''t you bring Barbara? |
3254 | Why did n''t you keep Vigil to dinner? |
3254 | Why did n''t you let me provide for you? 3254 Why did n''t you let us know? |
3254 | Why did n''t you show me? |
3254 | Why did n''t you tell me before? |
3254 | Why did n''t you? |
3254 | Why did n''t you? |
3254 | Why did you come here, when it''s so dangerous? |
3254 | Why did you come here,he said,"and tell me this?" |
3254 | Why did you come out? |
3254 | Why did you tell Fleur about that business? |
3254 | Why did you treat me like you did? |
3254 | Why did you want to sketch me? |
3254 | Why do n''t it buzz? |
3254 | Why do n''t you go into the country? |
3254 | Why do n''t you join the''Polyglot''? 3254 Why do n''t you?" |
3254 | Why do that? |
3254 | Why do you admire Jellaby? |
3254 | Why do you beg my pardon? 3254 Why do you keep me on tenterhooks like this, putting me off and off?" |
3254 | Why do you keep your name on? |
3254 | Why do you like them spotted like that? 3254 Why do you look at me like that?" |
3254 | Why do you stand there like a cow? |
3254 | Why do you take your own people as the type? |
3254 | Why do you want to know? |
3254 | Why glad? |
3254 | Why has she not come? |
3254 | Why have you come? |
3254 | Why is it better I should know? |
3254 | Why is n''t she with her husband? |
3254 | Why not Sunday? 3254 Why not both of us?" |
3254 | Why not, sir? |
3254 | Why not? 3254 Why not? |
3254 | Why not? 3254 Why not? |
3254 | Why not? 3254 Why not?" |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why ought it to be blown up? |
3254 | Why should I mind? |
3254 | Why should I suffer more than I''ve suffered already? 3254 Why should I, when I love you?" |
3254 | Why should I? 3254 Why should I?" |
3254 | Why should he be sorry? 3254 Why should he resign,"cried Noel again,"now that I''ve gone? |
3254 | Why should it have been choked out like that? 3254 Why should it, Mother? |
3254 | Why should n''t I? 3254 Why should n''t he marry his wife''s sister? |
3254 | Why should n''t we fill our pockets? 3254 Why should people be tortured and kept miserable and helpless year after year by this disgusting sanctimonious law?" |
3254 | Why should they? 3254 Why should we not hate?" |
3254 | Why should you want to know anything else? |
3254 | Why such a hurry? |
3254 | Why take it up? |
3254 | Why then do you have a doctor, Uncle Nic? |
3254 | Why wo n''t you come? |
3254 | Why wo n''t you give me that stuff, Mums? |
3254 | Why wo n''t you tell us? |
3254 | Why''poor''? |
3254 | Why, Jon, where did you spring from? |
3254 | Why, at all events,he said,"need you stay under these trees? |
3254 | Why, if I may ask? |
3254 | Why, then,thought Shelton,"do you go amongst them?" |
3254 | Why,he said to the creature,"did you sing so loud? |
3254 | Why-- in Heaven''s name? |
3254 | Why-- why was n''t I with him? |
3254 | Why? 3254 Why? |
3254 | Why? 3254 Why? |
3254 | Why? 3254 Why? |
3254 | Why? 3254 Why? |
3254 | Why? 3254 Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Will YOU come? |
3254 | Will he? |
3254 | Will it make you any happier,she said suddenly,"if I promise you not to see him for say-- the next six weeks?" |
3254 | Will she bow to him? |
3254 | Will the Secretary do? |
3254 | Will they stand a political powwow? 3254 Will you apply that to human nature?" |
3254 | Will you ask Sir Gerald and Lady Malloring if Miss Freeland and Mr. Derek Freeland could see them, please; and will you say the matter is urgent? |
3254 | Will you bet? |
3254 | Will you bring her to see me? 3254 Will you come a little walk with me?" |
3254 | Will you come for a walk with me, sir, instead? |
3254 | Will you come in to supper? |
3254 | Will you come in, sir? |
3254 | Will you come in,said the latter,"and have a drink?" |
3254 | Will you come into the parlour and rest your leg? 3254 Will you come one day and see her? |
3254 | Will you come with me as far as Pall Mall? 3254 Will you come, please?" |
3254 | Will you excuse me just a minute? 3254 Will you give her this letter? |
3254 | Will you give her this, please? 3254 Will you have a cigar?" |
3254 | Will you have a pipe? |
3254 | Will you have some brandy? |
3254 | Will you have some tea, mademoiselle? 3254 Will you have some tea?" |
3254 | Will you kindly hold my dog? |
3254 | Will you let me go? |
3254 | Will you let me look at it? 3254 Will you let my daughter speak to you?" |
3254 | Will you please leave my room? |
3254 | Will you please tell me why you sent Daphne Wing here yesterday? |
3254 | Will you please to take some tea, gentlemen? |
3254 | Will you really come to us soon, at once-- if they ask you? 3254 Will you shake hands?" |
3254 | Will you show us the way? |
3254 | Will you sing that song I like so much, Lady Babs? |
3254 | Will you smoke? 3254 Will you some tea, gnadiges Fraulein?" |
3254 | Will you stop and have some? |
3254 | Will you teach me? |
3254 | Will you treat me as your husband? |
3254 | Will you want money? |
3254 | Will you write to me? |
3254 | Will you''ave a slice of''am? |
3254 | Will''ee have some, sir? |
3254 | With her clothes? 3254 With whom?" |
3254 | With whom? |
3254 | Without love there can not be life,he said at last; and fixing his wistful gaze on Hilary, asked:"Does she love another?" |
3254 | Without telling them? |
3254 | Without whom? |
3254 | Wo n''t go? 3254 Wo n''t it look like a barrack?" |
3254 | Wo n''t they? |
3254 | Wo n''t this do, Frank? |
3254 | Wo n''t you come in? |
3254 | Wo n''t you have some? 3254 Wo n''t you rest now, sir?" |
3254 | Wo n''t you sit down, sir, please? 3254 Wo n''t you sit down? |
3254 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
3254 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
3254 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
3254 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
3254 | Wo n''t you stay to dinner, dear? |
3254 | Wo n''t you tell me any news? |
3254 | Wo n''t you wait and see Father? |
3254 | Wood- carving? |
3254 | Wot is it? |
3254 | Wot nyme? |
3254 | Wot''ll you bet me I do n''t ketch it soon? |
3254 | Wot''s the matter with her? |
3254 | Would n''t you rather that I went instead? |
3254 | Would she give herself away-- hysteria? |
3254 | Would she give you away? |
3254 | Would that boy like to come? |
3254 | Would the gentleman state his business, please? |
3254 | Would they lunch? 3254 Would you apply that to everyone?" |
3254 | Would you believe me, if I told you? |
3254 | Would you hook me? |
3254 | Would you know the time? |
3254 | Would you like it? |
3254 | Would you like me at dinner or not; I can easily be out? |
3254 | Would you like me to get a large one or a small one? |
3254 | Would you like me to punch his head? |
3254 | Would you like me to stay till you''re asleep? |
3254 | Would you like some Gluck? 3254 Would you like some Gluck? |
3254 | Would you like some? |
3254 | Would you like to come in and wait? 3254 Would you like to go by this back way into the lane? |
3254 | Would you like to put on your hat and come for a drive in the Park? |
3254 | Would you like to put on your hat and come for a drive in the Park? |
3254 | Would you like to see my sketches? |
3254 | Would you like to see the stables? |
3254 | Would you like to wash your hands? |
3254 | Would you mind if I spoke to Miss Heythorp, Sir? |
3254 | Would you mind telling Leila that I found I could n''t stop? |
3254 | Would you put us up? |
3254 | Would you say he''s changed much since you knew him, Dad? |
3254 | Would you tell the Court that that was English? |
3254 | Would you- would you like me to come too, Hilary? |
3254 | Would you? 3254 Would you?" |
3254 | Would you? |
3254 | Wow said the soldier, whose face was bandaged, she''ll get it''ere, wo n''t she? |
3254 | Wrong? 3254 Wrong?" |
3254 | YOU would n''t move in that direction, I suppose? |
3254 | Ye- es? |
3254 | Yes, Auntie; is n''t it interesting? |
3254 | Yes, Father? |
3254 | Yes, I know; but where is he, Grandy? |
3254 | Yes, I know; is my nose very red? |
3254 | Yes, and when it runs up against chivalry? |
3254 | Yes, but who are these people? |
3254 | Yes, dear? |
3254 | Yes, does n''t he? |
3254 | Yes, it helped a few of us to learn the motor- drivin''; but what''s the good of that to me, at my time of life? 3254 Yes, miss?" |
3254 | Yes, often; why? |
3254 | Yes, sir, will you come this way? |
3254 | Yes, sir, will you come this way? |
3254 | Yes, sir,murmured Michael Mont,"what do you keep fit for?" |
3254 | Yes, sir; do you? |
3254 | Yes, sir; will you wait? |
3254 | Yes, sir? |
3254 | Yes, sirr? |
3254 | Yes, what abaht it, sir? 3254 Yes,"Mr. Cuthcott murmured,"who would think a gosling would ever become a goose?" |
3254 | Yes,Stanley muttered,"and if he gets on to it, sha n''t I have a jolly time of it in the smoking- room? |
3254 | Yes,he said,"it''s awfully hard to put up with, but what can a fellow do? |
3254 | Yes,said Cecilia;"really? |
3254 | Yes,said Fort;"it''s dreadful--"And then a voice from the doorway said:"Did you want Doctor and Mrs. Laird, sir? |
3254 | Yes,said Francie, greatly daring,"but how are you going to alter it, Uncle Timothy, without more men?" |
3254 | Yes,said Nedda,"but which do YOU call God?" |
3254 | Yes,said Shelton;"and how are you?" |
3254 | Yes,said Soames, quietly,"why did you? |
3254 | Yes-- but is n''t he perfectly sweet? |
3254 | Yes-- but, why is it necessary at all? 3254 Yes-- who?" |
3254 | Yes; but those are all for curing the skin, and I suppose we''re really dying of heart disease, are n''t we? 3254 Yes; but what is right? |
3254 | Yes; can I see her? |
3254 | Yes; do n''t you? |
3254 | Yes; except for that, who would care? 3254 Yes; lovely, is n''t it?" |
3254 | Yes; what do you want? |
3254 | Yes; you would n''t expect anything else, would you? 3254 Yes? |
3254 | Yes? 3254 Yes?" |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes?'' |
3254 | You ARE thinking of one, are n''t you? |
3254 | You accuse me of restlessness? 3254 You admit, then,"said Shelton,"that our morality is the sum total of everybody''s private instinct of self- preservation?" |
3254 | You advise me, then, to compromise? |
3254 | You are estranged? |
3254 | You are going to be good, Granny? |
3254 | You are going? |
3254 | You are leaving here, then? |
3254 | You are living by yourself? |
3254 | You are making a journey? |
3254 | You are not an Irishman? |
3254 | You are not dancing, Rozsi Kozsanony? |
3254 | You are really going short of food? |
3254 | You are so pretty, my dear; almost too young and pretty for dear Soames, are n''t you? 3254 You been reading that? |
3254 | You begin with that? 3254 You came for refuge, did n''t you?" |
3254 | You did n''t sign? |
3254 | You didn''t-? |
3254 | You do love me-- don''t you? 3254 You do n''t REALLY want me, then?" |
3254 | You do n''t get dhrunk, I suppose? |
3254 | You do n''t imagine,said Felix,"that you or the Mallorings live in the country? |
3254 | You do n''t know yet? |
3254 | You do n''t know, then, what she''s done since? |
3254 | You do n''t love him? |
3254 | You do n''t mean that you believe? |
3254 | You do n''t mean to say that you took me seriously? |
3254 | You do n''t oppose it? |
3254 | You do n''t propose to live with them? |
3254 | You do n''t really bar me, do you? |
3254 | You do n''t? |
3254 | You do not approve of individuality? |
3254 | You do not love Society? |
3254 | You do not think,I said,"that there is a touch of extravagance in that? |
3254 | You do women, too, I s''pose? |
3254 | You do-- do you? |
3254 | You ever see old Fookes now? 3254 You goddem we d before dey found demselves?" |
3254 | You going to make some alterations? |
3254 | You had told him about his treatment of you? |
3254 | You have come to breakfast, my lord? |
3254 | You have come? 3254 You have n''t forgotten,"he said, suddenly gathering courage,"that we''re going mad- rabbiting together?" |
3254 | You have n''t got any hunting here, I suppose? |
3254 | You have n''t seen, then? |
3254 | You have no children,he said painfully;"do you live together?" |
3254 | You have tired of him? 3254 You haven''t-- you have n''t stopped loving me, Derek?" |
3254 | You knew I was returned to London, Major Winton? |
3254 | You know Mrs. Tallents Smallpeace, Hilary? |
3254 | You know he fell out of the window? 3254 You know her story, then?" |
3254 | You know him well, I suppose, old George? |
3254 | You know me, I suppose? |
3254 | You know the law of divorce, I suppose? |
3254 | You know this house well? |
3254 | You know what happens to the aloe, sir, when it has flowered? |
3254 | You know what posing to a sculptor means, of course? |
3254 | You know what you are doing? |
3254 | You know what''s happening to me, I suppose? |
3254 | You know, he bathes in the Serpentine all the year round? |
3254 | You like everybody, Jon? |
3254 | You like it? 3254 You live in Hound Street?" |
3254 | You lost your mother when you were a babe, did n''t you? |
3254 | You make money at it? |
3254 | You mean Monsieur Ferrand, teachin''Toddles French? 3254 You mean about Mrs.----H''m, yes?" |
3254 | You mean the little model? |
3254 | You mean these Hughs and people are the droppings? |
3254 | You mean you''re helpless? 3254 You mean-- an evil inherent in property- holding?" |
3254 | You met my people, did n''t you? |
3254 | You must go to him? |
3254 | You must have had some reason, Freeland minimus? |
3254 | You ought to know best,he said,"but if you want a divorce it''s not very wise to go seeing her, is it? |
3254 | You remember Shelton, sir? |
3254 | You remember my Cousin Soames? |
3254 | You said there was a chance? |
3254 | You said you were coming? |
3254 | You said-- to marry him? |
3254 | You saw her? |
3254 | You saw that fellow''s death, I suppose? |
3254 | You say that? |
3254 | You say the baby must be born dead if you do? |
3254 | You say you did n''t mean to kill him? |
3254 | You say you sympathise with them, but the first time it comes to action--"Well? |
3254 | You see that Powder Magazine? |
3254 | You see that left- hand fellow? |
3254 | You see, Mrs. Pierson,he said,"it''s not as if Noel were an ordinary girl in an ordinary time, is it? |
3254 | You sometimes find you let in a rotter? |
3254 | You think I shut my eyes? |
3254 | You think it''s over? |
3254 | You think so? 3254 You think so?" |
3254 | You think so? |
3254 | You think so? |
3254 | You think so? |
3254 | You think that''s better than letting? |
3254 | You think, then,said he,"that discontent is peculiar to the destitute?" |
3254 | You think? |
3254 | You think? |
3254 | You thought-- what? |
3254 | You too? |
3254 | You understand, I suppose,said Hilary in a low voice,"that she has been told not to come?" |
3254 | You want a cab? |
3254 | You want the forfeiture out? |
3254 | You want to know too much, do n''t you think? |
3254 | You want to stump the country? 3254 You will come to our Father- town? |
3254 | You wish to paint my nieces? |
3254 | You wo n''t forget to come, Mum? |
3254 | You wo n''t fret, old girl? |
3254 | You wo n''t go back there in the meantime, will you? |
3254 | You wo n''t shut the door any more than that, will you? 3254 You would desire, then, I suppose, suffering as the greatest blessing for yourself?" |
3254 | You would n''t know anything about the price of land about there? |
3254 | You''d better make a change, I think; you could find another room, could n''t you? |
3254 | You''ll allow me to mention your name? |
3254 | You''ll ask them, though? |
3254 | You''ll be with us for that dinner- party next week, eh? 3254 You''ll come?" |
3254 | You''ll find not having a hobby does n''t pay,he said;"you''ll get old, then where''ll you be?" |
3254 | You''ll have some tea? |
3254 | You''ll send me your address? |
3254 | You''ll stay and have a snack with us? |
3254 | You''re a writer, are n''t you? |
3254 | You''re acting with her consent, of course? |
3254 | You''re going far, then, in the Pied Witch, Zack? |
3254 | You''re not going to buy that, Father? |
3254 | You''re not going to charge her? |
3254 | You''re not going, of course? |
3254 | You''re not screwed, are you? |
3254 | You''re rather late,he said to Curly, and, looking ascetically at Shelton, asked, without waiting for an introduction:"Do you play chess? |
3254 | You''re still in the Domestic Office, then? |
3254 | You''ve been to see the Queen, I suppose? 3254 You''ve given up the Bar? |
3254 | You''ve got five hundred pounds of mine,he said;"why do you think I gave it you?" |
3254 | You''ve seen Father? |
3254 | You, Warmson? 3254 You,"she said,"and he? |
3254 | You,''ear? |
3254 | You-- nomadic? 3254 You--?" |
3254 | You? 3254 You?" |
3254 | You? |
3254 | You? |
3254 | You? |
3254 | Young Val told me; he and your boy are going off, then? |
3254 | Your EMPTY chambers? 3254 Your chauffeur would like to know, what time you will have the car?" |
3254 | Your chickabiddies? |
3254 | Your daughter''s name is Rosy? |
3254 | Your father home, my dear? |
3254 | Your father must be a stand- by, is n''t he? |
3254 | Your horse going to run, George? |
3254 | Your marriage? |
3254 | Your mistress at home? |
3254 | Your mistress at home? |
3254 | Your name is Crocker, is n''t it? |
3254 | Your name''s Fleur, is n''t it? 3254 Your name, my dear?" |
3254 | Your wife? 3254 Yours? |
3254 | ''),"but now that he is no longer hungry, what is he but a German? |
3254 | ''Adn''t I better tell the Press? |
3254 | ''Alone?'' |
3254 | ''Already?'' |
3254 | ''Am I heartless?'' |
3254 | ''Am I really so far from them,''he thought,''that they can wish me to go, for this? |
3254 | ''And if you should kill him?'' |
3254 | ''And where does Soames come in?'' |
3254 | ''And where should I be, I should like to know,''I said,''if I went on that lay? |
3254 | ''Are we never to get rid of these infernal people?'' |
3254 | ''Ave I got into the movies by mistyke? |
3254 | ''Ave I got to report you to Miss Stokes?] |
3254 | ''Ave n''t''e got no shares in the Company? |
3254 | ''Ave sister Mercy borrowed yure tongue? |
3254 | ''Ave they been sayin''anything particular vicious?" |
3254 | ''Ave yer noticed wot a weakness they''ave for the''orrible? |
3254 | ''Ave you got your baby still?" |
3254 | ''Ave you really, sir? |
3254 | ''Besides,''he thought honestly,''who knows whether, even for my boy''s sake, I could have stood this state of things much longer? |
3254 | ''But I shall not,''he answered slyly:''do you think I am going to fire at him? |
3254 | ''Ca n''t the old crank stop even on Sundays?'' |
3254 | ''Can you,''it seemed to say,''you-- help me? |
3254 | ''Consent?'' |
3254 | ''Could I? |
3254 | ''Dear me,''she thought,''who was that? |
3254 | ''Did they ever really whistle?'' |
3254 | ''Did you notice anything unusual?'' |
3254 | ''Dies ist nicht Ihr Bube''? |
3254 | ''Do you really think I shall admit that I''m not their equal''; he seemed to be saying,''or that I''ve got to give up anything, especially life?'' |
3254 | ''Do you see him?'' |
3254 | ''Do you?'' |
3254 | ''Does he know that Leila''s gone?'' |
3254 | ''Does that mean that you''re against me?'' |
3254 | ''E du, du''ee? |
3254 | ''Earl t''nuse about curate an''''is wife? |
3254 | ''Go and see her?'' |
3254 | ''Has he come about his wife?'' |
3254 | ''Have I got to live here?'' |
3254 | ''Have I to give up seeing that?'' |
3254 | ''Have you been speaking to Daddy about me?'' |
3254 | ''Have you no friends, nothing to say? |
3254 | ''He piles up his money for me,''she thought;''but what''s the use, if I''m not going to be happy?'' |
3254 | ''Her father?'' |
3254 | ''How am I to know? |
3254 | ''How comes he to have stayed?'' |
3254 | ''How long will it last?'' |
3254 | ''How much?'' |
3254 | ''How much?'' |
3254 | ''How much?'' |
3254 | ''How much?'' |
3254 | ''How much?'' |
3254 | ''How much?'' |
3254 | ''How much?'' |
3254 | ''How much?'' |
3254 | ''How shall I tell her?'' |
3254 | ''However shall I face my mistress?''" |
3254 | ''I am a fool for my pains,''he thought, and only said:"Well, what about this invitation, anyway?" |
3254 | ''I wonder if I might stand here a little? |
3254 | ''I wonder if I shall get to the Firs before it comes?'' |
3254 | ''I wonder what he thinks of it?'' |
3254 | ''I wonder what that chap''s doing at this moment?'' |
3254 | ''I''ve given myself away,''flashed across him,''what the devil can I say to them?'' |
3254 | ''I?'' |
3254 | ''If I am not-- what does it matter? |
3254 | ''If he goes in,''thought Jolyon,''what shall I do? |
3254 | ''Is he-- can he be the sort of man I would trust Nollie to?'' |
3254 | ''Is it because of me?'' |
3254 | ''Is that so?'' |
3254 | ''It''s like Moses or was it Aaron?'' |
3254 | ''My brother Jolyon,''he thought,''what would he have said to it all?'' |
3254 | ''No; an''when''e does,''tes generally to say:''Lord, an''t I right, an''an''t they wrong, just?'' |
3254 | ''Now, what does she mean by that?'' |
3254 | ''Now, what''s he mean by that?'' |
3254 | ''Oo beat''is wife? |
3254 | ''Oo is he, Daisy? |
3254 | ''Or because of Profond?'' |
3254 | ''Ought I to stay and conquer it?'' |
3254 | ''Ow can yer? |
3254 | ''Ow does it touch me? |
3254 | ''Ow dyer manage it? |
3254 | ''Ow''s Cook? |
3254 | ''Ow''s ten bob a week?" |
3254 | ''Ow''s that, Mr. Godleigh? |
3254 | ''Phew What''s all this about?'' |
3254 | ''Shall I call?'' |
3254 | ''Shall I go out and warn the fellow to clear off, or shall I wait to see what happens when she goes away?'' |
3254 | ''Shall I go up again?'' |
3254 | ''Shall I tell the boy about it?'' |
3254 | ''Should I have been turning my face away, like the rest? |
3254 | ''Sie haben einen Buben gestohlen''? |
3254 | ''So that fellow''s going to be an ass, too? |
3254 | ''So?'' |
3254 | ''Society for the Regeneration of Women''? |
3254 | ''Suppose I tell him,''she thought;''would n''t it really be safer?'' |
3254 | ''Tes all very airy talkin''; what shude''e du, then? |
3254 | ''Tes like the darned old chicken an''the egg-- meetin''or chairman-- which come virst? |
3254 | ''That''s right,''he said,''but who was to know? |
3254 | ''The question,''he thought with sudden realism,''is-- which of us? |
3254 | ''Then why did she marry me?'' |
3254 | ''Transportation for life, and then to be fined forty pounds?''" |
3254 | ''Twas you I spoke to, was n''t it? |
3254 | ''Understand?'' |
3254 | ''Walk?'' |
3254 | ''Walk?'' |
3254 | ''Was ist das''? |
3254 | ''Well, why should n''t he? |
3254 | ''Well,''he thought,''what do I care?'' |
3254 | ''Were they ever jolly ploughmen? |
3254 | ''What am I doing?'' |
3254 | ''What am I going to do?'' |
3254 | ''What am I to do with him?'' |
3254 | ''What am I to do?'' |
3254 | ''What are you doing?'' |
3254 | ''What are you to do with women like that?'' |
3254 | ''What came into me? |
3254 | ''What can I say to move him?'' |
3254 | ''What can they see in it?'' |
3254 | ''What did I do that was wrong?'' |
3254 | ''What did I do?'' |
3254 | ''What divides us from the beasts? |
3254 | ''What do they know of life?'' |
3254 | ''What has he got hold of now?'' |
3254 | ''What in God''s name am I to do with him?'' |
3254 | ''What is happening?'' |
3254 | ''What is it?'' |
3254 | ''What is it?'' |
3254 | ''What is it?'' |
3254 | ''What is it?'' |
3254 | ''What is it?'' |
3254 | ''What may you want to see my son for?'' |
3254 | ''What now?'' |
3254 | ''What now?'' |
3254 | ''What now?'' |
3254 | ''What on earth is happening?'' |
3254 | ''What should you know about him? |
3254 | ''What the deuce is that?'' |
3254 | ''What was she going to say to me?'' |
3254 | ''What will Mother do?'' |
3254 | ''What''s better than bread and cheese? |
3254 | ''What''s goin''to''appen to yu?'' |
3254 | ''What''s the excitement all about?'' |
3254 | ''What-- what is this man doing?'' |
3254 | ''What?'' |
3254 | ''When th''oak before th''ash---''"Ashurst said idly:"Where were you standing when you saw the gipsy bogie, Jim?" |
3254 | ''When will it end?'' |
3254 | ''Where''s my wife?'' |
3254 | ''Where?'' |
3254 | ''Why ask me that?'' |
3254 | ''Why ca n''t he settle down at some business,''he thought,''instead of all this talk?'' |
3254 | ''Why did n''t I accept Jimmy''s offer? |
3254 | ''Why did n''t they tell me the first thing,''he thought,''the day I first saw Fleur? |
3254 | ''Why do you go away?'' |
3254 | ''Why does n''t George open the door?'' |
3254 | ''Why does n''t she come?'' |
3254 | ''Why not?'' |
3254 | ''Why not?'' |
3254 | ''Why will she do these things?'' |
3254 | ''Will you come again?'' |
3254 | ''Would I marry him?'' |
3254 | ''Yn''t she IT? |
3254 | ''Yn''t yer got a kipper in the''ouse? |
3254 | ''Yu''m cryin''--what''s that, then?'' |
3254 | --"What d''you give for this sherry, Swithin? |
3254 | --"What''s the name of your doctor, Fanny?" |
3254 | --"Would you please ask Mrs. Hughs to come to me?--Oh, is that you, Mrs. Hughs? |
3254 | --he touched a dark mark on his forehead--"I took his throat in my hands, and when I let go--""Yes?" |
3254 | .... Do you remember the letters I wrote you from Moor Farm nearly three years ago? |
3254 | ....... Why do you ask me so many questions, and egg me on to write about these people instead of minding my business? |
3254 | 1917 an''war still on--''ad''is readers gone back on''i m? |
3254 | 64"Brother goin''out, miss?" |
3254 | ; but what could you do with father? |
3254 | ? |
3254 | A German? |
3254 | A Scotsman? |
3254 | A beautiful world, is n''t it? |
3254 | A big dinner?" |
3254 | A bit puffy about the gills? |
3254 | A cad?" |
3254 | A career at the Bar-- yes, he might take that up; but to what end? |
3254 | A clean breast of it? |
3254 | A country girl, was n''t she?" |
3254 | A family feud? |
3254 | A fool? |
3254 | A foreign patent for cleaning boilers? |
3254 | A gaol- bird in the office, COKESON? |
3254 | A gibbet in the air, a body hanging? |
3254 | A girl like that? |
3254 | A gleam of amusement played about the Frenchman''s teeth:"I? |
3254 | A good walk, hein?" |
3254 | A great artist? |
3254 | A humbug? |
3254 | A lady was a- speakin''to me yesterday about''em; that''s not your lady, I suppose, sir?" |
3254 | A lady? |
3254 | A law court? |
3254 | A light, Monsieur? |
3254 | A little dashed, Jon had answered:"But do n''t you think it''s a good scheme, Dad?" |
3254 | A little refugee, too, are n''t you, Chica?" |
3254 | A little?" |
3254 | A living? |
3254 | A look passed across her face which seemed to say:''What have I done to you, that you should stare at me like this?'' |
3254 | A man not to know what he had on? |
3254 | A man too fond of drink, or women-- how much mercy does he get from Nature? |
3254 | A man wants to sweat hisself silly and not allowed that''s a rum start, ai n''t it? |
3254 | A man''s love- life-- what say had he in the ebb and flow of it? |
3254 | A man''s voice says:"Mr. Malise? |
3254 | A maze, a wilderness; and but for faith, what issue, what path for man to take which did not keep him wandering hopeless, in its thicket? |
3254 | A message? |
3254 | A newspaper cutting slipped from his fingers; he picked it up, thinking:''How the dickens did that get in here?'' |
3254 | A peach? |
3254 | A plump white hand and wrist emerging took the can, and Daphne Wing''s voice said:"Oh, where''s the cream?" |
3254 | A professional bully? |
3254 | A prosecution? |
3254 | A public- house? |
3254 | A quavering cough, and out it had come:"Now-- in a word-- won''t your''Island Navigation Company''buy my ships?" |
3254 | A scent-- of what? |
3254 | A screen? |
3254 | A short silence followed, then Cecilia said suddenly:"Did you say that father was in the drawing- room? |
3254 | A sort of anger leaped in Lennan; why should Dromore speak that word as if he were ashamed of his own daughter? |
3254 | A spirit? |
3254 | A stout man in blue, with a fringe of gray hair under his peaked cap, and some keys dangling from a belt, opened, and said:"Yes, miss?" |
3254 | A tall man in a fur coat, whose tall wife carried a small bag of silver and shagreen, spoke to the coachman:"How are you, Benson? |
3254 | A thirsty day and a rash drink, or perhaps a tainted fruit-- who knew? |
3254 | A thought seemed to strike her:"But I could see you, Mr. Dallison, could n''t I, sometimes?" |
3254 | A thousand pounds? |
3254 | A traveller one day stopped one of these creatures whose voice was peculiarly disagreeable, and asked"Why do you sing like this? |
3254 | A trick of the sunlight, maybe? |
3254 | A violation of Nature? |
3254 | A voice behind her said:"Nothing nicer than darkness, is there?" |
3254 | A voice behind her said:"Will she stay the course?" |
3254 | A voice behind him said:"Can we have a look at you, sir?" |
3254 | A voice behind him said:"How are you? |
3254 | A voice close by said:"Well, friend Lennan-- brown study, or blue devils, which?" |
3254 | A voice said almost in her ear:"How do you do, Mrs. Fiorsen? |
3254 | A voice said cheerfully:"Bit thick, is n''t it, sir?" |
3254 | A voice said sharply:"What are you doing in this house?" |
3254 | A voice said sharply:"What''s this?" |
3254 | A voice said softly in his ear:"Is n''t it delicious, and warm, and gloomy black?" |
3254 | A voice said timidly behind her:"Westminister, marm?" |
3254 | A voice said:"Good painting, is n''t it?" |
3254 | A voice said:"How are you, Mrs. Dallison? |
3254 | A voice, thin, sweet, almost young, said:"Is that you, darling?" |
3254 | A waltz of Chopin''s?" |
3254 | A wee dhrop of the craythur? |
3254 | A what? |
3254 | A woman? |
3254 | A wonderful man for his age; so upright, and young looking, and how old was he? |
3254 | A''n''t yu conceited just? |
3254 | ARNAUD has sprung to attention, but with:"Let''s go in here, shall we?" |
3254 | Abating nothing of his stare and drawl, Gaunt answered:"Deserted? |
3254 | About that right- of- way case? |
3254 | About the Welsh contract? |
3254 | About the father''s name, do you think I might say the late Mr. Joseph Wing, this once? |
3254 | About them spots, now? |
3254 | About what? |
3254 | About your husband-- he''s not in work, I hear? |
3254 | Above all, what dreams had he in those rare moments when music transformed his strange pale face? |
3254 | According to instructions received did you on Easter Tuesday last proceed to the prisoner''s lodgings at 34, Merthyr Street, St. Soames''s? |
3254 | Account for the state of the men last day or two, Miller? |
3254 | Act passion, or-- horrible thought!--when he kissed her nowadays, was he thinking of that girl? |
3254 | Adam?" |
3254 | Address? |
3254 | Adela''s told you? |
3254 | Afraid of him? |
3254 | After a desperate look, that seemed to ask,''Am I going, too?'' |
3254 | After a moment''s silence, Crocker, looking straight before him, asked:"Do n''t you think we are doing good?" |
3254 | After about two hours a voice bellowed:''Has n''t the brute gone?'' |
3254 | After all these empty years was she not to have her hour? |
3254 | After all this time? |
3254 | After all, was it not the ideal future? |
3254 | After all, was there any other way in which she could really have developed? |
3254 | After all, what had there been in his own education, or theirs, to give them any other standard than this"good form"? |
3254 | After all, what is it? |
3254 | After all, what is the Army for? |
3254 | After all, without stripping herself naked of every thought, experience, and action since her birth, how could she admit that she was not better able? |
3254 | After all-- what other reasons could they have had? |
3254 | After applauding his resolution, she was silent for a little-- then asked:"Why do n''t you ride with Nell?" |
3254 | After dinner, when they were getting the table ready to play''red nines,''he did murmur:"Did you sleep last night-- after?" |
3254 | After filling his mouth with household bread, stale, he at once began:"How are you going down to Robin Hill? |
3254 | After he was gone that evening, she said:"Ought we to have Nell to stay with us while you''re finishing her? |
3254 | After his,"So he''s gone to Ostend?" |
3254 | After some seconds of mutual admiration, Hilary said:"Mr. Hughs, I believe?" |
3254 | After tea Stella put a book down beside him, and said shyly:"Have you read that, Frank?" |
3254 | After this statement, silence was broken only by munching, till Tod remarked:"What makes things?" |
3254 | Again the young people moved their faces, and again the younger of the two young men said:"Madre--""Dangers? |
3254 | Again, then, would it not be better to tell him? |
3254 | Against a revolution? |
3254 | Against? |
3254 | Ah, but could one tease on such a subject as their love? |
3254 | Ah, but would you tell me if you were? |
3254 | Ah, would yer? |
3254 | Ah, would you? |
3254 | All day and every day--just as far apart as we can be-- and still-- Jolly, is n''t it? |
3254 | All flourishing at home? |
3254 | All for the dinner? |
3254 | All right so far; but what''appens? |
3254 | All right, now? |
3254 | All right; chaff away, it''s good fun, is n''t it? |
3254 | All right? |
3254 | All she could find to answer was:"Is that a good dog?" |
3254 | All the same, if that tyke had n''t jeered at me for parlour tricks!--But what''s the good of all this now? |
3254 | All the same, wo n''t you? |
3254 | All this-- all this-- and-- and what for? |
3254 | All well in your cosmogony, Maud? |
3254 | All''s well with our house, and with the street before it?" |
3254 | Almost against his will he muttered:"Tell me, wo n''t you?" |
3254 | Almost against his will he muttered:"Tell me, wo n''t you?" |
3254 | Almost before he had said"How do you do?" |
3254 | Alone with Annette Soames said,"Well, Annette?" |
3254 | Alone? |
3254 | Alone? |
3254 | Already? |
3254 | Always sucking something, are n''t you? |
3254 | Always to dance? |
3254 | Am I a hard, or mean woman? |
3254 | Am I a liar, a coward, a traitor? |
3254 | Am I all right behind, Freda? |
3254 | Am I and all women really what they think us? |
3254 | Am I but a windlestraw?" |
3254 | Am I like that? |
3254 | Am I likely to? |
3254 | Am I lucky to have no past, ma''am? |
3254 | Am I not to think of them? |
3254 | Am I not, in fact, myself the Public? |
3254 | Am I nothing to you, after all?" |
3254 | Am I really Granny?" |
3254 | Am I suspected, Charles? |
3254 | Am I to desert them? |
3254 | Am I to let him go? |
3254 | Am I to live all my life like a dead woman because you''re ashamed? |
3254 | Am I to live like the dead because you''re a child that knows nothing of life? |
3254 | Am I to sympathise in the attraction this common little girl has for you?'' |
3254 | Am I to understand then, gentlemen, that your Board is going to make no concessions? |
3254 | Am I very like her?" |
3254 | Am I? |
3254 | Am I?" |
3254 | Am I?'' |
3254 | Among the ring of buyers round the Mayfly filly who had won her race, Monsieur Profond said:"You goin''to bid?" |
3254 | Amusing, is n''t it?" |
3254 | An American? |
3254 | An acquaintance of yours? |
3254 | An angel?" |
3254 | An ironic"Yes?" |
3254 | An irresistible impulse made her ask:"How was she looking, Dad?" |
3254 | An old hand, I think? |
3254 | An''the dy before? |
3254 | An''what came of it? |
3254 | An''what did ye say about Chapel? |
3254 | An''wot abaht since? |
3254 | And Ashurst, whose lips were trembling in the cover of his beard, murmured again:"Yes?" |
3254 | And Berryman went on:"Do we want to know about the feelings of a middle- class woman with a taste for vice? |
3254 | And Biddy added:"Please, what is prison like?" |
3254 | And Christian thought:''Can we never have quite enough?'' |
3254 | And Colonel Martlett, representing the older Tory policy of: What the devil would happen to the landowners if they did? |
3254 | And Dancy was n''t present? |
3254 | And Felix said:"This ca n''t be your bedroom, Mother?" |
3254 | And George thought:''So I must leave her like this, and what then?'' |
3254 | And I looked at him rather hard:"Do you object to putting any sort of floor under the feet of people like that?" |
3254 | And I suppose he takes all your money? |
3254 | And I suppose you do too?" |
3254 | And I suppose you''re behind in the rent? |
3254 | And I wondered, were those future watchers of apple- gathering farther from me than I, watching sheep- shearing, from the postman? |
3254 | And I would say:"How do you do, Mr. Gessler? |
3254 | And Joe would answer:"Which one is that, sir?" |
3254 | And Jolyon had thought:''I wonder if I had the right to say that?'' |
3254 | And Keith said between his teeth:"Well?" |
3254 | And Keith said:"How? |
3254 | And Lennan answered dazedly:"Will you come in, or shall I walk your way a bit?" |
3254 | And Lennan thought:"How long must I sit here?" |
3254 | And Miss Gyp''s?" |
3254 | And Mrs. Pendyce, her eyebrows lifted, would look anxiously up and down the table, murmuring:"Another cup, dear; let me see-- are you sugar?" |
3254 | And Nedda with her father-- what feeling had she? |
3254 | And Olive? |
3254 | And Roger would answer:"What do you want to know for? |
3254 | And Soames remarked:"Why ca n''t we have the Spanish?" |
3254 | And Soames thought:''Why is all this? |
3254 | And Soames was not happy, worried by the thought:''How-- when-- where-- can I say-- what?'' |
3254 | And Soames, speaking for the first time, asked:"Yes, Bosinney, what do you say?" |
3254 | And Winton, with another deep breath, would say:"Glass of port, doctor?" |
3254 | And a little way down the street a lady says to me:[ Pinching his voice]"D''you want to earn a few pence, my man?" |
3254 | And a thought came to him: When Timothy died-- why not? |
3254 | And a very odd thought beset him: Did she exist? |
3254 | And a very odd thought beset him: Did she exist? |
3254 | And a voice, young, clipped, clear, said:"How d''you do? |
3254 | And again:''Did I hurt Gyp?'' |
3254 | And age? |
3254 | And all for the sake of what? |
3254 | And all the grinding poverty that she herself could see when she went with her mother to their Girls''Club, in Bethnal Green? |
3254 | And all the time she thought dully:''Why am I doing this? |
3254 | And all the way back to the station he kept thinking:''How could I? |
3254 | And am I not? |
3254 | And am I? |
3254 | And are n''t I fond of you? |
3254 | And are they safe? |
3254 | And are you an exception, Mrs. Lemmy? |
3254 | And as a pressman? |
3254 | And baby?" |
3254 | And between her and it-- what was there? |
3254 | And between his teeth he muttered:"''Men of England, wherefore plough?'' |
3254 | And bitterly he thought: How can she sit there, and not want me, as I want her? |
3254 | And break my heart? |
3254 | And cleaning plate? |
3254 | And crossing to the fire he asked:"May I wait for him?" |
3254 | And d''you remember knocking our heads together? |
3254 | And d''you think anything''ll happen to him? |
3254 | And detecting that covert mockery, Lord Valleys said dryly:"Star- gazing?" |
3254 | And did he button it when you called his attention to it? |
3254 | And did he say anything to you? |
3254 | And did he say,"You, let her go, I took the box myself"? |
3254 | And did he think these Boers were really going to resist? |
3254 | And did she deny the same? |
3254 | And did you blow your whistle and obtain the assistance of another constable, and take him into custody? |
3254 | And did you by mistake leave your latch key in the door? |
3254 | And did you miss the same at 8.45 on the following morning, on going to remove the tray? |
3254 | And did you on entering see the box produced, lying on the table? |
3254 | And did you thereupon take possession of it, and charge the female prisoner with theft of the box from 6, Rockingham Gate? |
3254 | And do n''t ever borrow, except from me, will you?" |
3254 | And do n''t say I''ve been here, will you? |
3254 | And do n''t you want to see the world? |
3254 | And drown in-- that? |
3254 | And fever?" |
3254 | And first she thought she would go home to Hampstead, then that she would go back to the station, then:''After all, why should n''t I go and try? |
3254 | And five, did you say, sir? |
3254 | And for one wild moment he thought:''Why not?'' |
3254 | And for what else had he married her but to have a lawful heir? |
3254 | And for what? |
3254 | And further making an assault on the police when in the execution of their duty at 3 p.m. on Easter Tuesday? |
3254 | And get turned out? |
3254 | And glancing up sideways at Winifred, he added:"Shall I tell him?" |
3254 | And had all this come of one little moment in a dark corridor, of one flower pressed into his hand? |
3254 | And had he a very great affection for you? |
3254 | And has Wheeler been in the room alone? |
3254 | And have you seen these? |
3254 | And he asked:"Is the woman here, too?" |
3254 | And he asked:"What''s the savoury?" |
3254 | And he began again:"Was it his first reappearance with her?" |
3254 | And he had yielded-- what was the good of opposing it? |
3254 | And he looked around at Soames with the thought:''Is he real, this man?'' |
3254 | And he merely said:"Will you stay to dinner, Stan?" |
3254 | And he muttered:"How do you think he would like to know about this afternoon, Nell?" |
3254 | And he proceeded:"I''m quite an old friend of his; have you known him long?" |
3254 | And he repeated those two French words in his own way, adding:"Is n''t that just what I''m saying? |
3254 | And he said less sharply:"Why do n''t you come and sit down?" |
3254 | And he said mechanically:"Where are you living now?" |
3254 | And he said mechanically:"Where are you living now?" |
3254 | And he said sharply:"So that''s the best you can do to meet me, is it?" |
3254 | And he said sharply:"Well, Larry, what is it?" |
3254 | And he said to the woman:"Now, miss, can I begin?" |
3254 | And he said, in a voice that seemed to him to tremble:"Well, Gyp?" |
3254 | And he said:"Are you sure the name of that Johnny who came here yesterday was Ventnor?" |
3254 | And he said:"I suppose you hate me, little Daphne? |
3254 | And he said:"What did your godfather and godmothers in your baptism---?" |
3254 | And he said:"What is it, Nell?" |
3254 | And he said:"What on earth put that into your head?" |
3254 | And he said:"Wo n''t you sit down? |
3254 | And he said:"You were not seen, you think?" |
3254 | And he sought refuge in the words:"Been out?" |
3254 | And he thought desperately:''Dare I-- oughtn''t I-- couldn''t I somehow take her hand or put my arm round her, or something?'' |
3254 | And he thought:''Will she ask me if I get my tints in Paris, like the woman Tramper told me of?'' |
3254 | And he thrust out his under lip:"For instance, what''s your interest in this matter?" |
3254 | And he would come to her and whine about it, and say:"My Gyp, I never meant-- how should I know I was hurting? |
3254 | And he would say:"To- morrow fordnighd?" |
3254 | And he? |
3254 | And her voice, a little piteous, went on:"Are n''t you glad I''m back? |
3254 | And hers for him? |
3254 | And himself, who, as a youth came on the town in''forty- five? |
3254 | And holding up the paper, he said:"Is this where the man was found?" |
3254 | And how about your work here? |
3254 | And how are you, Soames? |
3254 | And how are you, sir? |
3254 | And how are you, sir? |
3254 | And how could this or any other woman help falling in love with George? |
3254 | And how dare you bribe that woman here to spy on me? |
3254 | And how do you propose to live? |
3254 | And how has it come, this slowly growing faith in Perfection for Perfection''s sake? |
3254 | And how have ye tried bein''neighbourly to me? |
3254 | And how is that sweet girl?" |
3254 | And how long have you enjoyed his acquaintanceship? |
3254 | And how many children have you? |
3254 | And how much are you going to put in? |
3254 | And how old is he-- this young man of yours? |
3254 | And how old is the eldest? |
3254 | And how was her dear father? |
3254 | And how was her music? |
3254 | And how were Giles and Jesse? |
3254 | And how''s Annie, and how are the children? |
3254 | And how''s the baby? |
3254 | And how''s this old darling?" |
3254 | And how-- how can I find rest? |
3254 | And how? |
3254 | And if I do, how am I to believe it a beautiful world, ni- ice boy? |
3254 | And if I go back? |
3254 | And if he had admired her-- and had not everyone, that night-- might she not have liked, perhaps more than liked, him in return? |
3254 | And if that is so, have I the right to say I do? |
3254 | And if things ate each other, what did it matter? |
3254 | And if victorious-- what then? |
3254 | And if, insatiate, the enquirer had gone on,"You do not look, then, for spiritual union in this marriage?" |
3254 | And in God''s name- why? |
3254 | And in confusion of feeling that amounted almost to pain he heard her say:"Will you and Aunt Dolly come?" |
3254 | And in the first place, what were you doing in the Vita Publica at that time of night?" |
3254 | And in what sort of age-- I thought-- are artists living now? |
3254 | And is he good? |
3254 | And is he of our world at all?" |
3254 | And is that all you can remember about your coming in? |
3254 | And is the feel of this earth how it feels to lie looking up for ever at nothing? |
3254 | And it began to ask itself in this uncertainty: Do I then desire to go on living? |
3254 | And jealous? |
3254 | And just on the point of saying:"I thought you''d stepped out of that picture"--he saw Dromore''s face, and mumbled instead:"So it''s YOUR kitten?" |
3254 | And later:"D''you think it means he''s dead, sir?" |
3254 | And look at my little Japanese trees; are n''t they dickies?" |
3254 | And look here, Falder, before Mr. Walter comes, have you finished up that cataloguing Davis had in hand before he left? |
3254 | And looking round gratefully, she said:"Do you like dinner- parties?" |
3254 | And married-- how long? |
3254 | And may I ask if my son will know you by daylight? |
3254 | And might he have some breakfast? |
3254 | And my friend, wiser than I, as he has always been, replied with this doubting phrase"Could we recapture the zest of that old time?" |
3254 | And never a day out? |
3254 | And now a few words about your work, Mrs. Lemmy? |
3254 | And now he thought, as he listened to the two players wrangling on the stage:"What''s the good of all this talk? |
3254 | And now how should she meet him, how first look into his eyes? |
3254 | And now we betray him, perhaps, who knows? |
3254 | And now where were they? |
3254 | And now where were they? |
3254 | And now-- what did he not know? |
3254 | And once more he said:"What in God''s name made you come here and tell me?" |
3254 | And one, sir? |
3254 | And one? |
3254 | And only a year ago? |
3254 | And presently the Colonel himself spoke, lugubriously through the door: Not well enough to come? |
3254 | And rather miserably, he said for the third time:"Why?" |
3254 | And rather sadly he added:"You''re feeling the heat; too, are n''t you, Annette? |
3254 | And saw nothing? |
3254 | And seeing Mrs. Tallents Smallpeace, he added:"How do you do? |
3254 | And seeing that Clifton did not move she added sharply:"Well?" |
3254 | And sharply he asked:"What is it you want, sir?" |
3254 | And she began:"Dad, do you remember my saying once that I did n''t understand what you and my mother felt for each other?" |
3254 | And she kept thinking:''Where HAVE I seen someone like him?'' |
3254 | And she murmured:"How is she?" |
3254 | And she promptly opened her attack: Did Soames know his work? |
3254 | And she said feebly:"This Major Winton is a man of breeding, is n''t he?" |
3254 | And she said suddenly:"Gustav; what exactly have I done that you dislike?" |
3254 | And she said:"Are you Wilmet Gaunt?" |
3254 | And she said:"How can you promise? |
3254 | And she smiled? |
3254 | And she thought:''Is it my fault, or is it only because he has me now to do what he likes with?'' |
3254 | And she thought:''Why does one have a heart? |
3254 | And since to drink deep of life was his nature, too-- what chance had he of escape? |
3254 | And sinking her voice:"Just look at that one with the feather going straight up; did you ever see such a guy?" |
3254 | And slowly to the chords of his mandolin he begins to sing:"The windy hours through darkness fly Canst hear them little heart? |
3254 | And slyly he murmured:"What would the Board say if they could hear that?" |
3254 | And so you came to London, Mrs. Lemmy? |
3254 | And so you do n''t believe in suicide, but in murder? |
3254 | And so you want her to come here? |
3254 | And so you would not let him paint you, after all?" |
3254 | And so you''ve come? |
3254 | And solemnly, desperately, with a weary feeling of the futility of words, he went on trying: Could she not see? |
3254 | And sometimes, I suppose, you go out for cook? |
3254 | And suddenly he added:"What do you think happens after death, Gyp?" |
3254 | And suddenly he heard her say:"Why do you know such awful men?" |
3254 | And suddenly he smiled, and said:"It''s rotten waiting for things, is n''t it?" |
3254 | And suddenly she thought: If our love can not stay what it is, and if I can not yet go to him for always, is there not still another way? |
3254 | And suddenly the girl said:"I wish you''d tell me why our families do n''t get on?" |
3254 | And suddenly there came the thought: Why should he not go to young Lennan and put it to him straight? |
3254 | And suddenly turning on her daughter, she said:"Did you ever hear about him at Oxford, Gertrude? |
3254 | And suddenly turning to Mr. Paramor, he said:"Well?" |
3254 | And suppose you marry him, and he treats you like a piece of furniture? |
3254 | And surely any other girl will do just as well?" |
3254 | And that did n''t lead you to avow what you''d done? |
3254 | And that lasted till the cashier said:"Will you have gold or notes?" |
3254 | And that night, when he kissed her, she murmured:"Would you rather it were that girl-- not me?" |
3254 | And that poor fellow Groome and his wife? |
3254 | And that reminds me where do you go every evening now after tea? |
3254 | And that would be true-- for was he not his own solicitor? |
3254 | And that''s what you do, do n''t you?" |
3254 | And the archway? |
3254 | And the bizarre thought came to him: If she were dead should I really care? |
3254 | And the boy? |
3254 | And the first moment? |
3254 | And the first thought that passed through her was:''Why did I ever pity him? |
3254 | And the girl herself? |
3254 | And the girl? |
3254 | And the irony, inscrutable, and bitter of that end? |
3254 | And the moral of that is--? |
3254 | And the old gentleman, glaring a little, as it seemed to her, from under his eyelids and his grey top hat, had answered:"Colonel Ercott, I think? |
3254 | And the old habitue thought:''How long will it last?''.... |
3254 | And the other poor dog? |
3254 | And the other? |
3254 | And the sardonic thought flashed through Lennan: Shall I tell him? |
3254 | And the secretary thought:''Those fellows, what does go on inside them? |
3254 | And the sound in them the sound the dead hear when flowers are growing, and the wind passing through them? |
3254 | And the suit against us will be withdrawn-- the divorce suit-- you understand? |
3254 | And the ten thousand, all animated by one hope, were asking each other one question:"Where are you lunching?" |
3254 | And the thought darted through her,''If it is n''t he, what shall I do?'' |
3254 | And the women? |
3254 | And the writer thought:"But if those people at the tables are the Public, what is that waiter? |
3254 | And the young horse? |
3254 | And the young lady? |
3254 | And the-- old gentleman who drank the rum? |
3254 | And then Irene asked:"Phil, have you heard my blackbird?" |
3254 | And then followed those amazing words:"You know why, do n''t you? |
3254 | And then he saw black? |
3254 | And then she said:''Are they going to ask him to resign?'' |
3254 | And then silence, and then another spurt:"Ever go down to''Bambury''s?'' |
3254 | And then the idea came to him: Why not kill these hours of waiting for to- morrow''s meeting by going on the river passing by her cottage? |
3254 | And then the question that would have given him his chance, if he had liked to be so cruel:"Seen Nell?" |
3254 | And then the thought had come: Why not? |
3254 | And then, can you-- can you possibly make her happy in the long- run?" |
3254 | And then, when he returned, to be to him just what she had been, to show nothing-- would it ever be possible? |
3254 | And then-- what? |
3254 | And then? |
3254 | And they have n''t traced''em? |
3254 | And they murmured amongst themselves:"What is the good of this old man and his silly lanthorn? |
3254 | And this young man? |
3254 | And those Sirs, so interested in him, with their theories? |
3254 | And through his mind there flashed the thought:''Now, am I worth as much as he?'' |
3254 | And truth? |
3254 | And was he drunk? |
3254 | And was he? |
3254 | And was his demeanour throughout very violent? |
3254 | And was it good enough? |
3254 | And was it not natural to sit under the trees, by the flowers and the water, the pigeons and the ducks, that wonderful July? |
3254 | And was she tall enough? |
3254 | And was this their house-- together? |
3254 | And we wo n''t give way, will we? |
3254 | And were n''t you desperately in love with your nursery- governess?" |
3254 | And were they true? |
3254 | And what DID you think?" |
3254 | And what about my face? |
3254 | And what about their food when you''re out at work? |
3254 | And what about tin? |
3254 | And what am I? |
3254 | And what are we-- ripples on the tides of a birthless, deathless, equipoised Creative- Purpose-- but little works of Art? |
3254 | And what are you doing out-- with a cold like that? |
3254 | And what business is it of his, I say, that''s got a wife and children of his own? |
3254 | And what did Cook--? |
3254 | And what did he answer? |
3254 | And what did it matter what Society thought? |
3254 | And what did it matter? |
3254 | And what did you do then? |
3254 | And what do you pay a week? |
3254 | And what do you think was the first thing I was conscious of next morning? |
3254 | And what do you think? |
3254 | And what do you want, holding up your paw like that? |
3254 | And what does she like?" |
3254 | And what does the other matter? |
3254 | And what doing there, alone? |
3254 | And what dye call it, to try and put me own son against me? |
3254 | And what else will it be here? |
3254 | And what exactly could he do? |
3254 | And what flowers shall t give YOU?" |
3254 | And what good are they? |
3254 | And what had made it clear that he( Lennan) would? |
3254 | And what had made the difference? |
3254 | And what have you got in your mouth? |
3254 | And what is Barbara about? |
3254 | And what is all this about a bomb? |
3254 | And what is it about her that reminds me-- reminds me-- What is it? |
3254 | And what precisely is your view-- you''ll pardon my asking? |
3254 | And what the deuce made her suddenly trot out the skeleton like this? |
3254 | And what was capital? |
3254 | And what was he doing? |
3254 | And what was it he had told her? |
3254 | And what was it like, to be always with him-- a little funny-- not so? |
3254 | And what was more delicious than a well- baked potato with margarine of good quality? |
3254 | And what was the fellow''s motive? |
3254 | And what was the nature of your married life? |
3254 | And what were they thinking-- Nedda and that haunted boy-- so motionless? |
3254 | And what were those convictions? |
3254 | And what will you do, pray, without your money?" |
3254 | And what would become of them all? |
3254 | And what''d come of it? |
3254 | And what''s THAT built on? |
3254 | And what''s your name? |
3254 | And what''s your young man, Annie? |
3254 | And what''s- his- name brought a bag, I suppose? |
3254 | And what''sh the result? |
3254 | And what, too, would June do? |
3254 | And what-- I thought do I mean by that? |
3254 | And what-- I thought-- is Realism? |
3254 | And when at last they were at home again, and she whispered:"What is it? |
3254 | And when did you last see him? |
3254 | And when do you go back to England? |
3254 | And when he asked:"Well, darling, what do you think of it?" |
3254 | And when he took a resolution which went counter, he did it with the minimum of defiance-- not like the Age, is it? |
3254 | And when he''s eaten it-- what then? |
3254 | And when he''s not flying it, what does he do? |
3254 | And when you ca n''t? |
3254 | And when your husband earns anything he spends it in drink, I suppose? |
3254 | And where are you living now, Mrs. Jones? |
3254 | And where is she now? |
3254 | And where might we be going then? |
3254 | And where was Sheila? |
3254 | And where was he now? |
3254 | And where was he now? |
3254 | And which is God and which is Mammon?" |
3254 | And which of two men who have lived those two lives well has most right to the word''superior''?" |
3254 | And while she was undoing the latch she thought:''What am I going to say? |
3254 | And whom d''you think she saw there in the street? |
3254 | And whom would you choose besides yourself? |
3254 | And whose was the dear little baby they had in the house? |
3254 | And why are people so bound and so unhappy? |
3254 | And why did he always make her feel that she must go the other way? |
3254 | And why did she hate him? |
3254 | And why had he not divorced her? |
3254 | And why not? |
3254 | And why not? |
3254 | And why not? |
3254 | And why should n''t they-- inferior things?" |
3254 | And why were they so few? |
3254 | And why? |
3254 | And why? |
3254 | And why? |
3254 | And why? |
3254 | And why? |
3254 | And why? |
3254 | And why? |
3254 | And will you have tea, please, sir?" |
3254 | And with the scent of the flower, crushed by their hands, stirring his senses, Fort thought:''Ah, what else is there, in these forsaken days?'' |
3254 | And with utter slowness, he traced round my foot, and felt my toes, only once looking up to say:"Did I dell you my brudder was dead?" |
3254 | And without the slightest change in the monotony of that creaking voice he added:"Did you read of the murder? |
3254 | And working at her hospital? |
3254 | And would n''t she wear this''measly flower''? |
3254 | And would these be any good to you? |
3254 | And would they really come? |
3254 | And would you play just one more? |
3254 | And yet as one grew old-- was there anything but what was ghost- like left? |
3254 | And yet how keep away from his own guests? |
3254 | And yet without speaking of them how make Jon understand the reality, the deep cleavage, the ineffaceable scar? |
3254 | And yet you say you stole the box? |
3254 | And yet, so long as there was beauty, why should a man feel lonely? |
3254 | And yet, to do away with this beside him and put in its place-- What? |
3254 | And yet, what could I have done? |
3254 | And yet, what else could he have written? |
3254 | And yet-- did he perhaps feel himself more bound than if they were married-- unfairly bound? |
3254 | And yet-- how to sit and watch it all-- watch his own passion with its ecstasy and its heart- burnings re- enacted with her-- perhaps for many years? |
3254 | And yet-- if one did not? |
3254 | And yet-- it was strange-- but there seemed another face and form in the room too; and the itch in his nerves, was it for that-- or for this? |
3254 | And yet-- what could one do? |
3254 | And yet-- what future?--with that nature-- those eyes-- that origin-- with that father, and that home? |
3254 | And yet-- where''s it all leading? |
3254 | And you believe----? |
3254 | And you can do hair? |
3254 | And you do n''t know much? |
3254 | And you do n''t remember altering the cheque? |
3254 | And you gave Davis the cash? |
3254 | And you have a key? |
3254 | And you have n''t it at all?" |
3254 | And you help do all the rooms? |
3254 | And you think that''ll be the wisest thing? |
3254 | And you will, wo n''t you?" |
3254 | And you would take it from us? |
3254 | And you''re the famous Felsman? |
3254 | And you''ve been out this morning? |
3254 | And you, Ma''moiselle, shall I tell your fortune? |
3254 | And you, Mr. Wace? |
3254 | And you, are their father? |
3254 | And you-- are you happy? |
3254 | And you? |
3254 | And you?" |
3254 | And your father? |
3254 | And your father?" |
3254 | And your husband? |
3254 | And"Athene Builder"on her drawings? |
3254 | And''ere''s another thing, sir: have n''t you never noticed that when a public man blows off and says something, it does''i m in? |
3254 | And''oo can tell''oo''s the father? |
3254 | And, Sirs, upon the second count of this indictment: Would you have a lanthorn dive into cesspools to rescue maidens? |
3254 | And, after all, was he not right? |
3254 | And, at once, he saw Dromore''s eyes probing, questioning:"You married?" |
3254 | And, curiosity overcoming his natural shrinking, he asked:"Why? |
3254 | And, curiosity overcoming his natural shrinking, he asked:"Why? |
3254 | And, encouraged by having begun, he added:"Whose kids were those?" |
3254 | And, following meekly, he asked himself: Why? |
3254 | And, for something to say, she asked:"Who is the girl you were talking to, Count Rosek? |
3254 | And, going away, she had whispered, with that old trembling- up at him, as if offering to be kissed:"I may come, may n''t I? |
3254 | And, holding out her hand, she said:"How do you do, Mr. Wagge? |
3254 | And, holding up the keys, he added:"Laurence would n''t have given me these, would he, if he had n''t trusted me?" |
3254 | And, looking at Gyp with her fine blue eyes, she asked:"Is that it? |
3254 | And, looking at her very hard with his melancholy brown eyes,"When will you find your fate, I wonder?" |
3254 | And, looking at him quizzically, she asked:"What were you like as a boy, Dad? |
3254 | And, looking at those lips, Soames said:"Are you happy over here, or do you want to go back to France?" |
3254 | And, looking up at her, he said:"That was good, was n''t it, Gyp?" |
3254 | And, obeying the longing awakened overnight to be as good as she could to her father; Noel said to him:"Would you like me to come to Church?" |
3254 | And, pensive, she returned to the nursery, where Gyp said at once:"Was that my father? |
3254 | And, sitting down, she fixed her eyes on his face and asked:"Where have you been abroad?" |
3254 | And, slowly moving his long face from side to side, he added:"Besides, what could people do? |
3254 | And, smiling, he simply said:"What do you think?" |
3254 | And, staring at the young woman, he thought:''I wonder if she guesses, and thinks me a blackguard?'' |
3254 | And, still bending down, Gyp asked:"And how is your lodger-- the young lady I sent you?" |
3254 | And, still with his eyes closed, he said sleepily:"It''s nice, is n''t it?" |
3254 | And, stopping before her, as if he read her thoughts, he added:"You think she''s not good enough for me? |
3254 | And, to get away from the lure of those eyes, he bent down and raked the grate, saying:"Have you seen Sylvia?" |
3254 | And, to the confidential man''s soft:"Mr. Lennan, miss,"he added a softer:"May I come in?" |
3254 | And, what disaster? |
3254 | And, with sudden rage, he said:"What do you want for a husband-- a bourgeois who would die if he missed his lunch?" |
3254 | And, without knowing, how give such pain to everyone? |
3254 | And-- afterward? |
3254 | And-- er-- a little given to-- brandy? |
3254 | And-- was she fascinated? |
3254 | And-- when you''re the example? |
3254 | And--? |
3254 | Anne Dromondy? |
3254 | Annette put down the cake she was fingering, and, looking up through darkened lashes, said:"Shall I give Maman any message?" |
3254 | Annie Roberts,''ow old were you, dear? |
3254 | Another Labour? |
3254 | Another dog? |
3254 | Another one? |
3254 | Antonia says he wants a tutorship; now, can you really recommend him? |
3254 | Any advance on six thousand? |
3254 | Any answer? |
3254 | Any conception of the competition nowadays? |
3254 | Any fool knows that, eh, Peachey? |
3254 | Any from the Rhine? |
3254 | Any ladders near? |
3254 | Any letters for me? |
3254 | Any little Soameses yet?" |
3254 | Any news of the mistress? |
3254 | Any news? |
3254 | Any one second that? |
3254 | Any particular brand?" |
3254 | Any questions to ask the Sergeant? |
3254 | Any sign of a ladder or anything? |
3254 | Any space conquered for art is something, is n''t it?" |
3254 | Any special hint or instruction while we''re about it?" |
3254 | Anybody about? |
3254 | Anybody on the curtain? |
3254 | Anybody seen the girl since? |
3254 | Anything I can do for you? |
3254 | Anything I can do for you?" |
3254 | Anything else? |
3254 | Anything great since you came back?" |
3254 | Anything more? |
3254 | Anything over? |
3254 | Anything particular, or just general patriotism? |
3254 | Anything the matter? |
3254 | Anything to complain of? |
3254 | Anything to eat, sir? |
3254 | Anything to report? |
3254 | Anything wrong, sir? |
3254 | Are all the middle classes virtuous? |
3254 | Are conditions favourable? |
3254 | Are my twenty years of care to go for nothing, against this modern spirit?'' |
3254 | Are n''t I been in the fightin''--earned all I could get? |
3254 | Are n''t I going to get you to do your frock, Miss Joy? |
3254 | Are n''t I to feed Faith, ma''am? |
3254 | Are n''t I? |
3254 | Are n''t there any letters from Dad? |
3254 | Are n''t they lovely?" |
3254 | Are n''t they nice to you? |
3254 | Are n''t they sweet? |
3254 | Are n''t they sweet? |
3254 | Are n''t they there? |
3254 | Are n''t they there? |
3254 | Are n''t we ever going to be friends again? |
3254 | Are n''t we goin''to get a game? |
3254 | Are n''t you ashamed? |
3254 | Are n''t you asleep, Mother?" |
3254 | Are n''t you brown? |
3254 | Are n''t you coming with us, Daddy? |
3254 | Are n''t you coming, Dad? |
3254 | Are n''t you dreadfully distressed?" |
3254 | Are n''t you feeling the thing, old girl? |
3254 | Are n''t you fond of your home? |
3254 | Are n''t you funny, dear?" |
3254 | Are n''t you going in to dinner, ma''am? |
3254 | Are n''t you going to have anything more? |
3254 | Are n''t you going to kees me, ni- ice boy? |
3254 | Are n''t you going to read the minutes, Tench? |
3254 | Are n''t you going to try and free yourself? |
3254 | Are n''t you happy here? |
3254 | Are n''t you his grandson, or something?" |
3254 | Are n''t you perished in this cold?" |
3254 | Are n''t you rather prejudiced? |
3254 | Are n''t you really ill then? |
3254 | Are n''t you simply boiled, Mother? |
3254 | Are n''t you surprised?" |
3254 | Are n''t you well, dear? |
3254 | Are n''t you well?" |
3254 | Are n''t you well?" |
3254 | Are n''t you, any more? |
3254 | Are n''t your knees tired, darling? |
3254 | Are n''t your people nice to you?" |
3254 | Are n''t your sisters going to do anything for you? |
3254 | Are not both, in fact, merely flower of author true to himself? |
3254 | Are there any more of them?" |
3254 | Are there many Forsytes besides those in the Red Book?" |
3254 | Are there many others? |
3254 | Are there many?" |
3254 | Are there not all the signs of it? |
3254 | Are there shops at the front? |
3254 | Are these very Bigwigs?" |
3254 | Are they all for the dinner, or for the people who come in to the Anti- Sweating Meeting afterwards? |
3254 | Are they always fierce? |
3254 | Are they coming? |
3254 | Are they husband and wife? |
3254 | Are they living with you? |
3254 | Are they rosy? |
3254 | Are they to have him?" |
3254 | Are those his letters? |
3254 | Are those the Holm Oaks Dennants? |
3254 | Are those the pictures?" |
3254 | Are those trousers? |
3254 | Are those your dogs? |
3254 | Are we cousins?" |
3254 | Are we doin''what the gentleman says?" |
3254 | Are we early? |
3254 | Are we moving back to the apes? |
3254 | Are we near the stile?" |
3254 | Are we not all like this?'' |
3254 | Are ye goin''to follow a man that ca n''t see better than that where he''s goin''? |
3254 | Are you Mrs. Jones? |
3254 | Are you Sleep? |
3254 | Are you a good liar?" |
3254 | Are you a good speaker?" |
3254 | Are you a pro- Boer?" |
3254 | Are you a relation here?" |
3254 | Are you a shepherd?" |
3254 | Are you a subscriber?" |
3254 | Are you absolute stoney? |
3254 | Are you afraid of yourself?" |
3254 | Are you all right now, darling? |
3254 | Are you all right? |
3254 | Are you always so cruel? |
3254 | Are you an artist? |
3254 | Are you any better? |
3254 | Are you as badly on the rocks as that? |
3254 | Are you asleep?" |
3254 | Are you coming in a fit of sentiment, or do you mean business?" |
3254 | Are you coming to the docks? |
3254 | Are you coming, child?" |
3254 | Are you coming? |
3254 | Are you convinced? |
3254 | Are you damtouchy, darling? |
3254 | Are you disengaged? |
3254 | Are you drinking them?" |
3254 | Are you equipping your minds? |
3254 | Are you ever violent, Frost? |
3254 | Are you expecting somebody?" |
3254 | Are you following the Inspector''s theory? |
3254 | Are you fond of Larry? |
3254 | Are you for staying and seeing the lions feed, or do we cut back?" |
3254 | Are you from London? |
3254 | Are you goin''to desert him now''e''s down? |
3254 | Are you goin''to tell the guv''nor, Miss? |
3254 | Are you going out again? |
3254 | Are you going out, my dear?" |
3254 | Are you going to Soames''? |
3254 | Are you going to be long, Mum?" |
3254 | Are you going to chuck him over, now''e''s lost''is wife? |
3254 | Are you going to divorce me? |
3254 | Are you going to do yours for us? |
3254 | Are you going to have them X- rayed? |
3254 | Are you going to jilt my grand- daughter?" |
3254 | Are you going to play any more? |
3254 | Are you going to retract, and apologise in front of Dancy and the members who heard you? |
3254 | Are you going to see her, sir? |
3254 | Are you going to take action? |
3254 | Are you going to the Four- in- Hand Meet? |
3254 | Are you going to turn him out? |
3254 | Are you going? |
3254 | Are you going? |
3254 | Are you good at my sort of dancing, Uncle? |
3254 | Are you his girl? |
3254 | Are you hungry?"... |
3254 | Are you hurt?" |
3254 | Are you ill, Mr De Levis? |
3254 | Are you ill?" |
3254 | Are you in love with John? |
3254 | Are you in pain? |
3254 | Are you lost? |
3254 | Are you mad? |
3254 | Are you managing clerk to the firm of solicitors who employ the prisoner? |
3254 | Are you married? |
3254 | Are you my daughter or are you not? |
3254 | Are you not unconsciously paying deference to the word gentleman?" |
3254 | Are you old enough to keep a secret? |
3254 | Are you on, Tom?" |
3254 | Are you out of your senses? |
3254 | Are you prepared to go to that length?" |
3254 | Are you ready for me? |
3254 | Are you ready to go away, at any time?" |
3254 | Are you ready? |
3254 | Are you really English? |
3254 | Are you really a genuine edition, or what?" |
3254 | Are you really going to speak? |
3254 | Are you really reluctant, father? |
3254 | Are you safe in your mountains? |
3254 | Are you serious, sir? |
3254 | Are you sleeping here, my boy?" |
3254 | Are you sorry for our love?" |
3254 | Are you sorry now you came and spoke to me? |
3254 | Are you staying to stop them setting the house on fire? |
3254 | Are you still fond of me? |
3254 | Are you still fond of your husband?" |
3254 | Are you sure it was there? |
3254 | Are you sure of what you''ve said, sir? |
3254 | Are you sure they ca n''t touch me?" |
3254 | Are you sure they''re kissing? |
3254 | Are you sure you put the box in the place you say at the time you say? |
3254 | Are you sure you''re not mistaken, and did n''t have them stolen on the course? |
3254 | Are you sure? |
3254 | Are you the proprietor? |
3254 | Are you thinking of Eastbourne?" |
3254 | Are you thinking of poor Tryst?" |
3254 | Are you thinking?" |
3254 | Are you tired of me? |
3254 | Are you to stay there, or are you to climb out? |
3254 | Are you turning tail at the first shot? |
3254 | Are you waiting for him? |
3254 | Are you, butler to John BARTHWICK, M.P., of 6, Rockingham Gate? |
3254 | Are you? |
3254 | Are you?" |
3254 | Are your feet wet? |
3254 | Art thou angry? |
3254 | Art? |
3254 | Arty? |
3254 | As I am''ere, can I do anything for yer? |
3254 | As a man or a Press man? |
3254 | As bad as that, Cokeson? |
3254 | As for discipline, what do you aristocrats, or bourgeois know of discipline? |
3254 | As if Maurice would be a Director if it was n''t? |
3254 | As if May I go up and see him?" |
3254 | As if something unusual had happened to him? |
3254 | As soon as they were clear of the crowd, she pressed his hand to her breast, and said:"Did you mind?" |
3254 | As the curtain rises she is saying in her soft and pleasant voice:"Well, what is the matter with us all, Johnny?" |
3254 | As they are? |
3254 | As they went along Mr. Purcey said:"That''s the young-- the-- er-- model I met in your wife''s studio, is n''t it? |
3254 | As to deeper feelings about her-- had he any? |
3254 | As to treatment? |
3254 | As you say, why want to know more? |
3254 | Ashamed? |
3254 | Ashurst answered:"Between friends-- and we are, are n''t we?" |
3254 | Ashurst broke in suddenly:"How old are you?" |
3254 | Ask him if he''s got that? |
3254 | Asleep with curtains undrawn, lights left on? |
3254 | Asleep, or- ill, which? |
3254 | At half- past seven, and your hotel is--? |
3254 | At his wits''end, with his heart thumping, but still keeping his eyes away from her, he said:"Where is Oliver?" |
3254 | At last Hilary remarked:"How are you getting on?" |
3254 | At last Pearse said:"''I do n''t understand; has he played the blackguard?'' |
3254 | At last he got up and said:"Glass of port, doctor?" |
3254 | At last he said:"What is it? |
3254 | At last he said:"You a native here?" |
3254 | At last he stood before me, and, gazing through those rusty iron spectacles, said:"Mr.-----, isn''d it?" |
3254 | At last she said:"Mr. Cuthcott, is there any chance of things like that changing?" |
3254 | At last she stopped a policeman, and said:"Which is the way towards Bloomsbury, please? |
3254 | At last, close again to her new home, Thyme said:"Why should one bother? |
3254 | At last; why not? |
3254 | At least-- have you-- Daddy? |
3254 | At lunch, the only allusion to the situation had been Harbinger''s inquiry:"When does Miltoun return?" |
3254 | At our conduct? |
3254 | At such a monstrous remark from any other man, Felix would have smiled; but seeing it was Tod, he only asked:"How?" |
3254 | At that lash of the whip, Summerhay turned and said:"It pleases you to think the worst, then?" |
3254 | At that she plucked up spirit to ask:"Would you like me to go and see him?" |
3254 | At that word she looked at him:"And do you think I do n''t want my youth back?" |
3254 | At the question,"Well, old man, how did the great Goya strike you?" |
3254 | At times a male guest rose, napkin in hand, and said to a lady:"Can I get you anything from the sideboard?" |
3254 | At what price? |
3254 | At what resolve were those clear eyes so swiftly raised to look? |
3254 | At what time did you take his clothes and boots? |
3254 | At what? |
3254 | Athene gone and got married? |
3254 | Aunt Hester again rustled the sheet, her voice was heard faintly pleading:"Done? |
3254 | Aunt Hester chimed in: Did not Winifred think that it was much better for the young people to be secure and not run any risk at their age? |
3254 | Aunt Hester, with her instinct for avoiding the unpleasant, here chimed in: Did Soames think they would make Mr. Chamberlain Prime Minister at once? |
3254 | Aunt Juley thought that horses were very uncertain, had not Montague found them so? |
3254 | Aunt Juley tried to say something pleasant:"And how will dear Irene like living in the country?" |
3254 | Aunt Nell, how ca n''t you? |
3254 | Avenin'', Will; what''s yure glass o''trouble? |
3254 | Awakening always, like a dog, to perfect presence of mind, she knew that he was playing in the sitting- room, playing-- at what time of night? |
3254 | Awfully hard luck, is n''t it?" |
3254 | Awfully hot, is n''t it? |
3254 | Awfully sorry, mother; but do n''t you see what a stunner father''s given me? |
3254 | Awkward, is n''t it?" |
3254 | Awkward, that-- isn''t it?" |
3254 | B--- is''viveur''no doubt, mais, mon Dieu, que voulezvous? |
3254 | B. division of the Metropolitan police force? |
3254 | BURLACOMBE: In my long medder? |
3254 | Babs, have you been out?" |
3254 | Back at High Constantia?'' |
3254 | Back to all that? |
3254 | Back? |
3254 | Bad as that, Ivy? |
3254 | Bad head? |
3254 | Bad news? |
3254 | Badly? |
3254 | Bally awful, is n''t it? |
3254 | Banging on your door? |
3254 | Barbara''s answer was a smile, faintly curious, compassionate, yet almost grateful, as if she had said:"Thank you-- who knows?" |
3254 | Barbara''s calm voice said again:"Anything else?" |
3254 | Bargaining? |
3254 | Barring the accident of money, are n''t they as good men as you? |
3254 | Barter?" |
3254 | Bartholomew Poulder? |
3254 | Battersea? |
3254 | Be good enough to tell him I specially want to see him here after dinner, will you? |
3254 | Beastly hot, is n''t it? |
3254 | Beastly when your head goes under? |
3254 | Beatrice, ca n''t you? |
3254 | Because general sentiment''s against me, I-- a public man-- am to deny my faith? |
3254 | Because of me? |
3254 | Because one is a coward that does n''t make it any better, does it?" |
3254 | Because she was alluring, was n''t she? |
3254 | Because we''re not going to hurt nothing, are we?" |
3254 | Because you had the privilege of fightin''for your country you still think you can put it on, do you? |
3254 | Because-- it''s all been not quite nice, has it?" |
3254 | Been anywhere?" |
3254 | Been doin''anything great?" |
3254 | Been racin''at all? |
3254 | Been''seeing the chairman? |
3254 | Before I go, gentlemen-- you''ve had time to think it over-- there''s no one you suspect in the house, I suppose? |
3254 | Before she went away Cecilia whispered--"B. if he seems to want that little girl while he''s like this, do n''t you think she ought to come?" |
3254 | Before- before he comes? |
3254 | Beg pardon, Mr March; d''you mind me cleanin''the winders here? |
3254 | Beg pardon, sir? |
3254 | Beg pardon, sir? |
3254 | Beg pardon? |
3254 | Being downstairs, how should I know? |
3254 | Bellew?" |
3254 | Besides, did she not know all that Harbinger could give her? |
3254 | Besides, how could he go? |
3254 | Besides, my dear boy, what''s the harm?" |
3254 | Besides, were not settlements always drawn so that they refused to form security for anything? |
3254 | Besides, what good to speak of her? |
3254 | Besides, what would she do? |
3254 | Besides, what''s it got to do with Charlie and Chloe? |
3254 | Besides, where was he? |
3254 | Besides, would not a loan make his position stronger? |
3254 | Besides-- besides, were his powers beginning to fail? |
3254 | Better? |
3254 | Betty-- so stout, and with that rheumatism in her leg-- did she ever think of herself? |
3254 | Between friends it does n''t matter, does it?" |
3254 | Between his teeth Keith muttered:"And Laurence?" |
3254 | Bianca looked at him for the first time; then, turning to her nephew, said:"What do you say, Martin?" |
3254 | Bianca spoke:"May I ask how you knew of this?" |
3254 | Big or little chap? |
3254 | Bill What? |
3254 | Bill come down yet? |
3254 | Bill come? |
3254 | Bill, if there''s any real trouble, you will tell me, wo n''t you? |
3254 | Bill, on your word of honour, are you acting of your own free will? |
3254 | Bill? |
3254 | Bind him? |
3254 | Bit of a philosopher, is n''t he?" |
3254 | Bit of a surprise for yer, ai n''t it? |
3254 | Bit stuffy for you here, dear, is n''t it? |
3254 | Black eye? |
3254 | Blackley''s? |
3254 | Blow yer up? |
3254 | Blow yet up? |
3254 | Bob Pierson, with a mouth full of sausage, as naturally responded:"What does he say?" |
3254 | Bob Pillin went hastening towards her; and following the young man with her chin, Mrs. Larne said, smiling:"Are n''t those children awful? |
3254 | Bosinney smiled:"How about the big one, for instance?" |
3254 | Bosinney''s voice hissed in his ear:"I am taking Irene back; do you understand?" |
3254 | Bosinney''s?" |
3254 | Bosinney, glass of sherry with your sweet? |
3254 | Bosinney?" |
3254 | Bread for hunger-- light in darkness? |
3254 | Break her heart? |
3254 | Bring in the papers in Boulter''s lease, will you, Falder? |
3254 | Brooding morbidly, she asked herself-- his drinking, debts, even the girl-- had she caused them, too? |
3254 | Brownbee added almost nervously:"Are we to understand that twelve hundred a year is your-- your last word?" |
3254 | Brune,''he would answer,''why should I be ashamed? |
3254 | Burnt? |
3254 | Bury himself in the country like Uncle Dennis, and administer one of his father''s estates? |
3254 | But Bosinney? |
3254 | But COULD she make him into such-- would he ever grow like that? |
3254 | But I do n''t think anyone would connect it, would they? |
3254 | But I must get my money back-- mustn''t I? |
3254 | But I say, what about your people? |
3254 | But Mrs. Ercott answered:"Have n''t you ever noticed that Olive never shows what she does not want to? |
3254 | But Roberts was paid a lot of money, was n''t he, for discovering that process? |
3254 | But Shelton, suffering from irritation at his own dishonesty, replied with heat:"Why not say at once, sir,''hysterical, unhealthy''? |
3254 | But Tryst, who does not even want to defy the law-- what happens to him? |
3254 | But Uncle Nic-- what am I to do? |
3254 | But answer me this question: Is n''t a social conscience, broadly speaking, the result of comfort and security?" |
3254 | But are n''t his eyes intelligent? |
3254 | But are n''t we all, Dodo? |
3254 | But are you sure no one minds?" |
3254 | But by that time I suppose, you''ll hardly be here yourself?" |
3254 | But could he hate Jon''s mother and yet keep her photograph? |
3254 | But did he go? |
3254 | But did he want to? |
3254 | But did she want to pray? |
3254 | But did that difference between a man and a woman necessarily mean that Gyp loved him so much more than he loved her? |
3254 | But did you ever know repentance change anybody, Cook? |
3254 | But did you really ever reach such a stage? |
3254 | But do I give you the illusion of being mad?" |
3254 | But do I really love her? |
3254 | But do I want her?'' |
3254 | But do n''t what, dear? |
3254 | But do n''t you know that that is no excuse? |
3254 | But do n''t you know that''s ruination? |
3254 | But do n''t you think, dear, you''d better not? |
3254 | But do they ever? |
3254 | But do we keep them? |
3254 | But do you imagine you can go about the town taking things out of spite? |
3254 | But do you think you''ve seen enough of him?" |
3254 | But does it matter? |
3254 | But does the wanting to meet make it any more likely, Dad? |
3254 | But folding her hands away behind her back she answered gently:"My dear, how should I know why?" |
3254 | But had he already''confessed''? |
3254 | But had he not already said too much? |
3254 | But had he still that anchorage, to prevent him slipping out to sea? |
3254 | But had she any right to ease her conscience if it brought harm to her lover? |
3254 | But had that been his fault? |
3254 | But had that want of knowledge ever retarded what was known as the upward growth of man? |
3254 | But had young Lennan really done such a thing? |
3254 | But have you thought it out? |
3254 | But have you tried? |
3254 | But he began to get alarmed at her silence, and asked impatiently:"Well, what do you say?" |
3254 | But he just looked at her, and said:"What have you come for?" |
3254 | But he never seems quite successful, have you noticed? |
3254 | But he only asked:"Would that clear you for starting?" |
3254 | But he said, very quietly:"Just tell me-- How did it come about, this-- affair?" |
3254 | But he said:"Do n''t you think you would be more helpless abroad, in case he followed?" |
3254 | But he said:"Is it right to fan this flame? |
3254 | But he said:"When shall we expect them? |
3254 | But he wo n''t ask me-- why should he now? |
3254 | But he''s like a madman when he''s in liquor, and he says he''ll go to Mrs. Hilary---""Go to my sister? |
3254 | But his hand was held out, she could not help putting hers into it; and looking up hardily, she said:"You know about me, do n''t you?" |
3254 | But how about that other truth-- that in love there is no pause, no resting? |
3254 | But how are YOU, ma''am? |
3254 | But how can it be fear when they''re hundreds to one? |
3254 | But how can we know truth, unless we know what is at the root of it?" |
3254 | But how comes it that these two people are charged with the same offence? |
3254 | But how could he? |
3254 | But how could you? |
3254 | But how did you get into the HOUSE? |
3254 | But how far did Winton understand, how far see what was going on? |
3254 | But how far-- how far had''those two''gone? |
3254 | But how get his address? |
3254 | But how had it all happened? |
3254 | But how much? |
3254 | But how much? |
3254 | But how on earth do you manage here on so little? |
3254 | But how shall a man grudge any one sensations he has so keenly felt? |
3254 | But how- without money? |
3254 | But how? |
3254 | But how? |
3254 | But if I''m to keep it up?" |
3254 | But if Mr De Levis feels otherwise, sir? |
3254 | But if he did not remain in public life, what was he to do? |
3254 | But if he should? |
3254 | But if he were wrong, having done the hardest thing already-- where could he turn? |
3254 | But if on this shock he began to drink, what might not happen? |
3254 | But if so, why? |
3254 | But if so, why? |
3254 | But if they had not told him, should she not-- could she not get him for herself-- get married to him, before he knew? |
3254 | But if you had all that money, what made you take this box? |
3254 | But in view of my son''s saying there''s nothing in this-- this fable-- will it be necessary to proceed against the man under the circumstances? |
3254 | But in which fashion? |
3254 | But inwardly, where was she? |
3254 | But is a man to be lost because he is bred and born with a weak character? |
3254 | But is it a fair fight, Father? |
3254 | But is n''t Pragmatism a perfectly beastly word, George? |
3254 | But is n''t there a name in it, or something? |
3254 | But is not hypocrisy just a product of tenacity, which is again the lower part of courage? |
3254 | But is there some mistake?" |
3254 | But it did n''t pay, did it?" |
3254 | But it is about the finest thing in the world, is n''t it?" |
3254 | But it is exceptional-- I mean in my case, is n''t it? |
3254 | But it is his night, is n''t it? |
3254 | But it made a very distinct impression on your mind? |
3254 | But it needed all his will- power to ask without tremor:"Mr. Darrant in?" |
3254 | But it was rather breaking through the feud, was n''t it?" |
3254 | But it''s funny, is n''t it? |
3254 | But it''s not only you is it? |
3254 | But it''s true, is n''t it? |
3254 | But my girl knows better; do n''t you? |
3254 | But need he know? |
3254 | But need she trouble about his? |
3254 | But noticing the extreme feebleness of Mr. Treffry''s advance, he exclaimed with genuine concern:"What is it? |
3254 | But now that her eyes had said, I love you!--What then? |
3254 | But on what pretext could he visit Pillin? |
3254 | But one can think anybody a rotter without hating them, ca n''t one?" |
3254 | But ought he to suppress reference to George''s progress? |
3254 | But ought you to have got up-- I thought you were ill in bed; ought n''t you to be lying down? |
3254 | But pardon me, how are you to tell? |
3254 | But perhaps you have not done it?" |
3254 | But shall I ever get the men down again? |
3254 | But she did not get up, and when Eve was gone, cuddled her arm through her father''s and murmured:"What d''you think of Cyril?" |
3254 | But she had come back and when they were in the carriage, he said:"Suppose we go and sit in Kensington Gardens instead?" |
3254 | But she had come back and when they were in the carriage, he said:"Suppose we go and sit in Kensington Gardens instead?" |
3254 | But she has n''t seen it, I suppose?" |
3254 | But she kept on playing, turning the pages without taking in the notes, haunted by the idea that he might again have fallen ill. Should she telegraph? |
3254 | But she said anxiously:"You believe there''s something to be done, then? |
3254 | But she said as softly as she could:"Mrs. Wagge? |
3254 | But still Larry gazed up at him with that wistful questioning, and not till he had repeated,"Understand?" |
3254 | But still she did not move, whispering:"Who are you, please?" |
3254 | But suddenly a secret irritation seemed to bubble in him; he burst forth almost violently:"He''s no business to let it affect him; now, has he? |
3254 | But suddenly she looked up at him, and pointing to the picture that to- day had no curtain drawn, said:"Do you think I''m like her? |
3254 | But suddenly she said in a surprising voice:"You have n''t a photograph you could spare, sir, to leave behind? |
3254 | But suppose I can induce your husband to forgive you, and take you back? |
3254 | But suppose his standards are low? |
3254 | But suppose it does n''t come?" |
3254 | But suppose there IS nothing after death-- would it make me say:''I''d rather not live''? |
3254 | But suppose you were to pay her ten bob a week, and keep my name out of it? |
3254 | But surely, surely-- you''re mistaken?" |
3254 | But that afternoon, at the end of a long gallop on the downs, she turned her head away and said suddenly:"Is she a huntress?" |
3254 | But that was mean-- besides, how could he hurt her? |
3254 | But that, you know-- we ca n''t do-- now can we? |
3254 | But the Peace knocked that, shares seem off, do n''t they? |
3254 | But the fellow''s motive? |
3254 | But the ideas----What? |
3254 | But the point is, not whether you or I are right-- the point is: What is a man who holds a faith with all his heart to do? |
3254 | But the question is, Mr Bly, do-- er-- any of us ever really give satisfaction except to ourselves? |
3254 | But the question now is: What do you owe to your wife? |
3254 | But the silence getting on her nerves, she said quickly:"Is your husband behaving himself better?" |
3254 | But the thing men called honour-- what was it, when her eyes were looking at him and her shoulder touching his? |
3254 | But there is something else--""Worse?" |
3254 | But there''s Jolly''s horse; why do n''t you ride him? |
3254 | But they came:"When will you marry me?" |
3254 | But they do not ache?" |
3254 | But they got you a place, did n''t they? |
3254 | But they''ve got their clubs, have n''t they? |
3254 | But to Fort there had come Noel''s words:"It''s awfully funny, is n''t it?" |
3254 | But to brand him like this? |
3254 | But to sympathise with a grief which is not shown would be an impertinence, would it not? |
3254 | But to what end-- if he had to stop short of his own part? |
3254 | But to what were they to hold on in this modern welter of the"democratic principle"? |
3254 | But was ever an American so passive? |
3254 | But was he to sit there all night? |
3254 | But was she so innocent? |
3254 | But was that an excuse? |
3254 | But was that possible? |
3254 | But was that true? |
3254 | But we''ve got to find out for ourselves, have n''t we? |
3254 | But were they never going to reach his business? |
3254 | But what about catching it? |
3254 | But what about you, my dear? |
3254 | But what am I to do about this of Arthur Baal''s? |
3254 | But what am I to do? |
3254 | But what are they? |
3254 | But what can I do, your Worship? |
3254 | But what could be done, when it was all like quicksand? |
3254 | But what could he do in that coming life? |
3254 | But what could he have said? |
3254 | But what could he say, from what standpoint say it, and-- with that feeling? |
3254 | But what did Imogen mean? |
3254 | But what did Prosper Profond represent? |
3254 | But what did Soames mean? |
3254 | But what did it matter if he did guess? |
3254 | But what did it matter? |
3254 | But what did it matter? |
3254 | But what do we do? |
3254 | But what does anything matter to Harbinger, for instance? |
3254 | But what does it matter? |
3254 | But what else could we do? |
3254 | But what excuse is that-- now, Mr. Scorrier, what excuse is that?" |
3254 | But what had the fellow got hold of? |
3254 | But what have they given away?" |
3254 | But what if it do n''t? |
3254 | But what is the best?'' |
3254 | But what made you let her? |
3254 | But what right had he to feel jealousy and rage against her? |
3254 | But what shall I do about this marriage of Val''s, Soames? |
3254 | But what was I to do? |
3254 | But what was her story? |
3254 | But what was the use of troubling? |
3254 | But what was this? |
3254 | But what was to be done? |
3254 | But what would happen now that both Soames and Jolyon were married again? |
3254 | But what would he be? |
3254 | But what would they be worth, if these maniacs once began to milk capital? |
3254 | But what would you? |
3254 | But what''s Athene''s point, exactly? |
3254 | But what''s all that to do with you? |
3254 | But what''s to be done with him? |
3254 | But what, then, was he to do? |
3254 | But what? |
3254 | But what? |
3254 | But when she laughed his arm stole back again; and Fleur began to sing:"O who will oer the downs so free, O who will with me ride? |
3254 | But when the interval came, she did not look round, until his voice said:"How d''you do, Major Winton? |
3254 | But when we see it inflicted on a woman whom we love-- what then? |
3254 | But where was he to go by himself? |
3254 | But where''s all the hurry?" |
3254 | But where? |
3254 | But where? |
3254 | But wherever are you going now?" |
3254 | But who buys flowers at this time of night? |
3254 | But who could have imagined this? |
3254 | But who could have supposed-- who dreamed--? |
3254 | But who knows when Noel fell in love? |
3254 | But why Pillin''s solicitors? |
3254 | But why ca n''t we be? |
3254 | But why could he not do all that his father could have done? |
3254 | But why could n''t he look you in the face; or, if he did, why did he seem about to eat you? |
3254 | But why did he ask?" |
3254 | But why did you? |
3254 | But why do we keep them? |
3254 | But why give the thing to him to do? |
3254 | But why has he not come in? |
3254 | But why not let them be? |
3254 | But why should Bosinney fly? |
3254 | But why should he take the scandal on himself with his whole career as a pillar of the law at stake? |
3254 | But why should we make trouble? |
3254 | But why were Pillins selling, if freights were to go up, as they were told? |
3254 | But why-- why should she tell him? |
3254 | But why? |
3254 | But why? |
3254 | But why? |
3254 | But will he?'' |
3254 | But with that almost professional gentleness of a man who has cut the heads and arms off people in his time, he answered:"What things?" |
3254 | But with the cane or with the fist? |
3254 | But wo n''t you have some more?" |
3254 | But would even that be anything more than a putting- off? |
3254 | But would he resign? |
3254 | But would it be so great a handicap? |
3254 | But would she answer? |
3254 | But would she be friendless? |
3254 | But would she ever hold him at all? |
3254 | But would she have fought? |
3254 | But would you allow yourself to be blown up with impunity? |
3254 | But would you have in prison? |
3254 | But you do n''t understand-- how should you? |
3254 | But you know there''s a feud between our families?" |
3254 | But you remember running, do you? |
3254 | But you said you''d done with her? |
3254 | But you speak English so well-- there for seven years? |
3254 | But you were not in a position to see very well? |
3254 | But you were not spying? |
3254 | But you will think it all well over, wo n''t you? |
3254 | But you''ll be glad to get the money wo n''t you? |
3254 | But you''re in good work, are n''t you? |
3254 | But your mother likes him? |
3254 | But, Dodo, why all this-- this attitude to the Hornblowers? |
3254 | But, Maurice, have you told him about the selling? |
3254 | But, Nurse, how can you leave us, you? |
3254 | But, Uncle Felix, do n''t you wish YOU were seeing it for the first time? |
3254 | But, anyway, if you give in a grudging spirit, or the spirit of a schoolmaster, what can you expect? |
3254 | But, dear Fraulein, that is a big matter; have you well thought?" |
3254 | But, did she want to refuse? |
3254 | But, first, is it true that we have it? |
3254 | But, hardening her heart, Gratian went on:"Do n''t you think it''s queer we''ve never heard from Captain Fort since he came down?" |
3254 | But, man, what made ye come? |
3254 | But, my dear girl, what the devil''s to become of George? |
3254 | But, short of that, when was a country ever consciously and homogeneously heroic-- except China with its opium? |
3254 | But, sometimes, she would think:''Am I a candle- flame again? |
3254 | But, tell me, what can we do without?" |
3254 | But, then, who could tell? |
3254 | But- for what? |
3254 | But-- are you? |
3254 | But-- but-- what if she did? |
3254 | But-- er-- doesn''t the question of a future life rather bear on your point about kindness? |
3254 | But-- er-- the stick was in''is''and, was n''t it? |
3254 | But-- er-- what-- er----How? |
3254 | But-- was she happy? |
3254 | But-- what now?" |
3254 | But-- what-- why? |
3254 | Buy them and stick them in a lumber- room? |
3254 | By Dorking, ai n''t it?" |
3254 | By appointment? |
3254 | By the firelight she saw him crouching at the foot of the bed; could just see his face-- like a face-- a face-- where seen? |
3254 | By the little Niobe-- the same story; would I go back to him?" |
3254 | By the way, has it occurred to you that there may be another bomb on the premises? |
3254 | By the way, poor Mrs. Cremer-- is she any better? |
3254 | By the way, shall we get out of this heat?" |
3254 | By the way, sir, what is your business? |
3254 | By the way, what do you value your house and collection at? |
3254 | By the way, will you dine with us on Christmas Day? |
3254 | By the way, will you send me a duck up to the Rectory? |
3254 | By the way-- what became of her accomplice? |
3254 | By what a strange fate had those two been thrown together; to what end was their love coming? |
3254 | By what right have you come here? |
3254 | By whom-- how? |
3254 | By whom?" |
3254 | CHAPTER II"Well, what''s the matter at Tod''s?" |
3254 | CHAPTER III HILARY''S BROWN STUDY"What do you really think, Uncle Hilary?" |
3254 | CHAPTER XIV THE NIGHT CLUB"May I ask,"said Shelton, as he and the youth came out into the chilly street,"What it is you call the''Den''?" |
3254 | CHAPTER XXV THE RIDE"Where now?" |
3254 | Ca n''t I begin?" |
3254 | Ca n''t I help?" |
3254 | Ca n''t I see? |
3254 | Ca n''t Reggie take you with him to India for a bit? |
3254 | Ca n''t go out into Hyde Park and stand on a tub, can I? |
3254 | Ca n''t it be done somehow? |
3254 | Ca n''t it be done without that?" |
3254 | Ca n''t we have done with this old- fashioned tug- of- war business? |
3254 | Ca n''t ye see? |
3254 | Ca n''t you SEE? |
3254 | Ca n''t you believe me?" |
3254 | Ca n''t you borrow? |
3254 | Ca n''t you come to an arrangement? |
3254 | Ca n''t you do without her?" |
3254 | Ca n''t you eat any breakfast? |
3254 | Ca n''t you get it out?" |
3254 | Ca n''t you get me more? |
3254 | Ca n''t you persuade the men that their interests are the same as ours? |
3254 | Ca n''t you put in a word yourself? |
3254 | Ca n''t you see she''s on the edge? |
3254 | Ca n''t you see that I want to help you all? |
3254 | Ca n''t you see that you''re being played with? |
3254 | Ca n''t you see, she wants you?" |
3254 | Ca n''t you see? |
3254 | Ca n''t you sleep? |
3254 | Ca n''t you stop his going, Annie? |
3254 | Ca n''t you suggest something, Freda? |
3254 | Ca n''t you tell him something to put him back to thinking it''s all right? |
3254 | Ca n''t you try to see George''s side of it a bit? |
3254 | Ca n''t you use your influence? |
3254 | Ca n''t you wait, at least till Cyril''s next leave?" |
3254 | Ca n''t you? |
3254 | Cage me up here with you? |
3254 | Call this justice? |
3254 | Call''imself a soldier, attackin''of old men and women in this way? |
3254 | Call? |
3254 | Came here? |
3254 | Can I MAKE myself love? |
3254 | Can I brush you? |
3254 | Can I come in again? |
3254 | Can I come in, Annie? |
3254 | Can I come to- morrow?" |
3254 | Can I do anything? |
3254 | Can I drop you? |
3254 | Can I get you anything?" |
3254 | Can I give you a lift home?" |
3254 | Can I go and see him before he gives evidence to- morrow? |
3254 | Can I go to Father?" |
3254 | Can I have a screen, Tench? |
3254 | Can I have another cup, Stella, not so beastly weak?" |
3254 | Can I not be reconciled, like a woman? |
3254 | Can I say three thousand? |
3254 | Can I see? |
3254 | Can I speak to you, Mr. Roberts? |
3254 | Can I stand any more of this? |
3254 | Can I trust you to watch him while I go and get the bottles filled?" |
3254 | Can I undertake anything, Monsieur? |
3254 | Can I? |
3254 | Can a man set an''see''is mother starve? |
3254 | Can anything be of any use? |
3254 | Can it be done wivaht blood? |
3254 | Can it be that Christ, if he were on earth, would count us Pharisees, believing ourselves not as other men? |
3254 | Can it be that it is derived from the sayings and writings of others, and is but a spurious spirit only meet to be outcast? |
3254 | Can it not walk? |
3254 | Can it possibly be that? |
3254 | Can one ask what she was doing, sir? |
3254 | Can one get dinner on that 6.30 train up? |
3254 | Can there be anything more odious,"he burst out,"than such a self- complacent blindness? |
3254 | Can they get blacklegs? |
3254 | Can we go?" |
3254 | Can we squeeze them a little more?" |
3254 | Can we talk?" |
3254 | Can we walk on?" |
3254 | Can you answer me that? |
3254 | Can you be ready by then? |
3254 | Can you begin at once? |
3254 | Can you come?" |
3254 | Can you conceive a greater folly? |
3254 | Can you do it at the money? |
3254 | Can you eat preserved peaches? |
3254 | Can you find me any one who can? |
3254 | Can you find some water, Mr. Harz? |
3254 | Can you give up seeing Summerhay while we get you a divorce? |
3254 | Can you hear that go by, man-- when your country''s just been struck? |
3254 | Can you let her off to- morrow?" |
3254 | Can you make these do for the moment? |
3254 | Can you manage-- on your bicycle-- now at once? |
3254 | Can you say if he was known to the police? |
3254 | Can you see her? |
3254 | Can you see him, Dodo? |
3254 | Can you see me?" |
3254 | Can you see the time by it?" |
3254 | Can you sew? |
3254 | Can you spare him a dance?" |
3254 | Can you tell me in what portion of the hall we are?" |
3254 | Can you tell me?" |
3254 | Can you typewrite where you are? |
3254 | Can you understand a gentleman--? |
3254 | Can you understand that? |
3254 | Can you-- can you keep him? |
3254 | Can you-- er-- be firm on the telephone? |
3254 | Can you? |
3254 | Can you?" |
3254 | Can yu zee curate? |
3254 | Can''e now? |
3254 | Candidly, which of those two lives demands more of the virtues on which human life is founded-- courage and patience, hardihood and self- sacrifice? |
3254 | Canynge, can I give you a lift? |
3254 | Captain Dancy in, madam? |
3254 | Captain Dancy? |
3254 | Carn''t you speak for once? |
3254 | Carry me home on my shield, eh?" |
3254 | Case of conscience? |
3254 | Cat come''ome? |
3254 | Cecilia could think of nothing now to say but:"Would you like to wash your hands, dear?" |
3254 | Cecilia fluttered out:"Oh, but, Hilary, what do you mean?" |
3254 | Cecilia said hastily:"Do you mind if I shut the window, father?" |
3254 | Cecilia spoke hastily:"Is n''t this white lilac lovely, Dad?" |
3254 | Cecilia, at her wits''end, answered:"Do you really miss her, Father?" |
3254 | Cecilia, at her wits''end, said hurriedly:"Dad, will you tell us what sort of character you think that little girl who comes to you has?" |
3254 | Cecilia, with an involuntary quiver of her little bag, said:"Father, how can you?" |
3254 | Challenger I used to know in the''nineties, and I thought-- you would n''t happen to know how long they''ve been married? |
3254 | Challenger? |
3254 | Chardonnet? |
3254 | Charity, and the forgiveness of sins honestly atoned for-- what became of them? |
3254 | Charles? |
3254 | Charlie, are you happy with me? |
3254 | Charlie, do you realise that the bathroom out there has to wash those four? |
3254 | Chelsea? |
3254 | Cherry?" |
3254 | Chloe, are n''t you well? |
3254 | Chloe? |
3254 | Choking back the words,"He was never married before,"she said:"Well, what about her?" |
3254 | Chris? |
3254 | Christian looked up, dropped her eyes again, and said:"Will you go on with the history, Greta?" |
3254 | Christian said:"Paint us? |
3254 | Christian thought:''Will he never see?'' |
3254 | Clods? |
3254 | Clubs? |
3254 | Cokeson, engage Mr. Cowley in conversation, will you? |
3254 | Come and have a drink?" |
3254 | Come and have some lunch, Clements? |
3254 | Come down to see for yourself?" |
3254 | Come now, is there? |
3254 | Come now-- how must she feel? |
3254 | Come up, will you?" |
3254 | Come, are you going to be nice to him, both of you? |
3254 | Come, do you deny seeing this young lady last night? |
3254 | Come, gen''lemen, we have n''t dried up? |
3254 | Come, joy; you''ll make yourself ill, and that wo n''t help, will it? |
3254 | Come, man, where''s your sense of humour? |
3254 | Come, now, what''s this about George?" |
3254 | Come, now, which are you going to do?" |
3254 | Come, what''s your position? |
3254 | Come; what was your game?" |
3254 | Come? |
3254 | Comin''on nicely, is n''t she?" |
3254 | Coming Sheila?" |
3254 | Coming to lunch, Scantlebury? |
3254 | Coming, Dad? |
3254 | Coming, Scantlebury? |
3254 | Confess that she is beautiful, hein?" |
3254 | Confound their thick- skinned charitable souls, what do they know of how a sensitive woman suffers? |
3254 | Contrary? |
3254 | Contrary? |
3254 | Cook''s been in the family longer than I have-- haven''t you, Cook? |
3254 | Cooling your heels, Peachey? |
3254 | Could Fate be cruel enough to deal one so soft and loving such a blow? |
3254 | Could Reggie Huntingdon do anything, now he''s home? |
3254 | Could Sylvia not let him keep both her love and the girl''s? |
3254 | Could a man suffer from passion, heart- searchings, or misgivings, and remain a gentleman? |
3254 | Could a person whose condition was deplorable find time or strength for any sort of lurid exhibition such as this? |
3254 | Could any Forsyte of her generation grasp how rude and brutal life was? |
3254 | Could anything be more reprehensible in a married man? |
3254 | Could anything be said with truth, save that we knew nothing? |
3254 | Could anything like passion spring up in those dismal alleys? |
3254 | Could beauty be confided to him? |
3254 | Could civilised restraint and tolerance go further? |
3254 | Could civilization be built on any other? |
3254 | Could culture ever make headway among the blind partisanships, the hand- to- mouth mentality, the cheap excitements of this town life? |
3254 | Could fear go with a smile? |
3254 | Could he accept from her such a sacrifice, exact a daily misery, see her droop and fade beneath it? |
3254 | Could he bear his own happiness at such a cost? |
3254 | Could he even consult Dolly? |
3254 | Could he ever have peace of mind for it again? |
3254 | Could he face all that he had been through that morning; face it day after day, night after night? |
3254 | Could he face it? |
3254 | Could he give up feeling he''s a leader? |
3254 | Could he help the girl''s kissing him? |
3254 | Could he let himself sink down and merge till he was just unseen leaven of good- fellowship and good- will, working in the common bread?'' |
3254 | Could he not make her see the truth, that it was only her he REALLY loved? |
3254 | Could he really be considered a butler? |
3254 | Could he rely on that? |
3254 | Could he say:"Is my only joy"? |
3254 | Could he tell me where M. Le Ferrier was? |
3254 | Could he trust himself? |
3254 | Could he-- could Soames turn him into a limited company? |
3254 | Could it be less than twenty- four hours since he had picked up her handkerchief, not thirty yards away? |
3254 | Could it be this? |
3254 | Could it have been to- day she had lain on the ground with tears of despair running down on to her hands? |
3254 | Could it turn out well? |
3254 | Could n''t I even nip out and get the car round and send them home in it? |
3254 | Could n''t help behaving like a shop- girl? |
3254 | Could n''t help it? |
3254 | Could n''t help listening? |
3254 | Could n''t she be induced to go back home? |
3254 | Could n''t they watch each other? |
3254 | Could n''t we-- couldn''t you go? |
3254 | Could n''t we? |
3254 | Could n''t you learn your son instead? |
3254 | Could n''t you see they were having the most high jinks? |
3254 | Could n''t you send Derek and Sheila abroad for a bit?" |
3254 | Could n''t you stop it? |
3254 | Could n''t you? |
3254 | Could nobody persuade him? |
3254 | Could not Gyp come down? |
3254 | Could one act love, then? |
3254 | Could one be everybody''s brother if one were blind to their existence? |
3254 | Could she do anything for Miss Freeland? |
3254 | Could she forgive herself for that? |
3254 | Could she have borne that anyone should see herself thus prostrate? |
3254 | Could she help? |
3254 | Could she meet Miltoun now that she knew of the passion in him, and he knew that she knew it? |
3254 | Could she not bear that? |
3254 | Could she not go riding with her own father? |
3254 | Could she not see things in proportion? |
3254 | Could she not take it up to him herself? |
3254 | Could she not? |
3254 | Could she open her mouth at all without rousing painful feeling of some sort? |
3254 | Could she speak of her wedding, and betray Miltoun''s presence? |
3254 | Could she, would she understand the silence in which he was gazing at that picture? |
3254 | Could that be Gyp? |
3254 | Could that man outside hear? |
3254 | Could that one act of violent possession be still alive within her? |
3254 | Could there be men who looked on women as their property? |
3254 | Could there really be danger from such an old idol? |
3254 | Could they be? |
3254 | Could they help a blue paper printing the words,''New complications,''which he had read that morning? |
3254 | Could they just drive, and then perhaps sit in the park? |
3254 | Could they make you dream, and see life rosy for a little? |
3254 | Could they not be left to themselves? |
3254 | Could they not travel-- go round the world? |
3254 | Could they really be going at all? |
3254 | Could this be good for her? |
3254 | Could we go by a train before they are down?" |
3254 | Could you arrange to- morrow morning? |
3254 | Could you come back a little later? |
3254 | Could you do anything for me with her?" |
3254 | Could you get him too? |
3254 | Could you get me my sewing from the seat? |
3254 | Could you get rid of it a little? |
3254 | Could you give him a bed for the night?" |
3254 | Could you make me a pair of Russia leather boots?" |
3254 | Could you sit, and listen to it?" |
3254 | Could you?" |
3254 | Couldn''t-- what? |
3254 | Courtier lives?" |
3254 | Courtier to do with this good lady?" |
3254 | Courtier, before I forget-- who is this Mrs. Lees Noel that I hear so much of?" |
3254 | Courtier, is it? |
3254 | Courtier,"said Lord Dennis dryly:"Are you after him?" |
3254 | Courtier? |
3254 | Courtier? |
3254 | Courtier? |
3254 | Courtier?" |
3254 | Courtier?" |
3254 | Courtier?" |
3254 | Cream? |
3254 | Cremer? |
3254 | Crocker, is n''t it? |
3254 | Crossing the road, he clenched his fists, and said in a voice which anguish made somewhat shrill:"Are you hungry, my friends?" |
3254 | Cure for all evils, um? |
3254 | Customs are only for Society?" |
3254 | Cut and run? |
3254 | Cuthcott?" |
3254 | Cuthcott?" |
3254 | Cyneec? |
3254 | Cynical? |
3254 | D''ye hear me? |
3254 | D''ye mean that? |
3254 | D''ye realise that I''m''very nearly round ye? |
3254 | D''you ever have bronchitis? |
3254 | D''you find much hatred in your household, miss?" |
3254 | D''you find that the general impression? |
3254 | D''you follow me? |
3254 | D''you hear the owls?" |
3254 | D''you know it? |
3254 | D''you know my daughter?" |
3254 | D''you know that child knew nothing? |
3254 | D''you know that? |
3254 | D''you know the price, Poulder? |
3254 | D''you know what I live in terror of? |
3254 | D''you know what they are? |
3254 | D''you know what time it is, Bob? |
3254 | D''you know, sir-- these terms, they''re the very same we drew up together, you and I, and put to both sides before the fight began? |
3254 | D''you mean I''m not a good husband and father? |
3254 | D''you mean it''s really the first----? |
3254 | D''you mean she-- loves you? |
3254 | D''you mean that he-- er-- intends to put this forward to- morrow? |
3254 | D''you mean to say Joy would n''t do anything on earth for her Mother, or Molly for Joy? |
3254 | D''you mean to say that Ventnor came here about my lending money? |
3254 | D''you mean to say that bid was for you? |
3254 | D''you mean to say that was n''t a no- ball? |
3254 | D''you mean to say that''s all you''ve got, Uncle Tom? |
3254 | D''you mean to say you believe what this fellow says? |
3254 | D''you mean to say you did n''t go to bed? |
3254 | D''you mean to say you knew? |
3254 | D''you mean you''ll stick to me? |
3254 | D''you mean you''ve never noticed how they treat each other? |
3254 | D''you mind going yourself, Adela? |
3254 | D''you mind if I go and try to get him on the telephone? |
3254 | D''you mind letting me see that a minute? |
3254 | D''you mind my asking? |
3254 | D''you realise that you''re encouraging me to go wrong? |
3254 | D''you really want the police, De Levis? |
3254 | D''you remember cashing a cheque for Mr. Walter last Friday week-- the day he went to Trenton? |
3254 | D''you remember that hammer when we were boys and you riled me, up in the long room? |
3254 | D''you remember that last night in the wood? |
3254 | D''you remember your rockettin''woodcock last year, Jerry?" |
3254 | D''you say that justifies me in shedding the blood of my boss? |
3254 | D''you say we ought to give up Gib?" |
3254 | D''you see anything of him?" |
3254 | D''you suppose I take you for a Company promoter? |
3254 | D''you suppose she was telling the truth about that young blackguard wanting to marry her? |
3254 | D''you tell me anything the parsons say can do me half the good of this pipe?" |
3254 | D''you think Hornblower had a father? |
3254 | D''you think I deserted you, or what? |
3254 | D''you think I enjoy trying to keep things straight?" |
3254 | D''you think I like living here? |
3254 | D''you think I would n''t have--? |
3254 | D''you think I''m going to whine to it to put the plaster on? |
3254 | D''you think I''ve ever liked it? |
3254 | D''you think I''ve ever----"But she did not finish that saying: D''you think I''ve ever loved you? |
3254 | D''you think I''ve got a chance, Mr. Lennan? |
3254 | D''you think he did it on purpose? |
3254 | D''you think he knows his own mind? |
3254 | D''you think he understands that?" |
3254 | D''you think she''s asleep?" |
3254 | D''you think that improves you? |
3254 | D''you think the sea- voyage.... Is she strong enough to be moved now at once?" |
3254 | D''you think there''s a chance of that-- do you? |
3254 | D''you think they''ll do her any good? |
3254 | D''you think this man really knows? |
3254 | D''you think we could stay? |
3254 | D''you think you understand what I mean? |
3254 | D''you understand? |
3254 | D''you understand? |
3254 | D''you understand?" |
3254 | D''you want any more illustrations, Mary? |
3254 | D''you want everybody in the house knocked up so that their keys can be tried? |
3254 | D''you want to see me? |
3254 | D''you want to see''er? |
3254 | D''yu think I do n''t know how gells oughter be''ave before confirmation? |
3254 | DE LEVIS points stage Right] See the rail of my balcony, and the rail of the next? |
3254 | DO you know her? |
3254 | DON''T you like it?" |
3254 | Dad is n''t here; why should n''t I ride with him?" |
3254 | Dad, have you noticed Johnny? |
3254 | Daddy, have you told those other two where we''re going? |
3254 | Daddy, why is there a war? |
3254 | Daddy, you are so-- don''t you know that you''re the despair of all social reformers? |
3254 | Daisy, which of us will you''ave? |
3254 | Dallison?" |
3254 | Dallison?" |
3254 | Dalton cried out,''What are you here for again, you mad girl?'' |
3254 | Damyers, Mrs. Dallison? |
3254 | Dancing''s for the young, eh?" |
3254 | Dancy, do you understand? |
3254 | Daphne Wing finished it for him:"My kind of beauty?" |
3254 | Daphne Wing, still motionless in the centre of her little crowded dressing- room said, in a matter- of- fact voice:"You are polite, are n''t you? |
3254 | Dared he speak? |
3254 | Dared he? |
3254 | Dared she now plunge in on this private agony? |
3254 | Dared she propose it? |
3254 | Dark? |
3254 | Dartie?" |
3254 | Dartie?" |
3254 | Davis was not here again after that Saturday, was he? |
3254 | Dawney said slowly:"B--- is a beast; I''m sorry for the poor woman; but what can she do alone?" |
3254 | Dawney?" |
3254 | De Levis? |
3254 | Dead? |
3254 | Death? |
3254 | Debts? |
3254 | Defeat? |
3254 | Defendant John Builder-- what do you say to all this? |
3254 | Delighted to meet you; often heard of your books; Mrs. Pogram has read one-- let me see--''The Bannister,''was it?" |
3254 | Deny? |
3254 | Deplorable sight, is n''t it?" |
3254 | Der Bub-- die baby hat typhus? |
3254 | Derek exclaimed at once:"Why did you let them, Father? |
3254 | Derek''s voice whispered hoarsely:"What? |
3254 | Derek?" |
3254 | Des oeillets rouges? |
3254 | Dick, is love always like this? |
3254 | Did Barra tell you how, when they come back-- all these fighters-- they are going to rule, and manage the future of the world? |
3254 | Did Father know that he called her mother"Annette"? |
3254 | Did Fleur know of that, too? |
3254 | Did I ever tell you about St. Francis of Assisi? |
3254 | Did I hurt you?" |
3254 | Did I say that? |
3254 | Did I understand him to say that he offers her marriage? |
3254 | Did I? |
3254 | Did I? |
3254 | Did I?" |
3254 | Did Jolyon wear a plate? |
3254 | Did Kentman ever give the police the numbers of those notes, WINSOR? |
3254 | Did Nature permit a Forsyte not to make a slave of what he adored? |
3254 | Did Soames think they must go down if there was a war? |
3254 | Did any one help you to open the door? |
3254 | Did anyone see you go in last night, when you first went to her? |
3254 | Did anything happen that morning? |
3254 | Did flies get into the cells? |
3254 | Did he come the heavy father? |
3254 | Did he dare ask HER? |
3254 | Did he envy them? |
3254 | Did he ever give you any money? |
3254 | Did he ever give you reason to suspect his honesty? |
3254 | Did he ever speak to you about a cheque? |
3254 | Did he give an explanation?" |
3254 | Did he give her the protection? |
3254 | Did he give you his name and address? |
3254 | Did he ill- treat you, or what? |
3254 | Did he know any one except himself who would have been such a flat? |
3254 | Did he know anyone in Torquay? |
3254 | Did he know how near his throat was to being scragged? |
3254 | Did he leave anything for me? |
3254 | Did he love her? |
3254 | Did he mean anything-- or was it simply his way of putting things? |
3254 | Did he mean that he and B. were going to separate? |
3254 | Did he not belong to the League for Suppression of Interference with the Liberty of the Subject? |
3254 | Did he or did he not try to shorten his life?" |
3254 | Did he quite understand that Mr. Forsyte wished a dozen bottles of the champagne from Whiteley''s to be put out? |
3254 | Did he really belong to her, and she to him-- for good? |
3254 | Did he run into debt, or gamble, or swear; was he violent; were his friends rackety; did he stay out at night? |
3254 | Did he say"like the wind,"Adela? |
3254 | Did he summon you to his aid? |
3254 | Did he take the walnuts? |
3254 | Did he think that in some way he was being outmanoeuvered? |
3254 | Did he try to get you away from me? |
3254 | Did he-- did he ever hear anything of Irene nowadays? |
3254 | Did his face look as if he''d been strangled? |
3254 | Did his heart jump? |
3254 | Did it all collapse?" |
3254 | Did it bar him thus utterly? |
3254 | Did it belong to you-- what is that but stealing? |
3254 | Did it hover in this room, visible still to the boy? |
3254 | Did it matter what happened to her? |
3254 | Did it matter what he wrote, what deliberate lie, if it helped Nell over the first shock? |
3254 | Did it matter what people thought of her? |
3254 | Did it matter where he went, what he did, or when he did it? |
3254 | Did it mean that she had really left him-- was not coming back? |
3254 | Did it? |
3254 | Did my brother ever see him before? |
3254 | Did n''t I, Nollie? |
3254 | Did n''t I?" |
3254 | Did n''t Joy come and tell you? |
3254 | Did n''t hear of the sale on the course at all? |
3254 | Did n''t include a fox did it? |
3254 | Did n''t it occur to you that the only thing for you to do was to confess to your employers, and restore the money? |
3254 | Did n''t look over your bettin''book? |
3254 | Did n''t she say what she wanted? |
3254 | Did n''t she? |
3254 | Did n''t you hear what Mrs. Gwyn said at dinner about the sun? |
3254 | Did n''t you miss them in the war? |
3254 | Did n''t you notice how you moved to Poulder''s orders, me boy; an''when he was gone, to mine? |
3254 | Did n''t you say it was dreadful going on with the men in this state? |
3254 | Did n''t you understand that I would rather you did not?" |
3254 | Did never two dart at each other, seize, and cling, and ever after be one? |
3254 | Did one ask restaurant proprietors with pretty daughters down to one''s country house without design? |
3254 | Did she care enough to break through all barriers, fling herself into midstream? |
3254 | Did she come alone? |
3254 | Did she die o''starvytion O.K.? |
3254 | Did she interest you?" |
3254 | Did she mean to be ironic? |
3254 | Did she not wish to speak of her, or had she simply-- not believed? |
3254 | Did she put her foot into it?" |
3254 | Did she realise that Val was at his best and quietest in her presence, and was that, perhaps, half the secret of his attraction for her? |
3254 | Did she really love him-- could she love him, and show not one little sign of it? |
3254 | Did she really mean that she could bear it if he drew back-- if he did look far, far into the future, and decided that she was not worth the candle? |
3254 | Did she think that he could not climb what-- her husband-- could? |
3254 | Did she understand? |
3254 | Did she want his consolation? |
3254 | Did she want to mix with the rift- raff there; wish him to make an exhibition of himself in this hurly- burly? |
3254 | Did she, now? |
3254 | Did she? |
3254 | Did she? |
3254 | Did that do anybody harm? |
3254 | Did that fellow Malise put all this into your head? |
3254 | Did that surprise you, or not? |
3254 | Did that woman wear a plate? |
3254 | Did the Law not know that a man''s name was to him the apple of his eye, that it was far harder to be regarded as cuckold than as seducer? |
3254 | Did the ghost of that grand passion linger in some corner of his heart? |
3254 | Did the man resist?" |
3254 | Did the whispering in the porch, then, mean nothing? |
3254 | Did the wind break the wine- glass, or did it come in two in your hand? |
3254 | Did they deceive? |
3254 | Did they find any footmarks in the grounds below that torn creeper? |
3254 | Did they learn you anything? |
3254 | Did they look frightened, or shy, or fierce, or what? |
3254 | Did they think I was going to eat the muck they shoved in? |
3254 | Did they think at all, these men and women in the street? |
3254 | Did this fellow then really love-- almost as he had loved? |
3254 | Did we shake Kentman or Goole? |
3254 | Did we touch top note with that Sonata?" |
3254 | Did women have it too? |
3254 | Did y''ever know anybody that swore they were? |
3254 | Did ye ever year tell of Orphus? |
3254 | Did ye have your supper anywheres?" |
3254 | Did ye tell her she might have her price? |
3254 | Did you afterwards communicate the loss to your employer, and did he send you to the police station? |
3254 | Did you appear on the scene, as the constable says, during the struggle? |
3254 | Did you at the time of your missing the box find her in the room alone? |
3254 | Did you call, Miss? |
3254 | Did you come up again for anything? |
3254 | Did you come up again, to bring the clothes back? |
3254 | Did you draw the curtains?" |
3254 | Did you enjoy your sight of''life,''mademoiselle?" |
3254 | Did you enjoy''Pagliacci''?" |
3254 | Did you ever ask anybody for anything? |
3254 | Did you ever come in there? |
3254 | Did you ever go to see old Timothy?" |
3254 | Did you ever hear him, Lady Agatha? |
3254 | Did you ever hear such folly? |
3254 | Did you ever hear the story of Faust? |
3254 | Did you ever know any one that could? |
3254 | Did you ever know anybody stand on their rights except out of wounded pride or for the sake of their own comfort? |
3254 | Did you ever love very deeply, Uncle Jolyon?" |
3254 | Did you ever love very deeply, Uncle Jolyon?" |
3254 | Did you ever pick up a lost dog? |
3254 | Did you ever read''Erewhon,''where the people broke up their machines? |
3254 | Did you ever see a stalactite? |
3254 | Did you ever see anything finer than this pasture? |
3254 | Did you ever see anything so disgusting? |
3254 | Did you ever see her look like that? |
3254 | Did you ever see him? |
3254 | Did you ever see such a dressing- gown? |
3254 | Did you ever see such a flame? |
3254 | Did you ever see such a gipsified object? |
3254 | Did you ever see such a mess? |
3254 | Did you ever see such arms? |
3254 | Did you ever see the Rhine? |
3254 | Did you ever see''Five Fingers''look so beautiful?" |
3254 | Did you ever watch a school of fishes coasting along a bank? |
3254 | Did you get a letter yesterday marked''Immediate''?" |
3254 | Did you get him? |
3254 | Did you give him your card? |
3254 | Did you give it? |
3254 | Did you go to bed at all? |
3254 | Did you happen to look out of your window, Mrs Dancy? |
3254 | Did you have a big triumph in Moscow and St. Petersburg? |
3254 | Did you have a good crossing?" |
3254 | Did you have adventures? |
3254 | Did you hear any language? |
3254 | Did you hear anything that throws light, Dancy? |
3254 | Did you hear anything? |
3254 | Did you hear him down in that spinney? |
3254 | Did you hear the bugle? |
3254 | Did you ill- treat her? |
3254 | Did you keep Sundays in there? |
3254 | Did you know him, Dick?" |
3254 | Did you know that Captain Fort was here yesterday?" |
3254 | Did you know that I was in London? |
3254 | Did you know whether she was happy with her husband? |
3254 | Did you know, Peachey? |
3254 | Did you look for it? |
3254 | Did you look in my room? |
3254 | Did you look to see if his clothes were marked? |
3254 | Did you look under it after the theft? |
3254 | Did you make it clear? |
3254 | Did you meet the Jackmans? |
3254 | Did you never hear of passion, Edward? |
3254 | Did you never, feel wild in your heart, Daddy?" |
3254 | Did you notice anything else peculiar? |
3254 | Did you notice anything particular about Mr De Levis''s clothes? |
3254 | Did you notice how quickly he ran away from us? |
3254 | Did you notice the look on the face of the eldest?" |
3254 | Did you pay it? |
3254 | Did you put many men in prison?" |
3254 | Did you really? |
3254 | Did you really? |
3254 | Did you ring, Miss? |
3254 | Did you ring, ma''am? |
3254 | Did you say anything very--""Did I? |
3254 | Did you say-- my daughter? |
3254 | Did you see her? |
3254 | Did you see him-- his forehead?" |
3254 | Did you see him?" |
3254 | Did you see the cigarettes scattered on the bed? |
3254 | Did you speak to them on that occasion? |
3254 | Did you take anything from the- body? |
3254 | Did you take her into custody? |
3254 | Did you tell her that?" |
3254 | Did you tell your friend what had happened? |
3254 | Did you thereupon ask him in what manner he had stolen the box? |
3254 | Did you try the whitebait last night? |
3254 | Did you want anything, sir? |
3254 | Did you wear peg- top trousers, and dundreary''s?" |
3254 | Did you witness any particular violence other than a resistance to arrest? |
3254 | Did you, Daddy? |
3254 | Did you, Squire?" |
3254 | Did you--? |
3254 | Did you?" |
3254 | Did your mistress say anything before she went out? |
3254 | Did your two Cooks tell you I''m here? |
3254 | Did''e now? |
3254 | Did''e''ave a flute like yu? |
3254 | Didn''I? |
3254 | Dined in? |
3254 | Dipsomaniac? |
3254 | Dirty linen washed in public? |
3254 | Dis is nod your baby? |
3254 | Divested of the romantic glamour which my friend is casting over the case, is this anything but an ordinary forgery? |
3254 | Do I know the world? |
3254 | Do I look like that? |
3254 | Do I say''Hands off''? |
3254 | Do I, to speak in the vernacular, care any buttons whether we stick to Gibraltar or not so long as men do but live in kindness? |
3254 | Do fellows sleep under here?" |
3254 | Do general rules of conduct take account of the variations of the individual spirit?" |
3254 | Do n''t Bulgin give you anythin''? |
3254 | Do n''t I know that? |
3254 | Do n''t I? |
3254 | Do n''t believe a word of what? |
3254 | Do n''t he? |
3254 | Do n''t let him go up? |
3254 | Do n''t mean that? |
3254 | Do n''t tell me you gave four hundred for that?" |
3254 | Do n''t their steps fit? |
3254 | Do n''t they look happy? |
3254 | Do n''t we get anything for the old Forsytes? |
3254 | Do n''t you always?" |
3254 | Do n''t you bless the day that gave you a French mother, and a name like yours?" |
3254 | Do n''t you ever look at her face? |
3254 | Do n''t you ever look at your own face, father? |
3254 | Do n''t you feel it?" |
3254 | Do n''t you feel you could n''t, Adela? |
3254 | Do n''t you generally go down? |
3254 | Do n''t you get any news ever? |
3254 | Do n''t you get awfully bored having nothing to do?" |
3254 | Do n''t you know I''m-- I''m within an ace of a Judgeship? |
3254 | Do n''t you know how these things come about? |
3254 | Do n''t you know that I was in our bedroom all the time with the door open? |
3254 | Do n''t you know that I''ve been shadowed these last three months? |
3254 | Do n''t you know what it''s costing him? |
3254 | Do n''t you know you''ve done a beastly thing?" |
3254 | Do n''t you know?" |
3254 | Do n''t you like it, though?" |
3254 | Do n''t you like it?" |
3254 | Do n''t you like me enough? |
3254 | Do n''t you love me enough?" |
3254 | Do n''t you really mean to come any further with me, Bird?" |
3254 | Do n''t you really think we might get on better together-- if I went away? |
3254 | Do n''t you remember her face? |
3254 | Do n''t you remember the Bly case? |
3254 | Do n''t you remember you said you was a Liberal, same as your father, and you asked me wot I was? |
3254 | Do n''t you see that he''s brought satire into sculpture? |
3254 | Do n''t you see, Jon?" |
3254 | Do n''t you see? |
3254 | Do n''t you think he''s splendid?" |
3254 | Do n''t you think it was rather sporting of me to buy these[ She touches the gardenias] with the last shilling over from my cab fare? |
3254 | Do n''t you think so, B.?" |
3254 | Do n''t you think so, Dodo? |
3254 | Do n''t you think so? |
3254 | Do n''t you think so?" |
3254 | Do n''t you think so?" |
3254 | Do n''t you think the wind is the most melancholy thing in the world? |
3254 | Do n''t you think they ought to have been challenged? |
3254 | Do n''t you think things are jolliest at night?" |
3254 | Do n''t you think this young man ought to come with us?" |
3254 | Do n''t you think we might give her a chance, Cook? |
3254 | Do n''t you? |
3254 | Do n''t your own hearth and home come first? |
3254 | Do nothing and trust to luck? |
3254 | Do tell me, Mr Jacob; is he going to win? |
3254 | Do the police know you-- because-- of your life? |
3254 | Do these few outrages justify us in stealing the freedom of this little people? |
3254 | Do they go to school? |
3254 | Do they know of the affair? |
3254 | Do they know, as we do, that their time must come? |
3254 | Do they look out this way?" |
3254 | Do they never change partners? |
3254 | Do they read Tolstoi in your country? |
3254 | Do they want me in Court? |
3254 | Do they? |
3254 | Do we control these things? |
3254 | Do what, ma''am? |
3254 | Do ye go lyin''down an''trustin''to the tender mercies of this merciful Nature? |
3254 | Do ye think blanks loike me ought to exist? |
3254 | Do you accuse me too? |
3254 | Do you agree with him? |
3254 | Do you always come out and pray to that tree?" |
3254 | Do you approve of Johnny getting entangled with this girl? |
3254 | Do you believe in a future life, Lord William? |
3254 | Do you believe in a future life?" |
3254 | Do you believe in it?" |
3254 | Do you believe that? |
3254 | Do you blame me? |
3254 | Do you call this cricket? |
3254 | Do you carry your unnatural feeling so far as to be sorry for that? |
3254 | Do you credit such a-- such an object? |
3254 | Do you dare--? |
3254 | Do you desire my company, Monsieur? |
3254 | Do you drink it? |
3254 | Do you ever see them, Babs; or are you, like me, obtuse?" |
3254 | Do you feel a draught? |
3254 | Do you feel it, darling?" |
3254 | Do you find anything to do?" |
3254 | Do you find it hard? |
3254 | Do you follow that? |
3254 | Do you get me?" |
3254 | Do you get out much?" |
3254 | Do you give him a good character all round, or do you not? |
3254 | Do you hate the rich? |
3254 | Do you hate us veree much? |
3254 | Do you have a sword, Val, or only a popgun?" |
3254 | Do you hear, Tod?" |
3254 | Do you imagine I think myself better than the humblest private fighting out there? |
3254 | Do you imagine he''ll have the necessary brutality to get rid of you? |
3254 | Do you imagine those people give anything away to our sort unless they''re forced? |
3254 | Do you insinuate that my heart''s not in the right place? |
3254 | Do you know Crum?" |
3254 | Do you know Jaspar Bellew?" |
3254 | Do you know Orleens Street? |
3254 | Do you know any drill, Val?" |
3254 | Do you know her address? |
3254 | Do you know him?" |
3254 | Do you know how pretty you look, Annette?" |
3254 | Do you know that Jolyon''s boy is staying with Val and his wife?" |
3254 | Do you know that he did? |
3254 | Do you know that man Roberts, Frost? |
3254 | Do you know that thing of Dowson''s:''I have been faithful to thee, Cynara, in my fashion''? |
3254 | Do you know that your pockets are one enormous hole? |
3254 | Do you know the prisoners? |
3254 | Do you know them? |
3254 | Do you know this for midge- bites?" |
3254 | Do you know what I have felt like all this time? |
3254 | Do you know what sort of people Athene associates with now-- I suppose you see her? |
3254 | Do you know what the girl wishes, Studdenham? |
3254 | Do you know what the subsoil is?" |
3254 | Do you know what time it is?" |
3254 | Do you know what trying to bridge such a gulf as this is like? |
3254 | Do you know what you''ve done? |
3254 | Do you know where he lives?" |
3254 | Do you know where my son is? |
3254 | Do you know you have n''t seen me for eight weeks? |
3254 | Do you know, the first time I ever saw you I thought of a picture by him?" |
3254 | Do you like Daddy? |
3254 | Do you like Persians? |
3254 | Do you like Uncle Nic?" |
3254 | Do you like her very much?" |
3254 | Do you like his expression?" |
3254 | Do you like it?" |
3254 | Do you like it?" |
3254 | Do you like my Ophelia dance?" |
3254 | Do you like my dress? |
3254 | Do you like my name? |
3254 | Do you like the name''Cynara''?" |
3254 | Do you like this life?" |
3254 | Do you live here all the year? |
3254 | Do you live here? |
3254 | Do you love another?" |
3254 | Do you love me, Gyp?" |
3254 | Do you love me, Mum?" |
3254 | Do you love me?" |
3254 | Do you love your Father as much as me? |
3254 | Do you mean he deliberately sat down, with the intention-- of-- er? |
3254 | Do you mean he insinuates that Mr. Hilary has anything to do with-- with this girl, or what?" |
3254 | Do you mean she does? |
3254 | Do you mean that girl we saw dancing in the Pandemonium Ballet? |
3254 | Do you mean that she came to the office? |
3254 | Do you mean that you had another person''s purse, and that this man took it too? |
3254 | Do you mean the woman said that? |
3254 | Do you mean this? |
3254 | Do you mean to say that ball was out, Letty? |
3254 | Do you mean to say that you were so drunk that you can remember nothing? |
3254 | Do you mean to tell me that because she acted like a Christian to that man she is to be punished for it in this way?" |
3254 | Do you mean your Father? |
3254 | Do you mind calling me M. M. and letting me call you F. F.? |
3254 | Do you mind, Daddy?" |
3254 | Do you mind? |
3254 | Do you mind?" |
3254 | Do you never make poetry here, and dream dreams, among your mountains? |
3254 | Do you never-- never-- feel as if you were wasting yourself on me?" |
3254 | Do you object?" |
3254 | Do you quite understand? |
3254 | Do you read much poetry?" |
3254 | Do you read poetry?" |
3254 | Do you read? |
3254 | Do you read? |
3254 | Do you realise that I''ve got gout? |
3254 | Do you realise your position? |
3254 | Do you realize how utterly unhappy you''re making her? |
3254 | Do you realize that you''re letting a woman, who has treated you abominably;--yes, abominably--go scot- free, to live comfortably with another man? |
3254 | Do you really mean to fight to a finish, Chairman? |
3254 | Do you really mean, Margery, that your husband ca n''t realise the position she''s placed in?" |
3254 | Do you really want to keep it from him? |
3254 | Do you really wish me to take them back to him? |
3254 | Do you remember St Offert-- cards? |
3254 | Do you remember dear old Blakeway? |
3254 | Do you remember giving any one a drink? |
3254 | Do you remember that May Week, Edward? |
3254 | Do you remember that day on our honeymoon, going up Ben Lawers? |
3254 | Do you remember that moonlit night at grape harvest? |
3254 | Do you remember the last day of the covert shooting? |
3254 | Do you remember these things, Jimmy? |
3254 | Do you remember this man being outside when you came in? |
3254 | Do you remember what he answered? |
3254 | Do you remember when the war broke out, how angry you were with me because I said we were fighting from a sense of self- preservation? |
3254 | Do you remember when you used to come into the nursery because Jenny was pretty? |
3254 | Do you remember?" |
3254 | Do you rule this country or do you not? |
3254 | Do you see any sign of his appreciating beauty?" |
3254 | Do you seriously think you''re going to make it any better by marrying her? |
3254 | Do you seriously wish me to? |
3254 | Do you still feel your back?" |
3254 | Do you still love him? |
3254 | Do you still think it a happy release?" |
3254 | Do you suggest that I bet in ready money? |
3254 | Do you suggest that he left you to better his position?" |
3254 | Do you suppose I am alive? |
3254 | Do you suppose I can believe that?" |
3254 | Do you suppose that if it was n''t I should ever have left my village; or gone through all that I''ve gone through, to get as far even as I am? |
3254 | Do you tell me I''m any stricter than nine out of ten men? |
3254 | Do you tell me that my son----? |
3254 | Do you think I could have stayed there all my life?" |
3254 | Do you think I could tame it in my little glass bog?" |
3254 | Do you think I do n''t care for her happiness? |
3254 | Do you think I do n''t know that I''m only tolerated for my money? |
3254 | Do you think I have n''t felt it going on for months? |
3254 | Do you think I loved him? |
3254 | Do you think I ought to put passion into that? |
3254 | Do you think I shall do well? |
3254 | Do you think I shall?" |
3254 | Do you think I should make a success in Budapest or Moscow?" |
3254 | Do you think I would have married you? |
3254 | Do you think I''m very English?" |
3254 | Do you think a divorce is really necessary?" |
3254 | Do you think a woman ca n''t feel passion at my age? |
3254 | Do you think any good end is being served?" |
3254 | Do you think anyone saw my brother come to you?" |
3254 | Do you think growing up is nice, Herr Harz?" |
3254 | Do you think he meant it?" |
3254 | Do you think me an awful coward for coming? |
3254 | Do you think me very selfish, Uncle Tom? |
3254 | Do you think she''d have married you if she''d known you were going to leave her like this? |
3254 | Do you think that you two quite know all you''re doing? |
3254 | Do you think the governors will take him on again, sir? |
3254 | Do you think the mere accident of your being or not being at home can affect my decision as to what my duty is?" |
3254 | Do you think there is any man in the world that I would n''t hate the sight of if I knew that to see him gave you a moment''s pain?" |
3254 | Do you think they do, those people who want to chase us out? |
3254 | Do you think violent rebellion is ever justifiable?" |
3254 | Do you think you can possibly be happy with this girl?" |
3254 | Do you think you quite grasp the alternative? |
3254 | Do you think your code applies to me? |
3254 | Do you think your mother would mind if I took him up to have a wash? |
3254 | Do you think your songs worth listening to? |
3254 | Do you twig? |
3254 | Do you understand me? |
3254 | Do you understand that it must all be secret-- underground?" |
3254 | Do you understand what all this means to Nedda? |
3254 | Do you understand? |
3254 | Do you understand? |
3254 | Do you understand? |
3254 | Do you understand?" |
3254 | Do you wand any hoods?" |
3254 | Do you wand some boods?" |
3254 | Do you want a lot of reasons, or the real one? |
3254 | Do you want any cigarettes, Jon?" |
3254 | Do you want him here? |
3254 | Do you want him in or out, me Lord? |
3254 | Do you want me any more? |
3254 | Do you want me to feel myself a cur? |
3254 | Do you want me, sir? |
3254 | Do you want that? |
3254 | Do you want to be a different woman? |
3254 | Do you want to do away with it?" |
3254 | Do you want to have a look at him? |
3254 | Do you want to see them?" |
3254 | Do you wish for the reason? |
3254 | Do you wish the case to be settled here, or do you wish it to go before a jury? |
3254 | Do you wish to say anything before I take her? |
3254 | Do you wish to sleep here? |
3254 | Do you''ear? |
3254 | Do you, General? |
3254 | Do you, mother? |
3254 | Do you, when you want it, here? |
3254 | Do you? |
3254 | Do you? |
3254 | Do you? |
3254 | Do you? |
3254 | Do you?" |
3254 | Do? |
3254 | Doctor-- have you? |
3254 | Dodo, what can we say to put him clean off the scent? |
3254 | Dodo? |
3254 | Does Daddy often? |
3254 | Does Lord William know? |
3254 | Does Mr. Anthony think it brave to fight against women and children? |
3254 | Does Mr. Pogram come to see you?" |
3254 | Does a type survive its age; live on into times that have no room for it? |
3254 | Does any one guess? |
3254 | Does anyone about here know you are his wife? |
3254 | Does happiness ever last?" |
3254 | Does he always call you his dear heart, Mummy? |
3254 | Does he do other work?" |
3254 | Does he help? |
3254 | Does he know I''m back?'' |
3254 | Does he know how ill you are? |
3254 | Does he know?" |
3254 | Does he love anyone just now?" |
3254 | Does he mean to tell us that this sale was the result of nerves?" |
3254 | Does he mind? |
3254 | Does he put his boots out? |
3254 | Does he think it brave to set children crying with hunger, an''women shivering with cold? |
3254 | Does he treat you badly? |
3254 | Does he, can he, go quite far enough to meet the case? |
3254 | Does he? |
3254 | Does his father agree? |
3254 | Does it hurt you here?" |
3254 | Does it not squall?" |
3254 | Does it suffer, do you think? |
3254 | Does n''t it strike you as amazing how sure they are of being in the right? |
3254 | Does n''t she look lovely this evening?" |
3254 | Does n''t she really want me to kiss her?'' |
3254 | Does not that run through all the Sermon on the Mount?" |
3254 | Does our rule bring blessing-- or does it not, Stephen? |
3254 | Does she always wear white dresses?'' |
3254 | Does she know Larry? |
3254 | Does she know everything, Molly? |
3254 | Does she make any money by them?" |
3254 | Does she mean to come out cubbing?" |
3254 | Does she want to be handed up to posterities a little peacock along with the other little birds?" |
3254 | Does she wear them? |
3254 | Does she? |
3254 | Does that make up for being spat at as I was last night? |
3254 | Does that meet your wishes? |
3254 | Does the difficulty of making oneself heard provoke confidential utterance? |
3254 | Does your Dad ride?" |
3254 | Does your Worship require this witness in the box any longer? |
3254 | Does your dog swot cats?" |
3254 | Does your father take any interest in this? |
3254 | Does your sister shave? |
3254 | Does''e? |
3254 | Doin''a bit o''skylarkin''? |
3254 | Doing? |
3254 | Dost thou know who myde thee?" |
3254 | Dot? |
3254 | Dot? |
3254 | Down the banisters? |
3254 | Down there; see? |
3254 | Down? |
3254 | Drawin''the curtains back first? |
3254 | Dreaming of your victories, eh?" |
3254 | Drink, and wait? |
3254 | Driving away from England, from all I''m used to- driving to- what?'' |
3254 | Du cafe?" |
3254 | Du they tache yu to love yore neighbours? |
3254 | During those four minutes you say you remember nothing? |
3254 | Earthly love-- heavenly love; was there any analogy between them? |
3254 | Ease for her conscience? |
3254 | Edgar-- anything? |
3254 | Edmund?" |
3254 | Eh, Molly? |
3254 | Eh, what?" |
3254 | Eh? |
3254 | Eh? |
3254 | Eh? |
3254 | Eh? |
3254 | Eh? |
3254 | Eh? |
3254 | Eight? |
3254 | Ellen Maiden----""Ellen Maiden?" |
3254 | Emigration? |
3254 | Emily crossed to the side of the bed where he was lying, and said softly,"How do you feel, James?" |
3254 | Enchanted, would it not be beautiful to see them lighted? |
3254 | End to what? |
3254 | Endangering? |
3254 | English, not of her religion, middle- aged, scarred as it were by domestic tragedy, what had he to give her? |
3254 | Enough to make it better to tell him? |
3254 | Er-- er----your master is not in? |
3254 | Er----Mr Challenger, I think? |
3254 | Ernie, will you play Dick and me? |
3254 | Even if pride would have let her ask, what good? |
3254 | Even if she is Old Combustion''s daughter- in- law? |
3254 | Even if we do, it wo n''t be so bad, Jack, will it? |
3254 | Even the very scarecrows? |
3254 | Even you wo n''t back me, Dolly? |
3254 | Ever been to the mountains? |
3254 | Ever do things of horses?" |
3254 | Ever go racin''? |
3254 | Ever had it? |
3254 | Everything has a beginning, has n''t it? |
3254 | Everything''s built on something, is n''t it? |
3254 | Exactly, but what is the game? |
3254 | Examine the bureau-- she is obviously always ringing for"the drumstick,"and saying:"Where''s this, Ellen, and where''s that? |
3254 | Excellent? |
3254 | Except for a line or two, and three or four grey hairs in his little dark moustache, had he aged any more than Irene? |
3254 | Excuse me, sir, is it-- is it worth it, sir? |
3254 | Expect it? |
3254 | Expression? |
3254 | Extraordinary dead- alive place, Widrington; I expect Mildenham is n''t much better?" |
3254 | FIRST S. How do you do, Mrs. Vane? |
3254 | Falder living with her, I suppose? |
3254 | Family well? |
3254 | Fancy the poor devils in London on a night like this, what? |
3254 | Farney?" |
3254 | Fat, lean, satirical, and compromising-- what was it that through diversity they had in common? |
3254 | Father in his room? |
3254 | Father, ca n''t you----? |
3254 | Faults on both sides? |
3254 | Feeling better, are you? |
3254 | Feeling better, my child? |
3254 | Felix, who could just see the dear baby, said dryly:"So that''s how you go about, is it? |
3254 | Felix, who felt the instinctive wisdom of that remark, answered helplessly:"What''s to be done, then?" |
3254 | Fetch the servants out of their rooms? |
3254 | Filled wiv? |
3254 | Fine night, eh?" |
3254 | Finest things ever written, are n''t they?" |
3254 | Fiorsen answered gloomily:"Triumphs? |
3254 | Fiorsen came up, put his arm round her from behind, and said with a fierce sigh:"Are they coming often-- these excellent people?" |
3254 | Fiorsen glared at him, and said:"Why did you throw me that cursed girl?" |
3254 | Fiorsen?" |
3254 | Fixing his eyes on her face, he asked:"Would you like me to stay?" |
3254 | Following I know not what impulse, I said:"Your case was dismissed, was n''t it?" |
3254 | Fonder than of me? |
3254 | For Miss Lanfarne? |
3254 | For a bit, just to see? |
3254 | For a few hours the fires of p- u- r- g- a- t- or- y will cease to burn--"What are the fires of p- u- r- g- a- t- o- r- y? |
3254 | For a minute he stood there doubtful; on which door should he knock? |
3254 | For a moment he looked deathly; then, moistening his lips, he said:"Larne-- Larne? |
3254 | For a moment they seemed saying:''Do n''t you want to know too much?'' |
3254 | For a wild moment Leila thought:''Shall I offer to go with him-- the two lost dogs together?'' |
3254 | For all her cautious resolutions Anna could not for the life of her help saying:"What, more than you?" |
3254 | For all our admiration we can not quite admit-- can we, when it comes to the point?" |
3254 | For all that, there was a curious avoidance of the spiritual significances of these things; or was it perhaps that such significances were not seen? |
3254 | For example-- is it your opinion that we should kill off the weak and diseased, and all that ca n''t jump around? |
3254 | For instance, if you had let this cottage to some one you thought was harming the neighborhood, would n''t you terminate his tenancy?" |
3254 | For instance, what are you and I, with our particular prejudices, going to do?" |
3254 | For instance, why do n''t we make Mary and Mother work for us like Kafir women? |
3254 | For months and months-- burned and longed; hoped against hope; killed a man in thought day by day? |
3254 | For one wild moment the thought had come to Soames:''Why should n''t I buy it back? |
3254 | For sheer emotional intensity had he ever-- old as he was-- passed through such a moment? |
3254 | For six thousand pounds? |
3254 | For six thousand? |
3254 | For the moon? |
3254 | For the sake of a passing shadow, to give up substance? |
3254 | For two thousand? |
3254 | For what could she say? |
3254 | For what do you imagine we are fighting this great war, if it is not to reestablish the belief in love as the guiding principle of life?" |
3254 | For what would even death be, but for parting? |
3254 | For who was there now in the room to mind? |
3254 | For whom an artist is''suspect''if he is not, in his work, a sportsman and a gentleman? |
3254 | For whom, then, did they take him? |
3254 | For, after all, what was land? |
3254 | For, if Miltoun had already made up his mind to marry her, without knowledge of the malicious rumour, what would not be his determination now? |
3254 | For, what is Style in its true and broadest sense save fidelity to idea and mood, and perfect balance in the clothing of them? |
3254 | Foreman?" |
3254 | Forty?" |
3254 | Four at a time, and five at the bottom? |
3254 | Four shillin''apiece to- night, see? |
3254 | Four thousand may I say? |
3254 | Four, is n''t it? |
3254 | Four? |
3254 | Francie alone had the hardihood to observe:"What is, then, Uncle Timothy?" |
3254 | Frankly, monsieur, do you not feel that with every revelation of your soul and feelings, virtue goes out of you? |
3254 | Freda? |
3254 | Freedom and self- determination, and all that? |
3254 | Friend of yours? |
3254 | Friends-- acquaintances? |
3254 | Friends? |
3254 | From Nedda:"What sort of Bigwigs are they, Dad?" |
3254 | From across the road she turned her head....''Won''t you come, too?'' |
3254 | From the police? |
3254 | From the time Davis went out to lunch to the time you cashed the cheque, how long do you say it must have been? |
3254 | From what corner of the room was that mute tremor coming? |
3254 | From what else could we draw our inspiration and comfort in these terrible days?" |
3254 | From your people? |
3254 | GRAVITER[ Suddenly] Were you blackmailing him? |
3254 | Gazing with queer and doubting commiseration at has mother] Well, old dear, wot shall we''ave it aht of-- the gold loving- cup, or-- what? |
3254 | General, d''you mind touching that bell? |
3254 | Gentle? |
3254 | Gentlemen, are you agreed on your verdict? |
3254 | Geof, can you eat preserved peaches? |
3254 | George answered her:"Well, Mother, and how have you been?" |
3254 | George answered:"What do you want me to say, Mother?" |
3254 | George, you''ll see Pasiance home?" |
3254 | George?" |
3254 | Gessler?" |
3254 | Gessler?" |
3254 | Get back to London, the men have nothing for ye? |
3254 | Get her a divorce?'' |
3254 | Give myself up, or what?" |
3254 | Give up everything? |
3254 | Give up-- Diana? |
3254 | Given him up, and why? |
3254 | Glancing slyly round at him, she said:"Did you notice how beautifully she asked herself?" |
3254 | Glass o''beer? |
3254 | Go amongst the poor? |
3254 | Go and see how likely it was that they might hang a fellow- man in place of himself? |
3254 | Go back on what I''ve said? |
3254 | Go out 8,000 miles, he and the girl, and leave a fellow- creature perhaps in mortal peril for an act committed by himself? |
3254 | Go out and meet everybody just as if nothing had happened? |
3254 | Go to Bury Street? |
3254 | Go up and see Val and warn him off? |
3254 | Go upstairs, wo n''t you, darling? |
3254 | God''s hands have n''t been particularly full, sir, have they-- two seconds out of twenty- four hours-- if man is His pet concern? |
3254 | Godleigh, you know the law about children? |
3254 | Goin''anywhere in particular?" |
3254 | Going out? |
3254 | Gone out on purpose? |
3254 | Good dinner? |
3254 | Good night, miss; anything else I can do for you?" |
3254 | Good night; and do n''t worry too much, will you?" |
3254 | Good reasons? |
3254 | Good- bye? |
3254 | Good- bye?" |
3254 | Good- lookin''woman; rather warm member, eh?" |
3254 | Gossip? |
3254 | Got a good husband? |
3254 | Got a match? |
3254 | Got any arnica?" |
3254 | Got any use for the rest of this bottle?" |
3254 | Got anything for dinner? |
3254 | Got anything on? |
3254 | Got everything packed? |
3254 | Got it marked carefully? |
3254 | Got that? |
3254 | Got the box? |
3254 | Got the sack? |
3254 | Gradman wrote on a piece of paper:"Life- interest-- anticipation-- divert interest-- absolute discretion...."and said:"What trustees? |
3254 | Granny, for Heaven''s sake, stand still; have n''t you squashed the hornet enough, even if he did come in where he had n''t any business?" |
3254 | Great steel bottles, large as Chica: bits of bottles, carrying off men''s heads? |
3254 | Gregory asked:"What now?" |
3254 | Gregory burst out again:"Can no one get a divorce, then, without making beasts or spies of themselves?" |
3254 | Gregory said without looking up:"But why?" |
3254 | Grizzled, married, with a large family? |
3254 | Ground too hard for golf? |
3254 | Grundys, I think you said?" |
3254 | Gyp looked at her steadily and asked:"Does he drink, then?" |
3254 | Gyp murmured:"It''s a question of atmosphere, is n''t it?" |
3254 | Gyp not in?" |
3254 | Gyp said calmly:"Would a man like that ever love?" |
3254 | Gyp said quickly:"Does n''t Daph-- Daisy live at home, then, now?" |
3254 | Gyp stood full half a minute before she said:"Is my father in?" |
3254 | Gyp stood wiping his kisses off her throat with the back of her hand, dumbly, mechanically thinking:"What have I done to be treated like this? |
3254 | Gyp thought:''Why does he come and whine to me like this? |
3254 | Gyp uttered a little laugh; then she said slowly:"Can you tell me, please, what this Mr.--Wagge can do?" |
3254 | Gyp, do you want me to go?" |
3254 | H''m? |
3254 | H''m? |
3254 | HIS G. I got her this-- rather nice? |
3254 | HIS G. Where''s Anne? |
3254 | HIS G. Where''s that woman who knows everything; Miss Munday? |
3254 | HORNBLOWER: Can ye attend a moment? |
3254 | HOW do you know? |
3254 | Ha? |
3254 | Had Annette come in? |
3254 | Had Cookie ever been in love? |
3254 | Had Fleur cooked her own goose by trying to make too sure? |
3254 | Had Gyp seen it? |
3254 | Had Soames heard that? |
3254 | Had Soames seen him? |
3254 | Had Uncle Soames and the old buffer behind made a mess of it? |
3254 | Had a good bathe? |
3254 | Had a sleep, old girl? |
3254 | Had a very bad time? |
3254 | Had all married men and women such things to go through-- was this but a very usual crossing of the desert? |
3254 | Had any man ever such a cruel moment to go through? |
3254 | Had any one ever used the word in connection with conduct of his, before? |
3254 | Had civilization so outstripped man that his nature was cramped into shoes too small-- like the feet of a Chinese woman? |
3254 | Had faith ever been anything but anodyne, or gratification of the aesthetic sense? |
3254 | Had faith ever been anything but embroidery to an instinctive heroism, so strong that it needed no such trappings? |
3254 | Had he a chance then? |
3254 | Had he a heart at all, had he blood in his veins? |
3254 | Had he after all cleared out for good? |
3254 | Had he attacked her? |
3254 | Had he been asleep, and they come in? |
3254 | Had he been bewitched into that queer state, bewitched by the gift of that flower in his coat? |
3254 | Had he been drinking when he wrote that letter? |
3254 | Had he been drinking? |
3254 | Had he been right? |
3254 | Had he been spying on his wife? |
3254 | Had he been-- and stolen away? |
3254 | Had he bought them to put there? |
3254 | Had he ever really loved her? |
3254 | Had he expressed himself too freely? |
3254 | Had he given too much, though? |
3254 | Had he gone mad? |
3254 | Had he got it in again? |
3254 | Had he got wind of Paris? |
3254 | Had he let her see that he felt that power? |
3254 | Had he lost her? |
3254 | Had he not been too censorious in thought? |
3254 | Had he not in connection therewith, this very day, perused his Will and Marriage Settlement? |
3254 | Had he not just made this settlement on Mrs. Larne? |
3254 | Had he not the right to consecrate himself to championship of one in such a deplorable position? |
3254 | Had he not used the expression,"a free hand"? |
3254 | Had he offended, hurt her? |
3254 | Had he one acquaintance who would not counsel him to see a doctor for writing in that style? |
3254 | Had he really made love to her-- really promised to take her away to live with him? |
3254 | Had he really touched the heart of the matter? |
3254 | Had he rushed down to the coppice-- his old hunting- ground? |
3254 | Had he said anything too thick? |
3254 | Had he some message, some counsel to give, something he would say, that last night of the last year of all those he had watched over us? |
3254 | Had he taken the knock that Val had spoken of? |
3254 | Had he time to saddle Bolero? |
3254 | Had he, then, not got her letter, not been home since yesterday? |
3254 | Had he? |
3254 | Had he? |
3254 | Had her Aunt Winifred, or Imogen, or Val Dartie and his wife, been talking? |
3254 | Had her husband gone away as he had come? |
3254 | Had his education and position really made it impossible for him to be brotherly? |
3254 | Had it ever stopped man from working, fighting, loving, dying like a hero if need were? |
3254 | Had it not once already driven him even to the edge of death; and must it now come on him again with its sweet madness, its drugging scent? |
3254 | Had it really come? |
3254 | Had n''t he come with them?" |
3254 | Had n''t that always seemed very extraordinary to Soames? |
3254 | Had n''t that ever occurred to you before?" |
3254 | Had n''t you better be a little careful? |
3254 | Had not Noel been but an apparition, her words a trick which his nerves had played him? |
3254 | Had not he confessed that he-- when young-- had loved with a grand passion? |
3254 | Had not his son done the very same thing( worse, if possible) fifteen years ago? |
3254 | Had not sanctity a presence? |
3254 | Had she a heart at all? |
3254 | Had she a wedding- ring on? |
3254 | Had she brought them because she knew they would make him feel sorry for her? |
3254 | Had she chosen wrong? |
3254 | Had she dreamed it all-- dreamed that they had stood together under those boughs in the darkness, and through their lips exchanged their hearts? |
3254 | Had she energy or spirit to meet him in the afternoon by the rock archway, as she had promised? |
3254 | Had she ever come at all? |
3254 | Had she ever come at all? |
3254 | Had she gone there to- day? |
3254 | Had she gone up? |
3254 | Had she got over Bosinney at last? |
3254 | Had she heard aright? |
3254 | Had she herself not said that very night that he had lost his laugh? |
3254 | Had she made a mistake in summoning Mrs. Noel to nurse him? |
3254 | Had she meant anything by that? |
3254 | Had she meant-- from that superiority? |
3254 | Had she never noticed before, how like a faun he was? |
3254 | Had she no heart or did she give it elsewhere? |
3254 | Had she not a story? |
3254 | Had she not borne him five, and toiled to keep him from that girl? |
3254 | Had she not expected him by the usual train? |
3254 | Had she not other resources? |
3254 | Had she not said to Mrs. Soames-- who was always so beautifully dressed-- that feathers were vulgar? |
3254 | Had she not then realised that we had quashed her claim; or was she, like myself, kept here by mere attraction of the Law? |
3254 | Had she noticed how all the mountains in moonlight or very early morning took the shape of beasts? |
3254 | Had she noticed? |
3254 | Had she once? |
3254 | Had she realised that he was following? |
3254 | Had she really given him up to her? |
3254 | Had she really had a life with another man? |
3254 | Had she seen it? |
3254 | Had she shut the drawing- room window when she returned so blindly? |
3254 | Had she some intuition that darkness was against her? |
3254 | Had she, without knowing it, got so far as this? |
3254 | Had she? |
3254 | Had that a chance of success? |
3254 | Had that any connection with what you were doing? |
3254 | Had that been himself living then? |
3254 | Had that hell- hound of an old doctor sneaked off? |
3254 | Had that no significance? |
3254 | Had that policeman really followed him home? |
3254 | Had that woman got clear? |
3254 | Had the Forsytes become less individual, or more Imperial, or less provincial? |
3254 | Had the girl been just a dream-- a fancy conjured up by his craving after youth? |
3254 | Had the young fellow, after all, seen and managed to get close to her in the crush at the paddock gateway? |
3254 | Had they ever been quite real? |
3254 | Had they gone out, leaving everything like this? |
3254 | Had they mothers, footmen, porters, maids? |
3254 | Had they told Jon-- had her visit to Robin Hill forced them to tell him? |
3254 | Had this woman been trying to borrow from him on that settlement? |
3254 | Had we heard them? |
3254 | Had you any-- any other offers before you were married, Mother? |
3254 | Had you ever seen such a look in his eyes before? |
3254 | Had you him under your eye all that time? |
3254 | Had you seen your brother? |
3254 | Had your valentine?" |
3254 | Haggle? |
3254 | Half past what? |
3254 | Hallo, Peachey? |
3254 | Hallo? |
3254 | Hands together, and victory-- or-- the starvation you''ve got now? |
3254 | Harbinger still with you?" |
3254 | Hard worker at his violin, too? |
3254 | Harz asked her suddenly:"Why do you paint?" |
3254 | Harz bowed:"And who are the others?" |
3254 | Harz?" |
3254 | Has Cook given you your money? |
3254 | Has Dawker come? |
3254 | Has Magpie cut his knees?" |
3254 | Has Monsieur Lavendie been in lately?" |
3254 | Has Mother been givin''you a tonic? |
3254 | Has any aberration of this nature ever attacked you before? |
3254 | Has any one begged of you to- day? |
3254 | Has anything been said? |
3254 | Has anything happened to you?" |
3254 | Has he been making speeches all the time? |
3254 | Has he finished his blasphemous speech- making at last? |
3254 | Has he got punch? |
3254 | Has he not? |
3254 | Has he spoken? |
3254 | Has he to keep in touch with the police till then? |
3254 | Has he told anyone?" |
3254 | Has he, on discovering its true nature, the right to call on the bookseller to refund its value? |
3254 | Has it ever struck you that each one of us lives on the edge of a volcano? |
3254 | Has it gone quite out of the world? |
3254 | Has life, then, with me been sorrow? |
3254 | Has mother never turned? |
3254 | Has n''t that shaken you, sir? |
3254 | Has n''t this been perfect? |
3254 | Has she a will of her own? |
3254 | Has she been? |
3254 | Has she come?" |
3254 | Has she come?" |
3254 | Has she gone out, since? |
3254 | Has she run you off your legs? |
3254 | Has she? |
3254 | Has that boy been told?" |
3254 | Has the plumber''s man been? |
3254 | Has there been a single utterance of any note which has not poured the balm of those words into our ears? |
3254 | Has this high- brow curtain- raiser of yours got any"pep"in it? |
3254 | Hastily she asked:"Would it do if you had Thyme to copy for you? |
3254 | Have I authority? |
3254 | Have I been a bad mother to you? |
3254 | Have I been so bad to you that you need feel like that, Molly? |
3254 | Have I made it clear to you? |
3254 | Have I made it clear to you?" |
3254 | Have I not already got all that? |
3254 | Have I said anything peculiar?" |
3254 | Have I served a sham? |
3254 | Have I the right? |
3254 | Have Ye celled on her, ma''am? |
3254 | Have a cigar?" |
3254 | Have a liqueur?" |
3254 | Have a little, Athene wo n''t you? |
3254 | Have a muffin?" |
3254 | Have cultured people dangers?" |
3254 | Have either Hughs or Mrs. Hughs spoken to you about-- coming to my house, about-- me?" |
3254 | Have n''t we been a little extravagant, and are n''t we rather bored with the whole subject?'' |
3254 | Have n''t we used ANY?" |
3254 | Have n''t you any Russian friends? |
3254 | Have n''t you any human sympathy? |
3254 | Have n''t you any religious sense at all, Clare? |
3254 | Have n''t you been to bed? |
3254 | Have n''t you begun to see that your policy''s hopeless, Joan? |
3254 | Have n''t you discovered that?" |
3254 | Have n''t you ever noticed that public sentiment is always in advance of the Law?" |
3254 | Have n''t you found it, Tibby? |
3254 | Have n''t you found out, Mabel, that he is n''t exactly communicative? |
3254 | Have n''t you now? |
3254 | Have n''t you ragged me enough, dad? |
3254 | Have n''t you seen?" |
3254 | Have n''t you the heart of a man? |
3254 | Have one to keep by you? |
3254 | Have so little pride-- so little pity? |
3254 | Have some cake? |
3254 | Have some tea, Megan? |
3254 | Have some tea? |
3254 | Have something else, then-- some grapes, or something? |
3254 | Have they been in custody since? |
3254 | Have they given you everything you want?" |
3254 | Have things changed much since the war, Mrs. Lemmy? |
3254 | Have we your word to say nothing? |
3254 | Have ye got a Testament? |
3254 | Have you a cigar? |
3254 | Have you a daughter as big as that? |
3254 | Have you a photograph of him? |
3254 | Have you a servant? |
3254 | Have you any brandy? |
3254 | Have you any children? |
3254 | Have you any little ones among your pupils?" |
3254 | Have you any little ones among your pupils?" |
3254 | Have you any money?" |
3254 | Have you any of yours for me to see?" |
3254 | Have you any suggestion? |
3254 | Have you any suspicions? |
3254 | Have you anything to ask him? |
3254 | Have you anything to ask the officer? |
3254 | Have you anything to ask the officer? |
3254 | Have you anything to say for yourself, why the Court should not give you judgment according to law? |
3254 | Have you asked Mrs. Barthwick? |
3254 | Have you been having any? |
3254 | Have you been having such a bad time of it? |
3254 | Have you been in a prison, ever? |
3254 | Have you been long in Botzen? |
3254 | Have you been spying on me? |
3254 | Have you been taking lessons in conversation? |
3254 | Have you been thinking it over? |
3254 | Have you been to Scotland Yard?" |
3254 | Have you begged her pardon?" |
3254 | Have you chucked the Bar? |
3254 | Have you come about Jon?" |
3254 | Have you come to see mother?" |
3254 | Have you committed a murder, that you stand there dumb as a fish?" |
3254 | Have you considered what her position was before she met you?" |
3254 | Have you consulted Miltoun?" |
3254 | Have you decided?" |
3254 | Have you ever acted? |
3254 | Have you ever been hungry? |
3254 | Have you ever been in hell? |
3254 | Have you ever done any sort of work? |
3254 | Have you ever felt like that on a dark night? |
3254 | Have you ever given evidence? |
3254 | Have you ever had your soul down on its back?" |
3254 | Have you ever heard him speak? |
3254 | Have you ever seen a dog that''s lost its master? |
3254 | Have you ever seen it, Dodo? |
3254 | Have you ever tried, mother? |
3254 | Have you fallen? |
3254 | Have you forgotten Glaive and Morlinson? |
3254 | Have you gone silly? |
3254 | Have you got a''Baronetage''here?" |
3254 | Have you got an ache? |
3254 | Have you got any horses?" |
3254 | Have you got any money? |
3254 | Have you got any of our people to show? |
3254 | Have you got daughters?" |
3254 | Have you got everything in your room you want? |
3254 | Have you got everything you want?" |
3254 | Have you got money on you? |
3254 | Have you got money? |
3254 | Have you got money? |
3254 | Have you got much luggage?" |
3254 | Have you got sisters? |
3254 | Have you got that? |
3254 | Have you got the numbers of the notes? |
3254 | Have you got your own toothbrush? |
3254 | Have you got your things, and the children''s? |
3254 | Have you grasped all these?" |
3254 | Have you had a good rest all this week? |
3254 | Have you had any lunch?" |
3254 | Have you had any news of your horse this morning?" |
3254 | Have you had dealings with them? |
3254 | Have you had dinner?" |
3254 | Have you had some tea?" |
3254 | Have you had tea? |
3254 | Have you had your breakfasts?" |
3254 | Have you had your dinner?" |
3254 | Have you heard this, sir? |
3254 | Have you heard? |
3254 | Have you hurt your leg?" |
3254 | Have you insured your life? |
3254 | Have you looked into the unfathomable heart of this trouble? |
3254 | Have you made any friends since you''ve been in London?" |
3254 | Have you missed me, Daisy? |
3254 | Have you money? |
3254 | Have you noticed Master Johnny? |
3254 | Have you noticed anything very eccentric about him?" |
3254 | Have you noticed how people may become utter strangers without a word? |
3254 | Have you quite got over your...."Hester interposed hurriedly:"What do you think of London, Annette?" |
3254 | Have you realised what an awful thins this would be for us all? |
3254 | Have you really made up your mind? |
3254 | Have you reason to suppose that he is dangerous?" |
3254 | Have you said anything in Park Lane?" |
3254 | Have you seen that young man who interested you? |
3254 | Have you seen the cigarette- box? |
3254 | Have you seen the cow- houses?" |
3254 | Have you seen the cow- houses?" |
3254 | Have you seen the revolution? |
3254 | Have you seen this about the poor Buccaneer?" |
3254 | Have you seen this, Camel-- in the Stop Press? |
3254 | Have you seen your mother?" |
3254 | Have you sold your bay horse, Glennie?" |
3254 | Have you some string?" |
3254 | Have you stopped it? |
3254 | Have you talked with my wife?" |
3254 | Have you thought enough now?" |
3254 | Have you thought what''ll happen if you''re beaten--[ she points]--in there? |
3254 | Have you tied him properly this time? |
3254 | Have you told Dancy? |
3254 | Have you tried? |
3254 | Have you, too? |
3254 | Havin''kittens? |
3254 | Having watched her for a little while with a certain pleasure, he said:"Yes, my dear?" |
3254 | He admitted this marriage? |
3254 | He always liked you, do n''t you remember? |
3254 | He answered abstractedly:"How should I know? |
3254 | He answered gently:"Yes-- yes; of course, why not?" |
3254 | He answered gently:"Yes-- yes; of course, why not?" |
3254 | He answered gloomily:"I suppose you realise that this may be the last time you''ll see me?" |
3254 | He answered:"I want to know how long this state of things between us is to last? |
3254 | He asked her one day:"What does your husband think of these?" |
3254 | He asked me: How I got there-- who I was-- where I was from? |
3254 | He asked: What did she mean? |
3254 | He asked:"Did he bring things?" |
3254 | He asked:"How is it you''re in? |
3254 | He became aware of Harz''s figure standing in the doorway:"Und der Herr?" |
3254 | He came closer, and lowered his voice:"Why did you get me to make that settlement? |
3254 | He came to a standstill and stared haggardly at Winton, who said:"How are you? |
3254 | He came to the Squire fluttering his tail, with a slipper in his mouth, and his eye said plainly:''Oh, master, where have you been? |
3254 | He collected himself, and drawled:"Are you going in to see your Guardy?" |
3254 | He could only half see, half imagine it, mysterious, blurry; and he whispered:"Is n''t this jolly?" |
3254 | He dared not say: Why not? |
3254 | He definitely refuses to marry her? |
3254 | He did not fail in outer gratitude, but did he realize what had been knitted into those ties? |
3254 | He did not want to hear what she was doing, did not want to hear anything; but the perverse word came out:"Alone?" |
3254 | He did not want to hear what she was doing, did not want to hear anything; but the perverse word came out:"Alone?" |
3254 | He did splendidly in the war, of course, because it suited him; but-- just before-- don''t you remember-- a very queer bit of riding? |
3254 | He do n''t bite, do''e? |
3254 | He drank it with a slow, clucking noise; then, seeing that a hand held the glass, said:"Is that you? |
3254 | He drinks, I suppose? |
3254 | He expected her to flinch and gasp; but she only clasped her hands together on her knees, and said:"Yes?" |
3254 | He felt a subtle flattery in that, as though she had added:''Do you think one could miss seeing you?'' |
3254 | He felt a subtle flattery in that, as though she had added:''Do you think one could miss seeing you?'' |
3254 | He folded up the letter with the splotch inside, and said:"What''s it all about, now?" |
3254 | He gave us a look out of those eyes of his, so like the eyes of a mild eagle, and said abruptly:"What do you say to this, then?..... |
3254 | He got up, and, back to the fire, said with a brutality born of nerves rather than design:"What is it, man? |
3254 | He gripped his chair and broke into a perspiration; was there no chance to get away? |
3254 | He grunted hastily,"I suppose you know that we''re engaged?" |
3254 | He had always been very amiable; what did Soames think? |
3254 | He had been patient-- oh, yes-- patient and kind, but how go on when one was tired-- tired of her-- and wanting only Gyp, only his own wife? |
3254 | He had cursed himself, and said gently:"Have you a brother out there?" |
3254 | He had everything before him; could he possibly go on wanting one who had nothing before her? |
3254 | He had forgotten its rider, till she looked up from the dogs, and said:"Do you like him? |
3254 | He had spoken of a guest at the Club, to account for evening dress-- another lie, but what did it matter? |
3254 | He had walked three steps towards the door, before he thought:''What does it matter? |
3254 | He had"got over"her, it seemed, wherever he was-- Russia, Sweden-- who knew-- who cared? |
3254 | He has great taste; so has Mr. Fiorsen, has n''t he?" |
3254 | He has n''t really left a horse outside, do you think? |
3254 | He has worn them out? |
3254 | He heard her say anxiously:"Dear Uncle Jolyon, what is it?" |
3254 | He heard her say anxiously:"Dear Uncle Jolyon, what is it?" |
3254 | He heard her say:"What is it, dear boy? |
3254 | He heard her voice, uncomfortably, pathetically soft:"Why have you come again? |
3254 | He heard his father''s voice, as though there were a pin in his mouth, saying:"Who''s that? |
3254 | He heard the boy laugh, and say eagerly:"I say, Mum, is this by one of Auntie June''s lame ducks?" |
3254 | He heard the maid''s voice say:"Did you ring, sir?" |
3254 | He heard the maid''s voice say:"Did you ring, sir?" |
3254 | He held out his hand, however, saying:"How are you?" |
3254 | He inclined his head to one side,"Why do we have nationality? |
3254 | He is her trustee; you knew that, of course?" |
3254 | He looked at Courtier meaningly, and after lunch said to him:"Will you come round to my den?" |
3254 | He looked at it for a long minute, and turned away:"Do n''t you think it''s like me, Daddy?" |
3254 | He looked round, sidelong, and said:"How are you? |
3254 | He looked up at Keith through the haze of smoke and said quietly:"Well, brother, what''s the sentence? |
3254 | He lowered his eyes, and said:"His line, is n''t it?" |
3254 | He makes Velasquez stiff, do n''t you think?" |
3254 | He married, did n''t he?" |
3254 | He mastered his tremors and said:"Well, Gyp-- tired?" |
3254 | He might not have been lying there at all, but"sanded"at the bottom of the sea, waiting for resurrection on the ninth day, was it? |
3254 | He murmured:"Was it all right when you got in last night?" |
3254 | He must MAKE her see-- but how? |
3254 | He nodded, and fixed his eyes on her-- they looked half- dead, or was it that the folds in the lids had become heavier? |
3254 | He nodded, and then rather suddenly said, with a peculiar little smile:"May I introduce him? |
3254 | He noticed gratefully the affectionate surprise in Emily''s:"Well, my dear boy?" |
3254 | He opened his eyes, and said suddenly:"So you think I''m going to lay hands on myself, Babs?" |
3254 | He passed into view of those within, and said:"Are n''t you very hot, Nollie?" |
3254 | He paused as Shelton entered, and, pouting like a baby, asked in a sleepy voice,"Play me a hundred up?" |
3254 | He paused by after- thought to say:"What do you think of it, Warmson?" |
3254 | He paused, evidently searching for a word; and Hilary, with a faint smile, said:"And how did women look on men, sir?" |
3254 | He pulled the door open with a jerk, and said:"What are you doing?" |
3254 | He raised his head as old Jolyon came in, and muttered:"How are you, Jolyon? |
3254 | He read it, raised his eyebrows, smiled, and, without looking up, murmured:"You wish to prosecute this romantic episode?" |
3254 | He replied, however:"Why should we, a small portion of the world''s population, assume that our standards are the proper ones for every kind of race? |
3254 | He said almost fiercely:"Can I trust you not to let Larry out of your sight? |
3254 | He said coolly:"I suppose he''s fallen in love with some other woman?" |
3254 | He said dryly:"What do you wish me to do?" |
3254 | He said feebly:"Are you sure you ought, sir?" |
3254 | He said gently:"Do n''t let them think you''re down;"and, squeezing her hand hard:"Why should you be wasted like this? |
3254 | He said hastily:"How d''you get hold of them?" |
3254 | He said hastily:"How d''you get hold of them?" |
3254 | He said impressively:"Do you know the forces you are up against? |
3254 | He said in a voice permanently gruff, but impregnated with a species of professional ingratiation:"Ye- es? |
3254 | He said more gruffly than ever:"May I ask what''as given us the honour?" |
3254 | He said quietly:"Do you mind telling me why you came here?" |
3254 | He said quietly:"Do you want the dogs?" |
3254 | He said quietly:"You do n''t care to talk about it, I suppose?" |
3254 | He said thinly:"How are you, Sylvanus? |
3254 | He said violently:"Well, what of that? |
3254 | He said with painful slowness:"I do n''t exactly know; we had hardly begun, had we?" |
3254 | He said, then:"It''s true, I suppose?" |
3254 | He said, with a sigh:"What does a young man''s fancy turn to in summer, Gyp?" |
3254 | He said:"Not at all; jolly good ballet, is n''t it?" |
3254 | He said:"What on earth has happened, Gyp, since I went up yesterday? |
3254 | He said:"Whom have you got at''The Shelter''next week?" |
3254 | He saw Gratian put her hand on her husband''s forehead, and thought-- jealously:''How can I save my poor girl from this infidelity? |
3254 | He saw them, stopped, and began playing"Che faro?" |
3254 | He say: Why did you a baby with typhus with you bring out? |
3254 | He seemed so old and poor-- what could she give him? |
3254 | He shook his head and muttered through that straggly moustache:"You''re a niece, are n''t you? |
3254 | He shrugged his shoulders, smiled and said:"An eccentric, your friend, nicht wahr?" |
3254 | He slipped his hand through her arm; and, following out those thoughts of his in the concert- hall, asked:"Do you like Captain Fort, Nollie?" |
3254 | He speaks again:"You do not remember me, Monsieur? |
3254 | He spoke suddenly:"Who is there?" |
3254 | He spoke up for me? |
3254 | He spoke:"Why on earth, if she felt like that, could n''t she have gone to work in the ordinary way? |
3254 | He stooped and whispered:"I say, d''you remember the rat?" |
3254 | He stopped at the bureau and said:"Will you kindly see that Mrs. Heron has this note?" |
3254 | He stroked the warm wool on Balthasar''s head, and heard Holly say:"When mother''s home, there wo n''t be any changes, will there? |
3254 | He stroked the warm wool on Balthasar''s head, and heard Holly say:"When mother''s home, there wo n''t be any changes, will there? |
3254 | He supposed they would pick up the others at Montpellier Square, and swop hansoms there? |
3254 | He surveyed Mr. Purcey''s figure from his cloth- topped boots to his tall hat, and said:"Shall we go in and find her?" |
3254 | He swallowed it, and said:"What is this?" |
3254 | He takes it queerly; what now?'' |
3254 | He therefore said abruptly:"What would you do in a case like that?" |
3254 | He thought:''This is better; I must n''t disturb them for my hat''; and approaching the fire, said:"Jolly cold, is n''t it?" |
3254 | He tightened his grasp of her hand; then, suddenly dropping it, said:"Did he touch you, Gyp?" |
3254 | He told you why, I suppose?" |
3254 | He took her arm-- his side always hurt him a little going uphill-- and said:"Did you ever see anything like those buttercups? |
3254 | He took her arm-- his side always hurt him a little going uphill-- and said:"Did you ever see anything like those buttercups? |
3254 | He took the hand, and answered:"Thank you, I am well-- and you?" |
3254 | He touched Fleur''s arm, and said:"Well, have you had enough?" |
3254 | He touched his cap, and said:"Will you have the window up or down?" |
3254 | He touched the dress she had taken off, and asked:"What have you been doing?" |
3254 | He turned to Halidome and whispered:"Can you stand that old woman?" |
3254 | He walked quickly, very upright; there was something unseeing even about that back view of him; or was it that he saw- another world? |
3254 | He walked some way before he said,"Will you have the goodness to tell me what you came to that seat for?" |
3254 | He wanted to give me the sketch he made of you in the Park, but what can I do with it now? |
3254 | He wanted to say: And how long is that? |
3254 | He was a gentleman, had money, preached to her every Sunday, and was not so very old-- what more could a man want? |
3254 | He was coming home from a long parish round, and had turned into the Square, when a low voice behind him said:"Wot price the little barstard?" |
3254 | He was her son; how could she ask for his address? |
3254 | He was n''t paid to care, and why expect it? |
3254 | He was of a frugal habit, ate what was put before him without question, and if asked what he would have, invariably answered:"What is there?" |
3254 | He was spared the effort, for Pippin said:"Do n''t be afraid-- you''ve got bad news? |
3254 | He was thinking:''Now I shall hear something for my good; a fine text; when did I preach from it last?'' |
3254 | He was your fag, was n''t he? |
3254 | He went away almost immediately, saying to Soames:"And how''s your wife? |
3254 | He went back to the door, and rattling the handle stealthily, called:"Unlock the door, do you hear? |
3254 | He went up to the bedside and touched her timidly:"Leila, what is it? |
3254 | He whispered"You will write?" |
3254 | He woke with a start, having a feeling of something out beyond the light, and without turning his head said:"What''s that?" |
3254 | He would go and saddle Bolero, and jump him in the park; or should he go down along the river and watch the jays? |
3254 | He would n''t be such a sublime donkey? |
3254 | He would n''t like it to be talked about, I''m sure, and if Timothy knew he would be very vexed, I...."James put his hand behind his ear:"What?" |
3254 | He would then stand with his eyes fixed on the door, till, in due time, the doctor would appear, and he could say:"Well, doctor? |
3254 | He would-- what would he not do? |
3254 | He''d never be such a donkey?" |
3254 | He''ll be back again in no time, and what''ll happen then? |
3254 | He''s a nice boy? |
3254 | He''s a young man with large, rather peculiar eyes, is n''t he? |
3254 | He''s better to stand with than Mr. Harold, or Captain Keith? |
3254 | He''s in that fast set too, is n''t he? |
3254 | He''s just twenty, and I shall be eighteen in a week; could n''t we marry now at once? |
3254 | He''s not confessed, I understand?" |
3254 | He''s not had a fall, has he?" |
3254 | He''s only a second cousin, is n''t he?" |
3254 | He''s the most pig- headed----What are you in such a hurry for, Margery?" |
3254 | He''s very like Sam Weller and Sancho Panza, do n''t you think, Don Pickwixote? |
3254 | Headache? |
3254 | Heard anything about the Centry, Dawker? |
3254 | Hearing Barbara''s voice murmuring above her, she paused:"What''s that you say?" |
3254 | Hearing the maid''s knock, and her murmured:"Count Rosek to see you, sir,"he thought:''What the devil does he want?'' |
3254 | Hegel, or Haekel? |
3254 | Hein, Monsieur Barra, is not mademoiselle pretty?" |
3254 | Help having a man''s nature? |
3254 | Help her being fond of him? |
3254 | Help her-- how could he help her? |
3254 | Help? |
3254 | Her cheeks went hot, she clenched her hands and said resolutely:"Mr. Cuthcott, do you believe in God?" |
3254 | Her crying was so-- Why should she cry at me? |
3254 | Her eyes said: How am I to know whether I shall not want more than you; feel suffocated in your arms; be surfeited by all that you will bring me? |
3254 | Her father answered:"Matter? |
3254 | Her father, who pretended to be caring only for his country? |
3254 | Her father? |
3254 | Her home, what but a place like this? |
3254 | Her husband was there, and she said to him:"Will you come with me into the town? |
3254 | Her husband-- where was he; what was he to her? |
3254 | Her mother did, perhaps? |
3254 | Her name? |
3254 | Her pale lips answered:"What do you mean? |
3254 | Her shoes were split, her hands rough; but-- what was it? |
3254 | Her voice interrupted"Are you going to be nice to me, dear boy?" |
3254 | Here was the answer to the question he had asked all day:"How have things come to such a pass?" |
3254 | Here-- where''s my hat? |
3254 | Here? |
3254 | Here? |
3254 | Herr Paul held out his hand:"What can we do for you?" |
3254 | Herr Paul muttered:"Who knows?" |
3254 | Herr Paul stopped in his tramp, and, still with his eyes fixed on the floor, growled:"A fine thing- hein? |
3254 | Heythorp?" |
3254 | Hide? |
3254 | Hilary asked gently:"Well, my dear, what did you see?" |
3254 | Hilary moved hastily towards him:"Badly? |
3254 | Hilary spoke:"You mistrust my powers of action?" |
3254 | Hilary stood contemplating her with the dubious, critical look, as though asking:"What is there behind you? |
3254 | Hilary?" |
3254 | His bag? |
3254 | His face peered round at her, queer and pale and puffy, with nice, straight eyes; and she added hastily:"It is n''t a fair question, is it? |
3254 | His father''s answering"Wait? |
3254 | His fear, unhappiness, and doubts seemed like an evil dream; how much worse off would he not have been, had it all been true? |
3254 | His friend repeated:"Why do n''t you think we''re doing good in India?" |
3254 | His friend''s voice called, as he was passing:"Is that you, old chap? |
3254 | His grandfather was speaking:"What''s his father doing?" |
3254 | His light grey gloves were still on his hands, and on his lips his smile sardonic, but where the feeling in his heart? |
3254 | His little aloe- plant had flowered; and, between the open windows of the only carriage he had ever been inside, the wind-- which, who knows? |
3254 | His mother said quietly:"Wo n''t you come up and have tea?" |
3254 | His mother, he had thought, was examining the potted stocks between the polled acacias, when her voice said:"Is that your favourite Goya, Jon?" |
3254 | His reason, even? |
3254 | His red lips were open, his blue eyes with their flaxen lashes stared fixedly at Ashurst, who said ironically:"Well, Joe, anything I can do for you?" |
3254 | His reply shot out of his smile like a snipped bread pellet"D''you remember, in Frazer, the tribe that buries the bride up to the waist?" |
3254 | His room, now? |
3254 | His round head, with curly hair, broad brow, and those clean- cut lips, gave her again the wonder:''Where HAVE I seen someone like him?'' |
3254 | His second thought:''Is this the cutting of the knot that I''ve been looking for?'' |
3254 | His second:''Is there anything still I ought to sell?'' |
3254 | His sufferings are less acute; he enjoys the compensations of advertisement-- you admit that?" |
3254 | His universal comment was:"What can they expect? |
3254 | His wife there and Bosinney?" |
3254 | His wife, in a Paris model frock and gold nose- nippers, reproved him:"How can you laugh, Harry? |
3254 | Hobby? |
3254 | Holding out her hand above the woman''s back, she said:"Oh, Mr. Fiorsen, how do you do?" |
3254 | Home experience? |
3254 | Home? |
3254 | Honeysuckle, or was it the scent of lilies still? |
3254 | Hopgood?" |
3254 | Hornblower coming? |
3254 | Hotly he had answered: What business was it of hers? |
3254 | How COULD she hold back and waver? |
3254 | How DID you know where I was?" |
3254 | How about a theatre? |
3254 | How about your brother? |
3254 | How am I goin''to get over this? |
3254 | How am I going to live? |
3254 | How am I to go to work? |
3254 | How answer that? |
3254 | How are YOU? |
3254 | How are things, Clare? |
3254 | How are we to go on? |
3254 | How are we to understand each other in a matter like this, eh?" |
3254 | How are ye, Dawker? |
3254 | How are you after all this time? |
3254 | How are you getting on now?" |
3254 | How are you getting on now?" |
3254 | How are you getting on?" |
3254 | How are you going to manage?" |
3254 | How are you going to paint me, monsieur?" |
3254 | How are you going to put it to mother? |
3254 | How are you going to stand it; with a woman who--? |
3254 | How are you going to stop her? |
3254 | How are you to get on here all alone? |
3254 | How are you, Charles? |
3254 | How are you, Diana?" |
3254 | How are you, Falder? |
3254 | How are you, Joy? |
3254 | How are you, Mr. Harness? |
3254 | How are you, Soames? |
3254 | How are you, dear old Guardy?" |
3254 | How are you, father? |
3254 | How are you, mother dear? |
3254 | How are you, old chap? |
3254 | How are you, sir? |
3254 | How are you? |
3254 | How are you? |
3254 | How are your eyes? |
3254 | How break a vow she had thought herself quite above breaking? |
3254 | How break so suddenly? |
3254 | How by vengeful prickings cure the deep wound, disperse the canker in her life? |
3254 | How came he to lose his place? |
3254 | How can I get my nap while you make that row? |
3254 | How can I help minding? |
3254 | How can I let you go? |
3254 | How can I remain in public life? |
3254 | How can I stay when there is no lady in the''ouse? |
3254 | How can I take this nomination for Mayor? |
3254 | How can he let all this suffering go on amongst you? |
3254 | How can he love me? |
3254 | How can men stand on their rights left? |
3254 | How can there be exceptions if a thing''s sacred? |
3254 | How can we exert them to the utmost in some matters, and in others suddenly turn our backs on them?" |
3254 | How can we feel like that when we''re all brought up on mongrel food? |
3254 | How can we help it, seeing that we are undisciplined and standardless, seeing that we started without the backbone that schooling gives? |
3254 | How can we meet the shareholders with things in the state they are? |
3254 | How can you expect it, David? |
3254 | How can you feel like that? |
3254 | How can you separate them?" |
3254 | How can you stick this? |
3254 | How can you take it so calmly, John? |
3254 | How can you tell what I feel? |
3254 | How can you till you know? |
3254 | How can you-- both? |
3254 | How can you? |
3254 | How can you? |
3254 | How choose? |
3254 | How could I leave her while this war lasts? |
3254 | How could I?" |
3254 | How could any husband ask that? |
3254 | How could any woman do that? |
3254 | How could anybody loathe him? |
3254 | How could he ever find her, or she him? |
3254 | How could he foresee? |
3254 | How could he guard his child? |
3254 | How could he have answered otherwise? |
3254 | How could he have been so treacherous to her? |
3254 | How could he have been such a base fool, as to have committed himself to Leila on an evening when he had actually been in the company of that child? |
3254 | How could he have helped it all? |
3254 | How could he help staying awake that night? |
3254 | How could he help thinking, then? |
3254 | How could he justify desire for the company of one who had stolen-- early morning does not mince words-- June''s lover? |
3254 | How could he justify desire for the company of one who had stolen-- early morning does not mince words-- June''s lover? |
3254 | How could he know what men who had such faces thought and did? |
3254 | How could he look natural with Italy hanging over him? |
3254 | How could he tell? |
3254 | How could he word what he had come to say so that it might pierce the defence of her proud obstinacy? |
3254 | How could he? |
3254 | How could it be otherwise, when there was veritably blossom on the trees and the chimneys were ceasing to smoke? |
3254 | How could one who produced such fresh idyllic sounds have sinister intentions? |
3254 | How could she ask this girl anything? |
3254 | How could she be going to live, grudging her fate? |
3254 | How could she have liked hurting those poor women, hurting that man-- who was only paying her a man''s compliment, after all? |
3254 | How could she say such things just as they were going to part? |
3254 | How could there be any alternative? |
3254 | How could they, little one? |
3254 | How could women mope and moan because they were cast out, and try to scratch their way back where they were not welcome? |
3254 | How could you have them without mutual ownership? |
3254 | How d''ye think your fathers got your land? |
3254 | How d''you account for it? |
3254 | How d''you do, Captain Huntingdon? |
3254 | How d''you do, Miss Orme? |
3254 | How d''you do, Mrs. More? |
3254 | How d''you do? |
3254 | How d''you do? |
3254 | How d''you do? |
3254 | How d''you feel-- eh? |
3254 | How d''you make that out?" |
3254 | How d''you mean? |
3254 | How d''you mean? |
3254 | How d''you mean?" |
3254 | How dare he think her like that-- a nothing, a bundle of soulless inexplicable whims and moods and sensuality? |
3254 | How dare he? |
3254 | How dare men be so effeminate? |
3254 | How dare ye tell me such monstrosities? |
3254 | How dare you? |
3254 | How dare you? |
3254 | How dared he have anything to break, and yet how dared he break it? |
3254 | How de do, Mr Mayor? |
3254 | How de do, ma''am? |
3254 | How de do? |
3254 | How deal with it-- how sway and bend things to her will, and get her heart''s desire? |
3254 | How decide whether or no to take notice; to let him do his worst, or try and get into touch with him? |
3254 | How describe Jolly, who, ever since she remembered anything, had been her lord, master, and ideal? |
3254 | How did I get home?'' |
3254 | How did he come here? |
3254 | How did he find out where she was? |
3254 | How did it alter anything-- this sight of her? |
3254 | How did it come about? |
3254 | How did she know? |
3254 | How did she take it, mother? |
3254 | How did she turn out? |
3254 | How did the police come into it? |
3254 | How did you and''i m come here? |
3254 | How did you come by all that money? |
3254 | How did you come to be present? |
3254 | How did you come to know her? |
3254 | How did you do?" |
3254 | How did you get here? |
3254 | How did you get here? |
3254 | How did you know that? |
3254 | How did you like the dance?" |
3254 | How did you----? |
3254 | How do you do, Lord William? |
3254 | How do you do, Ma''am? |
3254 | How do you do, Mr. Home? |
3254 | How do you do, Mrs. Dedmond? |
3254 | How do you do, Shelton? |
3254 | How do you do, WINSOR? |
3254 | How do you do, my dear? |
3254 | How do you do, sir? |
3254 | How do you do? |
3254 | How do you do? |
3254 | How do you do? |
3254 | How do you do? |
3254 | How do you do? |
3254 | How do you do? |
3254 | How do you do?" |
3254 | How do you find the hotel?" |
3254 | How do you fix that, sir? |
3254 | How do you go to work to worm things out of them?" |
3254 | How do you imagine vice takes its rise? |
3254 | How do you know she''s not a thief-- not got designs on the house? |
3254 | How do you know that he did n''t? |
3254 | How do you know that? |
3254 | How do you know this? |
3254 | How do you know, then? |
3254 | How do you know? |
3254 | How do you know? |
3254 | How do you know? |
3254 | How do you know?" |
3254 | How do you like Paris?" |
3254 | How do you like him, Father?" |
3254 | How do you like it here? |
3254 | How do you like this whisky?" |
3254 | How do you like your room?" |
3254 | How do you mean stolen? |
3254 | How do you mean, Joy? |
3254 | How do you mean, my boy? |
3254 | How do you mean-- mother? |
3254 | How do you suppose we could get on if everybody behaved like you? |
3254 | How do you think Fleur looks?" |
3254 | How do you think it''s going? |
3254 | How do, Lady Ella? |
3254 | How do, Squire?--how do, Rector? |
3254 | How does anyone ever get a chance? |
3254 | How does it look? |
3254 | How does one find out about people? |
3254 | How everything is chic, is it not, Annette? |
3254 | How expect a busy man like Mr. Cuthcott to spare time to come down all that way? |
3254 | How expect keen farming to start from such an example? |
3254 | How face his own conscience? |
3254 | How far dared he go with her along the railings before he said good- bye? |
3254 | How far has it gone? |
3254 | How far is it from your office to the bank? |
3254 | How far was his big brother within reach of mere unphilosophic statements; how far was he going to attend to facts? |
3254 | How far was it one''s business to identify oneself with other people, especially the helpless-- how far to preserve oneself intact--''integer vita''? |
3254 | How far were they going to go? |
3254 | How far would you apply kindness in practice? |
3254 | How far? |
3254 | How find the words? |
3254 | How get him upstairs without anyone knowing?" |
3254 | How goes it then this morning? |
3254 | How goes it, my girl? |
3254 | How goes it? |
3254 | How goes it? |
3254 | How greet her? |
3254 | How had he dared? |
3254 | How had he managed to go on so long in that town devoid of the scent of sweetpeas, where he had not even space to put his treasures? |
3254 | How had he struck Nedda? |
3254 | How had she come like this?--what excuse had she found to get away?--what did she hope for? |
3254 | How had that poor girl fared? |
3254 | How had they come to commit such an imbecility? |
3254 | How had this youth known that Sylvia would not understand passion so out of hand as this? |
3254 | How heal herself by hurting him whom she loved so? |
3254 | How if I was mistaken, and not they, but he were the real Public?" |
3254 | How is Daddy looking?" |
3254 | How is Helen Bellew? |
3254 | How is he?" |
3254 | How is it possible for Liberals and Conservatives to join hands, as you call it? |
3254 | How is it you leave them to wander about the streets like this? |
3254 | How is my little one?" |
3254 | How is old Halidome?" |
3254 | How is she? |
3254 | How is she?" |
3254 | How is she?" |
3254 | How is that? |
3254 | How is the law unjust, may I ask?" |
3254 | How is this relevant, Mr. Frome? |
3254 | How know? |
3254 | How leave her there? |
3254 | How let her know he had seen that pretty act of devotion? |
3254 | How long after you left the billiard- room? |
3254 | How long ago? |
3254 | How long ago? |
3254 | How long do you think I would live if I was not a cyneec? |
3254 | How long had it lasted? |
3254 | How long had she been standing there? |
3254 | How long had the carriage been back from taking Miss June to the station? |
3254 | How long had the prisoner been in their employ? |
3254 | How long had they been out here? |
3254 | How long had they used it for their meetings-- sneaking in by that door from the back lane? |
3254 | How long has Daddy been away? |
3254 | How long has Morison been up with you? |
3254 | How long has she been at this Soho place? |
3254 | How long has this- engagement lasted? |
3254 | How long have we been here, Dodo? |
3254 | How long have you been at it?" |
3254 | How long have you been engaged? |
3254 | How long have you known the last witness? |
3254 | How long is that? |
3254 | How long shall I keep you? |
3254 | How long was it? |
3254 | How long was this state of things to last? |
3254 | How long will you be?" |
3254 | How long, Phyllis, since we met him at Guardy''s? |
3254 | How long, he wondered, had they been sitting like that? |
3254 | How long-- how long am I to be torn in two? |
3254 | How long? |
3254 | How make her understand? |
3254 | How make him speak of what he was going to do? |
3254 | How make the going to her, and that which must come of it, less ugly? |
3254 | How many bottles have you got to pick out? |
3254 | How many days are you going to let him sit up there, Mother? |
3254 | How many lumps would dear Marian take? |
3254 | How many men are, there into whose lives there has not entered some such relation at one time or another? |
3254 | How many more women are you going to let to die? |
3254 | How many times had he been to them since she came back? |
3254 | How meet those doubting, knowing eyes, goggling with the fixed philosophy that a man has but one use for woman? |
3254 | How much am I valued at? |
3254 | How much did he give you in all? |
3254 | How much do I owe you? |
3254 | How much do you know about this war? |
3254 | How much had her mother told her? |
3254 | How much had you drunk, then? |
3254 | How much had you, dad? |
3254 | How much has Thomas given up-- ten pounds or five, or what? |
3254 | How much must you have? |
3254 | How much of that forty pounds have you got left, Jack? |
3254 | How much will it be, Grandfather?" |
3254 | How much? |
3254 | How much? |
3254 | How much? |
3254 | How much? |
3254 | How never grasped the fact that''Time steals away''? |
3254 | How not long for her lips when he had but her hand to kiss? |
3254 | How not try to be that? |
3254 | How old are you, Miss Winton?" |
3254 | How old are you, my child? |
3254 | How old are you? |
3254 | How old was she, with her brown limbs, and her gleaming, slanting eyes? |
3254 | How old was the baby, Mr Bly? |
3254 | How old''s this little one? |
3254 | How old?" |
3254 | How on earth did he know that? |
3254 | How on earth did he know your address?" |
3254 | How on earth had the fellow known that he wanted to sell that picture? |
3254 | How on earth to say what he had come to say? |
3254 | How otherwise, when the sun actually shone on the ponds? |
3254 | How preserve that vision in her life, in her spirit, about to enter such cold, rough waters? |
3254 | How shall I know''em? |
3254 | How shall I prevent Thyme''s hearing? |
3254 | How should I know?" |
3254 | How should an old man live his days if not in dreaming of his well- spent past? |
3254 | How should an old man live his days if not in dreaming of his well- spent past? |
3254 | How should he set about it, or how refuse? |
3254 | How should she answer? |
3254 | How should she know what was passing in here-- this little old woman whose blood was cold? |
3254 | How soon? |
3254 | How subject himself to contempt and secret laughter? |
3254 | How the devil can I do anything if you do n''t tell me?" |
3254 | How to attack this mania? |
3254 | How to effect this withdrawal without causing gossip, and yet avoid suspicion of collusion with Gyp? |
3254 | How to get Nedda out of it?'' |
3254 | How was I to know that by''extras''you meant seven hundred pounds?" |
3254 | How was I to understand her? |
3254 | How was he to know, when he wanted Irene so violently, and she consented to be his, that she would never love him? |
3254 | How was it I did n''t? |
3254 | How was it down there before she married him? |
3254 | How was it possible that he could feel both at once? |
3254 | How was it possible? |
3254 | How was it that she could see that disturbance in him, and not care? |
3254 | How was it that this little suburban girl, when she once got on her toes, could twirl one''s emotions as she did? |
3254 | How was it, then, that he himself could not feel incensed? |
3254 | How was she going to receive him? |
3254 | How was that possible? |
3254 | How was that possible? |
3254 | How was that? |
3254 | How was that? |
3254 | How was your window? |
3254 | How were the men? |
3254 | How would he greet her? |
3254 | How would he stand then? |
3254 | How would he stand up to Granny? |
3254 | How would she come to this first dance? |
3254 | How would she ever be able to keep herself in hand, how disguise from these people that she loved their boy? |
3254 | How would she treat him at this last moment of her girlhood? |
3254 | How would that dead loved one feel? |
3254 | How would the world go round, how could Society exist, without common- sense, practical ability, and the lack of sympathy? |
3254 | How would they know my room? |
3254 | How would you like being turned out of a place you were fond of? |
3254 | How would you like to be insulted in front of your girl? |
3254 | How would you like to have your home spoiled? |
3254 | How wrong of you not to let me know before?" |
3254 | How''ll ye like that for a country place? |
3254 | How''s Horace? |
3254 | How''s Mrs. Pendyce? |
3254 | How''s Mrs. Val Dartie? |
3254 | How''s dear Ossy?" |
3254 | How''s that, Athene? |
3254 | How''s that? |
3254 | How''s that? |
3254 | How''s the City?" |
3254 | How''s the head? |
3254 | How''s the old man?" |
3254 | How''s your gout, ducky? |
3254 | How''s your nephew--the-- er-- sculptor?" |
3254 | How''s your old man? |
3254 | How''s your wife doing-- a girl? |
3254 | How''s your wife? |
3254 | How''s your wife? |
3254 | How''s your wife?" |
3254 | How''s your wife?" |
3254 | How, in decent pride, keep him from her, fetter him? |
3254 | How? |
3254 | How? |
3254 | How? |
3254 | How? |
3254 | How? |
3254 | How? |
3254 | How? |
3254 | How? |
3254 | How?" |
3254 | However did it happen, Miss Maud? |
3254 | Hubert? |
3254 | Hughs?" |
3254 | Hughs?" |
3254 | Hughs?" |
3254 | Hughs?" |
3254 | Hypocrite of genius, eh? |
3254 | Hysterical? |
3254 | I HAVE-- haven''t you? |
3254 | I am not so veree beautiful as all that; he must see, must n''t he, sir?" |
3254 | I am the impediment-- the just cause and impediment-- isn''t that the jargon? |
3254 | I apologize, sir; can I come in a minute? |
3254 | I ask you a plain question: What is it?" |
3254 | I ask you again, Eustace, what will you do afterwards?" |
3254 | I ask you-- what was the good of all our sacrifices for the country? |
3254 | I ask you? |
3254 | I asked:"Is n''t it a bit quiet?" |
3254 | I bar Miss Stokes, of course; but then, who would n''t? |
3254 | I beg your pardon; did you speak to me? |
3254 | I beg your pardon? |
3254 | I believe my faith the higher, the better for mankind-- Am I to slink away? |
3254 | I brought you into the world, and you say that to me? |
3254 | I ca n''t be bothered-- What is it? |
3254 | I ca n''t believe as he does, any more; can you, Nollie?" |
3254 | I ca n''t go to bed till I''ve digested it can I? |
3254 | I ca n''t help the truth, can I?" |
3254 | I ca n''t take you anywhere, I suppose?" |
3254 | I ca n''t think how people can live without flowers, can you?" |
3254 | I called out at last:"Is any one there?" |
3254 | I came to ask what I''m to do-- give myself up, or what? |
3254 | I came to ask you: Do you think she ought to go on with her work? |
3254 | I came to know what I''m to do, Keith? |
3254 | I can-- can''t I-- if I tell Uncle Tom?--can''t I----? |
3254 | I could bring my dresses, and change in the music- room, could n''t I?" |
3254 | I could n''t get you a little anything, ma''am? |
3254 | I couldn''t-- what was it?" |
3254 | I did n''t act as I ought to have, about references; but what are you to do? |
3254 | I did n''t mean that; will you get me some water- irises for this evening? |
3254 | I did n''t quite catch-- Mr. Dawson? |
3254 | I do n''t know if you know anything about him?" |
3254 | I do n''t know what''s the matter with that child? |
3254 | I do n''t know-- what''s coming? |
3254 | I do n''t know-- wrong? |
3254 | I do n''t know; what does it matter?" |
3254 | I do n''t seem-- What are its politics? |
3254 | I do n''t want it; what''s the good of it to me? |
3254 | I do n''t want to say anything against the girl, but she seems-- she seems to have---""Yes?" |
3254 | I do think the rising generation amusing, do n''t you? |
3254 | I do think we''ve got too many nerves, do n''t you? |
3254 | I expect there''s times when you wish you was a man, do n''t you, miss? |
3254 | I feed a small lot of babies out in my mother''s country; but what''s the use? |
3254 | I forget if your lordship''s very strong on politics?" |
3254 | I forget, Mr. Malise-- you write, do n''t you? |
3254 | I get--""Darling, what does that matter?" |
3254 | I goes down an''I says:"You know there''s no one lives there, do n''t yer?" |
3254 | I haf reason to be, do n''t you think? |
3254 | I hate being slow about things, do n''t you?" |
3254 | I have got little Pippin-- you know little Pippin?" |
3254 | I have n''t seen it yet, you know-- shall we all go on Sunday?"'' |
3254 | I have n''t yet, have I? |
3254 | I hope that''ll do us some good, but I suppose you think the other way?" |
3254 | I hope you think well of her talent, sir? |
3254 | I know about them; but is he?" |
3254 | I know it''s all very shocking-- what about it? |
3254 | I know what you''d like to ask: Should I be a Bigwig in THEIR estimation? |
3254 | I know you and Geoff do n''t get on; but here''s this child of yours, devoted to you, and-- and do n''t you see, old girl? |
3254 | I know your book, and I do n''t approve of you; you''re a dangerous man-- How do you do? |
3254 | I know-- sort of world without end, was n''t it? |
3254 | I live at Mapledurham; where do you?" |
3254 | I may have the slips? |
3254 | I may safely say we lead in security, if in nothing else.... Now, sir, what can I do for you?" |
3254 | I may take it you resign pretensions then? |
3254 | I mean, what else can you do, except die, do n''t you know?" |
3254 | I mean-- anything peculiar? |
3254 | I murmured,"molly- coddling? |
3254 | I only know that here he is, and I do n''t want you to go burning your fingers, eh? |
3254 | I put it to you as a gentleman, would you go back on yer duty if you was me? |
3254 | I quite agree, but----[ ANTHONY Shakes his head] You make it a question of bedrock principle? |
3254 | I read your article, and I thought to meself after I''d finished: Which would I feel smallest-- if I was-- the Judge, the Jury, or the''Ome Secretary? |
3254 | I remember his saying"Gold or notes?" |
3254 | I remember my first thought:"Is n''t his nose too long?" |
3254 | I repeat: Duty to what?" |
3254 | I s''pose ye''re on the comic pypers? |
3254 | I said to Mr. Anthony this morning:"Is it worth it, sir?" |
3254 | I said to him:"Where do you feel it?" |
3254 | I said, you do n''t think we shall have the thunder before to- night, do you? |
3254 | I said,"you think it''s worse, then, than it used to be?" |
3254 | I said,''those English wives and bakers drop bombs? |
3254 | I say, Freda, have they been going hard at rehearsals? |
3254 | I say, I hope my young sisters have been decent to you?" |
3254 | I say, Marlow, where are the cigarettes? |
3254 | I say, Rector, did you really know a Challenger in the''nineties? |
3254 | I say, Topping, do you know anything about the film? |
3254 | I say, are you going this way? |
3254 | I say, can you stand this spiritualistic racket? |
3254 | I say, d''you want me----? |
3254 | I say, have I got to speak? |
3254 | I say, is it true that Maurice Lever''s coming with your mother? |
3254 | I say, is n''t there anything to be done to prevent a divorce? |
3254 | I say, is that the yarn that''s going round about his having had a lot of m- money stolen in a country house? |
3254 | I say, must you go on spoiling their home? |
3254 | I say, what d''you suppose happens to us?" |
3254 | I say, what made you grow that b- b- eastly beard?" |
3254 | I say, what shall I have to swear to? |
3254 | I say, what''s your name? |
3254 | I say, you wo n''t get cold?" |
3254 | I say- what gives you these heads? |
3254 | I say-- er-- was n''t there a book? |
3254 | I say-- who is she? |
3254 | I say; what''s the matter? |
3254 | I see the name of your engineer is Rodriguez-- Italian, eh? |
3254 | I see; four days a week, and you get half a crown a day, is that it? |
3254 | I sent for you-- to-- ask--[ quickly] How old are you? |
3254 | I sha n''t ask anything from him-- nothing-- do you understand? |
3254 | I shall not go back beaten; you will have to carry me on my shield;"and slyly:"Too heavy, eh? |
3254 | I should n''t be free, either; so what''s the good? |
3254 | I should n''t be surprised if he heard voices, like--''who was it? |
3254 | I should n''t like--""Where was he educated?" |
3254 | I soon stopped-- what was there to say? |
3254 | I stammered:"What do you mean by freedom?" |
3254 | I suppose Gertrude can have me? |
3254 | I suppose I can wait for her in the garden?" |
3254 | I suppose I may ask you not to be entirely oblivious of our name; or is such a consideration unworthy of your honour?" |
3254 | I suppose he ca n''t slip out of that room? |
3254 | I suppose he''d told the Professor? |
3254 | I suppose it''s natural to want my money back? |
3254 | I suppose she''d mind if-- I-- were to come down now and then?" |
3254 | I suppose she''s told you all about it?" |
3254 | I suppose she''s wrapped up in him?" |
3254 | I suppose the lady has n''t missed her purse? |
3254 | I suppose the news of his death stopped you?" |
3254 | I suppose there''s no mistake?" |
3254 | I suppose there''s nothing else I ought to do, in the interests of the law? |
3254 | I suppose we can go out the back way? |
3254 | I suppose you did n''t leave your latch- key in the door? |
3254 | I suppose you do n''t think a person like me can ever really love?" |
3254 | I suppose you fellows really think you''re doing good out there?" |
3254 | I suppose you find it quiet enough up your way, miss?" |
3254 | I suppose you haf been killing lots of Germans? |
3254 | I suppose you have heard about it?" |
3254 | I suppose you know that Nicholas has driven him to the frontier? |
3254 | I suppose you know that she''s engaged to be married?" |
3254 | I suppose you know who the lady you''ve been watching really is?" |
3254 | I suppose you want me to go? |
3254 | I suppose you would n''t walk my pace a minute or two, would you? |
3254 | I suppose you''ll be comin''''ome to fetch your things to- night? |
3254 | I suppose you''re in debt?" |
3254 | I suppose, as you say, the man must be charged, eh? |
3254 | I suppose,"he added, with sudden malice,"a laborers''rising would have no chance?" |
3254 | I swear to you, sirs, I could not help it---?" |
3254 | I sy put that dahn, wo n''t yer? |
3254 | I sy: Is this the lytest fashion o''receivin''guests? |
3254 | I take Madame''s cloak? |
3254 | I take it you do n''t belong to any Church, Lord William? |
3254 | I think I ought to prosecute, now, do n''t you, sir?" |
3254 | I think Mrs. Stormer as good as any man-- only-- only--""Not quite so good as you, eh?" |
3254 | I think they could do perfectly well on seven hundred to start with, do n''t you, Charles?" |
3254 | I think you ought to see it?" |
3254 | I think you said he was a congenital? |
3254 | I think you would; but can it be Nature to do something which will hurt terribly one whom I love and who loves me? |
3254 | I think--""I do n''t believe in doin''things by halves,"said Mrs. Dennant;"he does n''t drink, I suppose?" |
3254 | I thought I heard--[Louder]--Is these anybody out there? |
3254 | I thought he could n''t really be--""Really be what?" |
3254 | I thought you were a Celt; so it''s not your farm?" |
3254 | I understand, a large sum of money? |
3254 | I waited, it caught me-- what happened? |
3254 | I want to know this: Has this Mrs. Jones been here the whole morning? |
3254 | I wanted to ask you: Could you arrange for Noel to come and get trained here? |
3254 | I wanted you so much to see my room-- do you like it? |
3254 | I wanted you to tell me-- who is she?" |
3254 | I was hot from walking, I could feel the blood boiling in my veins-- I said to myself''Old, are you?'' |
3254 | I was sorry for my old guest, but vexed with him too; what business had he to carry his Quixotism to such an unpleasant length? |
3254 | I was with him this afternoon-"The Squire said suddenly:"He''s not ill, is he?" |
3254 | I will catch the young man''s trout; thou shalt catch-- h''m!--he shall catch-- What is it he catches-- trees? |
3254 | I will come with pleasure; you do n''t mind my being dirty?" |
3254 | I will not be made angry; do you understand? |
3254 | I wish to goodness...."He checked himself, and added:"The question is, what had I better do with this house?" |
3254 | I wonder if Cook could do anything with him? |
3254 | I wonder if I could bear to be unhappy to save someone else-- as Leila is? |
3254 | I wonder if I shall die? |
3254 | I wonder if she''d see me?" |
3254 | I wonder if you would be so very kind as to let us have a few words with Mrs. Dedmond alone? |
3254 | I wonder what this filly''s like?'' |
3254 | I would surmise in your leisure moments you have created babies, sir? |
3254 | I''ad a word wiv you,''adn''t I? |
3254 | I''ad one come to see we before the war, an''they''m still goin''on? |
3254 | I''d do anything to save you pain-- won''t you stop just for a minute? |
3254 | I''ll let you away-- can''t you see I will? |
3254 | I''ll take it for what''s overdue, d''ye hear? |
3254 | I''m going to take an afternoon off; too cold for Lord''s, I suppose?" |
3254 | I''m sorry; but has he t- taken it in quite the right way? |
3254 | I''m sure I did n''t want to-- it''s not likely, is it? |
3254 | I''ope the young ladies are well, sir?" |
3254 | I''ve come on purpose to speak to you; will you come outside a minute? |
3254 | I''ve finished here; shall I do the drawing- room now? |
3254 | I''ve got a balalaika; you ca n''t play on it, can you? |
3254 | I''ve got a fr--[ She checks herself] The streets are beautiful, are n''t they? |
3254 | I, sir? |
3254 | I? |
3254 | I? |
3254 | I? |
3254 | II Then what happens to the moon? |
3254 | III Crossing the Green Park on his way home, was he more, or less, restless? |
3254 | III To wake, and hear the birds at early practise, and feel that winter is over-- is there any pleasanter moment? |
3254 | IV INTO THE DANGERS OF A PUBLIC LIFE"At what time is my meeting?" |
3254 | If Aunt Nell''s got a room for him-- of course-- why not? |
3254 | If De Levis got those notes back, and the rest of the money, anonymously? |
3254 | If I am right, you want something for it to tread on, do n''t you, to get your full effect?" |
3254 | If I can not, what use am I-- what use to the poor fellows in there, what use in all the world?'' |
3254 | If I get my fingers skinned over my marriage, which I undertake at my own risk, what''s the community to do with it? |
3254 | If I give you money, will you disappear, for his sake? |
3254 | If I had before, perhaps I would n''t have dared only, I do n''t know-- you never know, do you? |
3254 | If I had n''t been, I could n''t have risked coming here, could I? |
3254 | If I hit a little man in the eye, and he hits me back, have I the right to chastise him? |
3254 | If I might suggest-- German--''ock? |
3254 | If I promise you a separate house-- and just a visit now and then?" |
3254 | If I put my guinea- pig down, will they bite it? |
3254 | If I saw a man ill- treat a cat, should I be justified in striking him?" |
3254 | If I see France looking at Brighton"--he laid his head upon one side, and beamed at Shelton,--"what do I do? |
3254 | If I should fall into their hands, Miss, shall I eat the despatch? |
3254 | If I were a strong man I should n''t dream....""What d''you want for''em?" |
3254 | If I were rich, should I not be simply veree original,''ighly respected, with soul above commerce, travelling to see the world? |
3254 | If I''m going to be killed, I think we''ve got a right to be married first; and if I''m not, then what does it matter?" |
3254 | If Irene broke such laws, what does it matter?" |
3254 | If Larry were condemned in his stead, would there be any less miscarriage of justice? |
3254 | If Mrs March is n''t about? |
3254 | If Sylvia woke, and found him still away, what might she not think? |
3254 | If a man does not soon pass beyond the thought"By what shall this dog profit me?" |
3254 | If a model landlord like Malloring had trouble with his people, who-- who should be immune? |
3254 | If a parson''s not to du the Christian thing, whu is, then? |
3254 | If a person loves a person, they have to decide, have n''t they? |
3254 | If against the operation and she died, how face her mother and the doctor afterwards? |
3254 | If darkness and light did not change, could we breathe? |
3254 | If every girl or woman the boy knew was to cause such a feeling in her, what would life be like? |
3254 | If for this we are to be stoned and cast forth, what living force is there in the religion I have loved; what does it all come to? |
3254 | If foreigners invaded us, would n''t you be fighting tooth and nail like those tribesmen, out there? |
3254 | If he and her mother-- how would that affect her chance? |
3254 | If he could be so ridiculously young, what became of her doubts? |
3254 | If he could kiss them, would he not go nearly mad? |
3254 | If he did, how could he hesitate one second? |
3254 | If he had heard in dark, pessimistic moments the words''yeomen''and''very small beer''used in connection with his origin, did he believe them? |
3254 | If he had n''t the right to take the pearls he had given her himself, who had? |
3254 | If he might not, what should he do when they were married? |
3254 | If he were a human being, could she really be one, too? |
3254 | If he, who knew them both, and was so fond of Mrs. Noel, would talk to Miltoun, about the right to be happy, the right to revolt? |
3254 | If her old school- fellows now knew what was before her, how would they treat her? |
3254 | If it had not been for the expression on Gyp''s face, what might he not have done? |
3254 | If it were his own life, would he be taking that risk? |
3254 | If it were n''t so, do you imagine for a moment your''boys in blue''could keep order? |
3254 | If it were still against the grain with her, had he not feelings to subdue, injury to forgive, pain to forget? |
3254 | If it''s disagreeable to her-- but why should it be? |
3254 | If it''s not a rude question, why was that? |
3254 | If it, indeed, had come, dared she take it? |
3254 | If my faith and my convictions mean nothing to them-- why should they follow? |
3254 | If my thoughts and my will are n''t free, how can I work? |
3254 | If my thoughts be"What could I buy that for?" |
3254 | If not, why not? |
3254 | If not-- what hope of regeneration from above? |
3254 | If one had to miss a meal, what comfort in the knowledge that many others had to miss it too? |
3254 | If one loved, what could one want better? |
3254 | If one''s own wife called this-- this sort of-- thing, love-- then, why had he been faithful to her-- in very hot climates-- all these years? |
3254 | If only even he could surrender to the sudden vision:''What does it all matter?'' |
3254 | If only she did see him, what would the rest matter? |
3254 | If she lied about this, could she go on lying to his other questions? |
3254 | If she sprang up, could she slip by him before he caught her arm again, and get that taxi? |
3254 | If she sticks to you-- do you think she will? |
3254 | If she was not enough for him now, would she not be still less, if his work were cut away? |
3254 | If she was pursuing him, how could he help it? |
3254 | If she, so soft and yielding as he had always judged her, could take this decided step-- what could not happen? |
3254 | If so, what would be left? |
3254 | If so, why should it be different for us? |
3254 | If so-- why did they not at least go off together? |
3254 | If some one had asked him in those days,"In confidence-- are you in love with this girl?" |
3254 | If that girl knew how much anxiety and suffering she had caused, would she stop writing, stop seeing him? |
3254 | If that is really what you do at Oxford? |
3254 | If the Union were going to withdraw their support from the men, as they''ve done, why did they ever allow them to strike at all? |
3254 | If the brute wo n''t fight, what am I to do, sir? |
3254 | If the chairman''s got no voice, ca n''t somebody read for him?" |
3254 | If the fellow could build houses, what did his clothes matter? |
3254 | If the law is going to enter private houses and abrogate domestic authority, where the hell shall we be? |
3254 | If the working man''s to be looked after, whatever he does-- what on earth''s to become of his go, and foresight, and perseverance?" |
3254 | If the worst comes, and this man is traced to you, can you trust yourself not to give Larry away? |
3254 | If there is n''t one-- why be kind? |
3254 | If there''s a case would it be all right afterwards? |
3254 | If these ladies and gentlemen were put into that pit into which he had been looking, would a single one of them emerge again? |
3254 | If they could drive me out of here by fair means or foul, would they hesitate a moment? |
3254 | If they get that out of him, and recall me, am I to say he told me of it at the time? |
3254 | If they had told him, what would he do? |
3254 | If they prove to be really fond of each other, why should they be made unhappy because of the past?" |
3254 | If they were like this now, what would they be when the woman in her woke? |
3254 | If this man were persecuting her with his attentions, why had he not gone across when she was standing at the picture- shop? |
3254 | If those gentlemen were in my position, do you think that they would hesitate?" |
3254 | If we really thought it, was it humbug? |
3254 | If yer went into the foundytions of your wealf-- would yer feel like''avin''any? |
3254 | If you are right, I agree; but are you right?" |
3254 | If you ca n''t buy the house, will you pay his lawsuit claim? |
3254 | If you can not, how is it our fault? |
3254 | If you could just open out on them a little more? |
3254 | If you do n''t get work, how are we to go on? |
3254 | If you do n''t like me, why do you follow me about? |
3254 | If you do n''t remember anything, how can you remember that? |
3254 | If you had n''t had me to come to, where would you have been? |
3254 | If you have finished a thing, does it ever satisfy you? |
3254 | If you let Gradman off his chain, would he bite the cook? |
3254 | If you once begin a thing, you always go on; and what earthly good? |
3254 | If you think she would like to know how we all feel for her, you would tell her, would n''t you? |
3254 | If you want to do away with marriage, why do n''t you say so?" |
3254 | If you wanted to blow it up, though, you''d have to begin from here, would n''t you? |
3254 | If you were downstairs all the time, as you say, why was your door first open and then shut? |
3254 | If you were to load him with a character and give him money on condition that he acted as we all act, do you think he would accept it?" |
3254 | If you would like to have a look in at the opera, come and dine with me quietly...."But where? |
3254 | If you would like to have a look in at the opera, come and dine with me quietly...."But where? |
3254 | If you''d like us to have more holly? |
3254 | If you''re going home we might go together?" |
3254 | If''e go away, whu''s goin''to finish us for confirmation? |
3254 | If...? |
3254 | Images-- nothing solid-- hein? |
3254 | Impudence, constitutional and professional, sustained him in saying to the little maid:"Mrs. Larne at home? |
3254 | Impulse of acquisition; or:"From what quarry did it come?" |
3254 | Impulse of inquiry; or:"Which would be the right end for my head?" |
3254 | In France, for instance?" |
3254 | In God''s name, how can I help the difference in our faiths? |
3254 | In God''s name-- what? |
3254 | In a hard voice Keith said:"What did you do then?" |
3254 | In a quite friendly voice she said:"Can I do anything for you?" |
3254 | In all this chaos, what of his work? |
3254 | In any case, what end is served by your staying in the country? |
3254 | In bed? |
3254 | In disconsolate silence, he thought rapidly:''What''s to be done? |
3254 | In exchange we have got money, but what''s the good of money when we do n''t know how to spend it?" |
3254 | In future-- see? |
3254 | In her calmest voice Noel answered:"Why should we, after being told that he was n''t liked?" |
3254 | In his aunts''drawing- room he heard with but muffled ears those usual questions: How was his dear father? |
3254 | In his laziest voice, he answered:"I suppose you mean-- does she hunt me?" |
3254 | In his room? |
3254 | In law? |
3254 | In one little corner? |
3254 | In place of that new feeling, intoxicating as wine, what was coming? |
3254 | In place of this, for some reason that he did not understand, he looked at the young foreigner, and asked,"Why do you say all this to me?" |
3254 | In real life, which should I naturally do-- put them in here[ She touches her chest] or in my bag? |
3254 | In short, the question is: Are you prepared to go out for us, and report on it? |
3254 | In spirit, was he not always rushing to her like that? |
3254 | In spite of my- wickedness? |
3254 | In that great London, which they had conquered and become merged in, what time had they to be sentimental? |
3254 | In that half- drunken state, where would his baffled frenzies lead him? |
3254 | In the House? |
3254 | In the cab, he put his hand on hers and said:"Now, my dear?" |
3254 | In the close season? |
3254 | In the corridor, Rosek, in attendance, said:"Why not this evening? |
3254 | In the course of her appeal to see Falder, did the woman say anything that you specially remember? |
3254 | In the face of this, Falder, do you still deny that you altered both cheque and counterfoil? |
3254 | In the garden?" |
3254 | In the hall? |
3254 | In the little drawing- room when the door was shut, he asked gravely:"One of your protegees?" |
3254 | In the little drawing- room when the door was shut, he asked gravely:"One of your protegees?" |
3254 | In the meantime, my dear; another cup?" |
3254 | In the meantime, perhaps you''ll have some refreshment?" |
3254 | In the morning? |
3254 | In the neighbourhood of Lucy''s inn, the Rose and Maybush-- Can you imagine a prettier name? |
3254 | In the porch George said:"You''ll come in to lunch tomorrow, wo n''t you?" |
3254 | In the very act of going she gave him a look that said as plain as words:"Will you not?" |
3254 | In there, under the bomb? |
3254 | In these circumstances, what alternatives were left to her? |
3254 | In this girl of evil life, who had brought on them this tragedy, what was it which moved him to a sort of unwilling compassion? |
3254 | In this room? |
3254 | In this search, who knows what he thought and what he sought? |
3254 | In those minutes a hundred things came up in me-- a hundred memories, true, untrue, what do I know? |
3254 | In truth, Felix had looked at the old man, for the accursed question had begun to worry him: Ought he or not to give the lame old fellow something? |
3254 | In what condition were you? |
3254 | In what garden were you wandering?" |
3254 | In what way? |
3254 | In what-- in what? |
3254 | In your rooms? |
3254 | In''sixty-- yes--''sixty- five? |
3254 | Indeed, Miss? |
3254 | Indeed, he detested Euphemia altogether, to whom he always alluded as''Nick''s daughter, what''s she called-- the pale one?'' |
3254 | Indeed? |
3254 | Indeed? |
3254 | Indeed? |
3254 | Inspector, do you really think it necessary to disturb the whole house and knock up all my guests? |
3254 | Instance? |
3254 | Irene was in front; that young fellow-- what had they nicknamed him--''The Buccaneer?'' |
3254 | Irene''s lips moved; she seemed to be saying:"Where should I go?" |
3254 | Irene''s voice answered:"Why not at dinner?" |
3254 | Irene, smiling quietly, said:"If only....""Only what?" |
3254 | Irish poplin?" |
3254 | Is Auntie Babs going?" |
3254 | Is Daddy one? |
3254 | Is Dawker here? |
3254 | Is God here? |
3254 | Is God with your goats? |
3254 | Is Gyp so fond of you as that? |
3254 | Is Jarland there? |
3254 | Is Mabel in love with-- whoever she is in love with? |
3254 | Is Miss Holly asleep?" |
3254 | Is Miss Holly asleep?" |
3254 | Is Miss Stokes middle class? |
3254 | Is Monsieur not well? |
3254 | Is Mr. Malise in? |
3254 | Is Mr. Strangway in? |
3254 | Is Poulder? |
3254 | Is Roberts out? |
3254 | Is Soames getting a divorce?" |
3254 | Is Studdenham and the pups to wait, Mm? |
3254 | Is a little blighter a little Englishman? |
3254 | Is a man only to hold beliefs when they''re popular? |
3254 | Is a rose like an artichoke?" |
3254 | Is all well with you and with your boy? |
3254 | Is anyone else coming? |
3254 | Is anything else missing? |
3254 | Is civilisation built on chivalry or on self- interest? |
3254 | Is father ill? |
3254 | Is he all right? |
3254 | Is he as pale as ever? |
3254 | Is he behaving? |
3254 | Is he better?" |
3254 | Is he falling in love with you? |
3254 | Is he in the house? |
3254 | Is he in?" |
3254 | Is he just going to burn himself? |
3254 | Is he likely ever to forget that? |
3254 | Is he really out of danger? |
3254 | Is he still delicate?" |
3254 | Is he that funny little man?" |
3254 | Is he tired of her?" |
3254 | Is he to become a member of the luckless crews that man those dark, ill- starred ships called prisons? |
3254 | Is he up here to- night? |
3254 | Is he very badly torn? |
3254 | Is he working double tides to finish his magnum opus? |
3254 | Is he- is he really coming here, Mother? |
3254 | Is he-- er----?" |
3254 | Is he? |
3254 | Is her account of the relationship between you a correct one? |
3254 | Is her husband in work? |
3254 | Is his account correct? |
3254 | Is his love big enough to carry you both over everything?.... |
3254 | Is his picture of Daddy good?" |
3254 | Is it Guilty, or Guilty but insane? |
3254 | Is it a bad one?" |
3254 | Is it a bargain? |
3254 | Is it a crime for me to love her?" |
3254 | Is it a good thing, then? |
3254 | Is it a question of money? |
3254 | Is it a real bird, mum? |
3254 | Is it a sin-- I wonder?'' |
3254 | Is it a success?" |
3254 | Is it a woman baby? |
3254 | Is it about Lever? |
3254 | Is it all ready for to- night? |
3254 | Is it all right?" |
3254 | Is it as bad as that? |
3254 | Is it as bad as that? |
3254 | Is it back to him thou wilt go? |
3254 | Is it because he''s old and we are young? |
3254 | Is it because of Nollie?" |
3254 | Is it because you''re so English, d''you think? |
3254 | Is it below the belt, Mr. Underwood? |
3254 | Is it descriptive of technique, or descriptive of the spirit of the artist; or both, or neither? |
3254 | Is it fair to attribute responsibility to an unsigned journalist-- for what he has to say? |
3254 | Is it fear of ridicule, independence, or consideration, for others that prevents one from showing one''s feelings? |
3254 | Is it for pleasure that you do it, or for pain? |
3254 | Is it for the sake of those up there? |
3254 | Is it for your own sake-- for the sake of your family-- for whose sake? |
3254 | Is it going to do you any good, that''s the question? |
3254 | Is it his wife? |
3254 | Is it in his mouth? |
3254 | Is it incurable?" |
3254 | Is it kind of boiled looking? |
3254 | Is it learning? |
3254 | Is it my fault that they quarrelled with their Union too? |
3254 | Is it not natural that Youth about to die should yearn for pleasure, for love, for union, before death?" |
3254 | Is it not plain and simple? |
3254 | Is it not so?" |
3254 | Is it not? |
3254 | Is it or is it not a Mayor?" |
3254 | Is it people on our side who throw things? |
3254 | Is it people-- society-- you''re afraid of? |
3254 | Is it possible you do n''t take the young man seriously, Babs?" |
3254 | Is it possible? |
3254 | Is it really necessary for you to do anything?" |
3254 | Is it sheer impudence, or lunacy, or what? |
3254 | Is it short enough and to the point? |
3254 | Is it so very unflattering to you that in spite of everything I-- I still want you for my wife? |
3254 | Is it the dark horse, Bertie?" |
3254 | Is it the heat? |
3254 | Is it the heat? |
3254 | Is it the heat? |
3254 | Is it then? |
3254 | Is it too far from your work?" |
3254 | Is it too late?'' |
3254 | Is it true that he divorced her, and she married Jon Forsyte''s father?" |
3254 | Is it true-- what they''re shouting? |
3254 | Is it true?" |
3254 | Is it up or down to get so soft that you ca n''t take care of yourself? |
3254 | Is it very big? |
3254 | Is it very nice in towns, in the World, where you come from? |
3254 | Is it with Baryn?" |
3254 | Is it worth it, Moaney? |
3254 | Is it worth while to rag me? |
3254 | Is it you? |
3254 | Is it your impression that the cane inflicted the injury? |
3254 | Is it your own? |
3254 | Is it your view that Christianity is on the up- grade, Lord William? |
3254 | Is it, do you think chronic unemployment with a vagrant tendency? |
3254 | Is it- is it over?" |
3254 | Is it-- Has she really had the pluck? |
3254 | Is it? |
3254 | Is it? |
3254 | Is it? |
3254 | Is life anything but a nightmare, a dream; and is not this the reality? |
3254 | Is my father back, Topping? |
3254 | Is my wife here? |
3254 | Is n''t he a chook?" |
3254 | Is n''t he a dun? |
3254 | Is n''t he coming? |
3254 | Is n''t he fun, though?" |
3254 | Is n''t he good enough for me?'' |
3254 | Is n''t he rather a darling?" |
3254 | Is n''t he the one you wrote about-- come down in the world? |
3254 | Is n''t he wonderful? |
3254 | Is n''t it a bit lonely there?" |
3254 | Is n''t it a bore? |
3254 | Is n''t it a particular noise? |
3254 | Is n''t it a pity about young Dunning? |
3254 | Is n''t it a poor bird, mum?" |
3254 | Is n''t it a treat, dear Papa? |
3254 | Is n''t it always a mistake to lose one''s temper? |
3254 | Is n''t it always as full as this?" |
3254 | Is n''t it an awfully hopeless sort of life? |
3254 | Is n''t it awful-- like a boiled rabbit?" |
3254 | Is n''t it charmin''?" |
3254 | Is n''t it disgusting? |
3254 | Is n''t it dreadful? |
3254 | Is n''t it funny? |
3254 | Is n''t it hateful that people should hurt others, because they''re foreign or different?" |
3254 | Is n''t it just like him to get married now? |
3254 | Is n''t it pleasant to know that whatever you do you can none of you be destitute?" |
3254 | Is n''t it splendid? |
3254 | Is n''t it stupid? |
3254 | Is n''t it, Fleur?" |
3254 | Is n''t it, James? |
3254 | Is n''t it? |
3254 | Is n''t life bad enough already?" |
3254 | Is n''t money horrible, Guardy?" |
3254 | Is n''t she a spidery old chip? |
3254 | Is n''t she fearfully alive, though? |
3254 | Is n''t she good- looking enough for you, or what? |
3254 | Is n''t she here? |
3254 | Is n''t she worth serving for?" |
3254 | Is n''t she worth waiting for? |
3254 | Is n''t that a very common practice? |
3254 | Is n''t that delicious?" |
3254 | Is n''t that excessive?" |
3254 | Is n''t that rather coercive, Joan? |
3254 | Is n''t that so? |
3254 | Is n''t that the Professor''s knock? |
3254 | Is n''t there a small thing I can do for you?" |
3254 | Is n''t there anything better than being good? |
3254 | Is n''t there generally some clause against it?" |
3254 | Is n''t there-- when you''re like this? |
3254 | Is n''t this gorgeous? |
3254 | Is n''t this the most perfect lamp you ever saw? |
3254 | Is n''t washing one''s head awful?" |
3254 | Is not that salvation, and happiness? |
3254 | Is she clever?" |
3254 | Is she dead? |
3254 | Is she dressed like one? |
3254 | Is she here?" |
3254 | Is she in the house now? |
3254 | Is she in town? |
3254 | Is she insured agynst''er own curiosity? |
3254 | Is she known here? |
3254 | Is she known here? |
3254 | Is she not, Monsieur Barra?" |
3254 | Is she pretty?" |
3254 | Is she still going? |
3254 | Is she the charwoman employed at 6, Rockingham Gate? |
3254 | Is she with her husband? |
3254 | Is she-- er-- is she all right? |
3254 | Is that Megan? |
3254 | Is that Swedish, do you think-- or what?" |
3254 | Is that a British habit? |
3254 | Is that a true definition of your principle?" |
3254 | Is that all you came to say? |
3254 | Is that all your luggage?" |
3254 | Is that all, please, sir? |
3254 | Is that all?" |
3254 | Is that an excuse for driving over me? |
3254 | Is that boulder firm? |
3254 | Is that clear enough for ye? |
3254 | Is that comfy? |
3254 | Is that enough?" |
3254 | Is that essential to nice girls too? |
3254 | Is that exaggerated?" |
3254 | Is that exaggerated?" |
3254 | Is that her name?" |
3254 | Is that in accordance with the spirit of Christ''s teaching, or is it not?" |
3254 | Is that indeed a bygone glory? |
3254 | Is that long? |
3254 | Is that one of the''lessons of life''? |
3254 | Is that quite fair? |
3254 | Is that right or wrong according to, your view?" |
3254 | Is that right? |
3254 | Is that right? |
3254 | Is that right?" |
3254 | Is that so, COKESON? |
3254 | Is that so, Thomas? |
3254 | Is that so? |
3254 | Is that so? |
3254 | Is that so? |
3254 | Is that the Duke''s agent? |
3254 | Is that the box? |
3254 | Is that the box? |
3254 | Is that the thing? |
3254 | Is that to be his voyage- from which so few return? |
3254 | Is that what Aunt Constance means when she says:''If life were not a paradox, we could not get on at all''? |
3254 | Is that what you came for? |
3254 | Is that what you meant, Derek?" |
3254 | Is that what you meant, Derek?" |
3254 | Is that what you want, Mr Vane? |
3254 | Is that what you wanted to speak to me about? |
3254 | Is that where your friends go?" |
3254 | Is that why they do not drust my word?" |
3254 | Is that why you do n''t like him? |
3254 | Is that your faith? |
3254 | Is that your friend, Molly? |
3254 | Is that your only reason for regret? |
3254 | Is that your opinion too, sir-- and yours-- and yours? |
3254 | Is that your opinion?" |
3254 | Is the female prisoner known to you? |
3254 | Is the little dog all right? |
3254 | Is the regiment to go, Mr. Hubert? |
3254 | Is the shrine invisible?" |
3254 | Is there a God? |
3254 | Is there a God? |
3254 | Is there a letter for me? |
3254 | Is there a light at the far end, Martin?" |
3254 | Is there a lot of yer sewin''yer fingers orf at tuppence''ypenny the pair? |
3254 | Is there a man of you here that has less to gain by striking? |
3254 | Is there a man of you that had more to lose? |
3254 | Is there a man of you that has given up eight hundred pounds since this trouble here began? |
3254 | Is there a pin or anything? |
3254 | Is there a victory yet? |
3254 | Is there any condition I can make which will bring you back to me? |
3254 | Is there any connection? |
3254 | Is there any man you know who would be so lacking in chivalry as to refuse in these circumstances?" |
3254 | Is there any necessity, Timson? |
3254 | Is there any reason why she should come instead of any other girl?" |
3254 | Is there any sort of case to report? |
3254 | Is there any way out of that, for her?" |
3254 | Is there anybody here that can understand American? |
3254 | Is there anybody so unhappy?'' |
3254 | Is there anything I can do for you? |
3254 | Is there anything I can do, sir? |
3254 | Is there anything I can do? |
3254 | Is there anything I can do?" |
3254 | Is there anything between him and Annette?" |
3254 | Is there anything between you and Jon? |
3254 | Is there anything else you want, Father? |
3254 | Is there anything more?" |
3254 | Is there anything new?" |
3254 | Is there anything special, Dad? |
3254 | Is there anything we can get, and send you? |
3254 | Is there anything you would like me to say to him?" |
3254 | Is there anything you''d like to say?" |
3254 | Is there anything you''ll take, not to spoil my life? |
3254 | Is there anything? |
3254 | Is there in all the world a thing so wonderful as I?... |
3254 | Is there need for fear that a swallow should dash itself against the wall over which it skims? |
3254 | Is there no chance of you and Tod?" |
3254 | Is there no other way?" |
3254 | Is there nobody, then, who can do good?" |
3254 | Is there room? |
3254 | Is there-- is there going to be a scandal?" |
3254 | Is this a ply wivaht words? |
3254 | Is this not very much in the English character? |
3254 | Is this relevant, Mr. Frome? |
3254 | Is this the Millennium, Cook? |
3254 | Is this the rum--? |
3254 | Is this the same child that told me only the other night she wanted to know everything? |
3254 | Is this the''63, Dad? |
3254 | Is this young man to be ground to pieces under this machine for an act which at the worst was one of weakness? |
3254 | Is this your dog? |
3254 | Is this your home?" |
3254 | Is this your husband? |
3254 | Is your dog safe?" |
3254 | Is your father in?" |
3254 | Is your knee fit, do you think?" |
3254 | Is your mother old?" |
3254 | Is your promise worth anything? |
3254 | It ca n''t be true about marriage-- how can it when----? |
3254 | It can''t-- can it-- while James is sitting on it? |
3254 | It could not last-- how could it? |
3254 | It does n''t amount to melancholia? |
3254 | It does n''t occur to you that people, however humble, like to have some say in their own fate? |
3254 | It does seem monstrous, does n''t it? |
3254 | It haunts me? |
3254 | It is an old cabby, is it not, Monsieur? |
3254 | It is because I am German, then? |
3254 | It is n''t a usual thing for you to have the door opened for you, is it? |
3254 | It is n''t fair to us to let old things spoil our happiness, is it?" |
3254 | It is n''t fair to-- Why not?" |
3254 | It is n''t in you, is it? |
3254 | It is n''t satisfied, is it? |
3254 | It is n''t to be manufactured, is it? |
3254 | It is not good to be always sad, is it, Herr Harz?" |
3254 | It is opened a few inches, and NURSE''S voice says:"Can I come in, Ma''am?" |
3254 | It is such a pity you and Clare-- What is it? |
3254 | It is to them we must look----''""Will you''ave a glass, sir?" |
3254 | It must be awfully exciting, of course; but it''s cruel, is n''t it? |
3254 | It must be one or the other, must n''t it? |
3254 | It seemed like the finger of God; and perhaps it was-- who knows?" |
3254 | It seems about a hundred years, does n''t it? |
3254 | It seems so dreadful, and it''s not only yourselves, is it?" |
3254 | It so clearly said:''Well, what do you think? |
3254 | It startled me; and I fear I asked quite foolishly:''Is it a boy?'' |
3254 | It upset him? |
3254 | It was Roberts''s doing, was n''t it? |
3254 | It was a double stunt-- to make sure-- wasn''t it, George? |
3254 | It was a good meeting, was n''t it?" |
3254 | It was after the young man had whistled before a Whistler, with the words,"D''you think he ever really saw a naked woman, sir?" |
3254 | It was all as though he had said to himself:"What''s the use?" |
3254 | It was almost on their lips to add,''And how is your dear grandfather?'' |
3254 | It was felt that he must be, and yet, what could be done? |
3254 | It was he, however, who, after one look at Stephen, said:"What''s the matter, Stevie?" |
3254 | It was her duty; why not her delight, too? |
3254 | It was much, but was it enough for a beautiful girl of twenty? |
3254 | It was my son, perhaps, you wished to see? |
3254 | It was not merely the careful speech but something lacking when the perfect mouth moved-- spirit, sensibility, who could say? |
3254 | It was only when leaving that he added:"So they''re not selling the Bolderby Old Crome, after all?" |
3254 | It was quiet to- night; he felt very drowsy.... Did Nollie still think of that young man, or had it passed? |
3254 | It was then that for two seconds the thought flashed through him: Ought I to have considered whether I could agree to that demand? |
3254 | It was-- for him-- a surprising thing to do, and he said rather anxiously:"What will you have?" |
3254 | It wo n''t creak? |
3254 | It would be no use to say of that event,"What does it matter? |
3254 | It would have been better if he could have seen the dance properly, would n''t it? |
3254 | It''d be too long for the papers, would n''t it? |
3254 | It''d been more if they''d a- known he was a- hankerin''after that young girl-- a married man like him; do n''t ye think so, sir?" |
3254 | It''ll take some time-- you do n''t want me? |
3254 | It''s a nice room, is n''t it?" |
3254 | It''s a pity to part with it; ai n''t you got another? |
3254 | It''s a pity, is n''t it? |
3254 | It''s all for the best, is n''t it?" |
3254 | It''s an unhappy position, is n''t it?" |
3254 | It''s awful, is n''t it?" |
3254 | It''s awfully difficult, is n''t it?" |
3254 | It''s awfully hot in here, is n''t it? |
3254 | It''s certainly the last thing to be considered-- who wants self- respect in a house, when you can squeeze in an extra lavatory?" |
3254 | It''s considerable, is n''t it? |
3254 | It''s jolly down here, is n''t it?" |
3254 | It''s my duty to----What''s that? |
3254 | It''s myself that I ca n''t rule"; and with a sudden burst of passion such as Scorrier had never seen in him:"Why did they send this man here? |
3254 | It''s nice to have her all to ourselves, is n''t it? |
3254 | It''s no good hiding our heads under our wings, is it?" |
3254 | It''s no good running your head against a stone wall, is it? |
3254 | It''s no use doing things by halves, is it? |
3254 | It''s not going to make any difference, is it? |
3254 | It''s not real sin when it only hurts yourself; but that does n''t prevent people condemning you, does it?" |
3254 | It''s nothing Charlie would mind? |
3254 | It''s quite a lot, really, is n''t it?" |
3254 | It''s rather jolly, is n''t it? |
3254 | It''s so dreadful when it''s your own, is n''t it? |
3254 | It''s so important for me not to miss any now, is n''t it?" |
3254 | It''s syfer,''yn''t it? |
3254 | It''s the only thing, is n''t it?" |
3254 | It''s this Dancy- De Levis case that''s keepin''him at the Courts, I suppose? |
3254 | It''s time I played the mother, is n''t it? |
3254 | It''s very cold, is n''t it?" |
3254 | It''s very hot this morning, do n''t you think? |
3254 | Ivy Takes them and goes out] What ever''s this? |
3254 | Ivy? |
3254 | James Jones, have you anything to ask this witness? |
3254 | James Jones? |
3254 | James was just saying what a busy time of year....""Was he?" |
3254 | James went on in a fluster:"Why, what should I know about it? |
3254 | James''s are much softer; are n''t they, James? |
3254 | James, are these really the foundations? |
3254 | James, are your breeches made of mufti? |
3254 | James, could you get her a Peche Melba? |
3254 | James, is there a future life? |
3254 | Japes?" |
3254 | Jill, I just wanted to say-- Need we? |
3254 | Jim, do you love me true? |
3254 | Jimmy, what else is there?" |
3254 | Joan, what''s happened to you? |
3254 | Joe Pillin, brooding over the fire, said:"This meeting-- d''you think they mean to have it? |
3254 | Joe, I am very hungry; is there nothing left?" |
3254 | John, whose dislike of the Bigwigs was that of the dogged worker of this life for the dogged talkers, wrinkled his brows:"How''s that?" |
3254 | Johnny, how can you? |
3254 | Johnny, what is the use of wrapping the thing up in catchwords? |
3254 | Johnny, will you be in to lunch? |
3254 | Johnny? |
3254 | Jolly dance last night, was n''t it? |
3254 | Jolly day, is n''t it?" |
3254 | Jolly moonlight, is n''t it, out there?" |
3254 | Jolly thought he had stopped their loving each other, did he? |
3254 | Jolly, is n''t it? |
3254 | Jolyon found no more appropriate answer than:"Wo n''t you smoke?" |
3254 | Jolyon was thinking; and Soames,''How shall I begin?'' |
3254 | Jolyon went up to Irene:"Do you want money?" |
3254 | Jolyon''s face twitched, and he said with painful slowness:"Better than your mother, Jon?" |
3254 | Jon said, quickly:"What''s the matter between him and my father?" |
3254 | Jon stammered:"Feud? |
3254 | Jones? |
3254 | Joy, what is the matter? |
3254 | Joy? |
3254 | Judging at once from the expression of her face that she must have heard the news of Miltoun, Barbara said:"Well, my dear Angel, any lecture for me?" |
3254 | Julia, how can you say a thing like that? |
3254 | Julia, will you leave me to manage this? |
3254 | June said:"How can you like the scent? |
3254 | Just a little turn? |
3254 | Just a road- man, flinging to the moon his song? |
3254 | Just as he was about to take his leave, however, the old fellow thus accosted him:"Did you ever go to the dentist, mister?" |
3254 | Just tell me why? |
3254 | Just the future? |
3254 | Just the watchman, telling his dateless tale of safety? |
3254 | Just those eyes, and lips, and hair? |
3254 | Just undressin''? |
3254 | Justice from London? |
3254 | Kasteliz answered with a hiss,"If you do not leave the city I will make you, with my sword-- do you understand?" |
3254 | Keep back, there? |
3254 | Keep him hankering? |
3254 | Keep us apart by the threat of a divorce? |
3254 | Kenneth, do you understand why he does n''t claim damages, after what he said that day- here? |
3254 | Kerry your parcels for you?" |
3254 | Kick a man that''s down? |
3254 | Kicked a ha- at?" |
3254 | Killed? |
3254 | Kind eh? |
3254 | Kirsteen answered:"Tod, will you tell Mother who''s here?" |
3254 | Kissing me, and-- hating me? |
3254 | Know me? |
3254 | Know? |
3254 | L. ANNE: James, are you really James? |
3254 | L. ANNE[ Mining] James-- we''re quite safe down here, are n''t we, in a revolution? |
3254 | LADY CHESHIRE: And-- do you think he''s quite lost his affection for you? |
3254 | LADY W. Coin? |
3254 | LADY W. Do n''t you think it was rather-- inconsiderate of you? |
3254 | LADY W. Do n''t you think you owe us an explanation? |
3254 | LADY W. Well, what did you tell him? |
3254 | LADY W. What did he ask you? |
3254 | LADY W. Why do you want to? |
3254 | LADY W. Why, what harm have we done? |
3254 | LADY W. Yes; that''s why I came dawn: Who was that person? |
3254 | LADY W.[ About to follow] Well, I do n''t see; are n''t they? |
3254 | LADY W.[ Apart] Have you-- spoken to him? |
3254 | LADY W.[ Puzzled] Well, why not? |
3254 | LAME M. Is''e a lord? |
3254 | LORD W. And what do you suggest we could have done, to avoid trouble? |
3254 | LORD W. But what is it? |
3254 | LORD W. Ca n''t you come, Nell? |
3254 | LORD W. Can you apply it in theory? |
3254 | LORD W. Got one of those lozenges on you, Nell? |
3254 | LORD W. I say, why do we always call them they? |
3254 | LORD W. I say: Is there really going to be a revolution, or are you making it up, you Press? |
3254 | LORD W. Is that old lady your mother? |
3254 | LORD W. Is there any difference? |
3254 | LORD W. New? |
3254 | LORD W. So you think one takes to it as a sort of insurance, Mr. Lemmy? |
3254 | LORD W. So you''re my friend of the cellars? |
3254 | LORD W. Taken some lifting- wouldn''t they? |
3254 | LORD W. The wish is always father to the thought, is n''t it? |
3254 | LORD W. What did n''t he? |
3254 | LORD W. What? |
3254 | LORD W. Where''ve you put''em, Poulder? |
3254 | LORD W. Yes-- shall we--? |
3254 | LORD W.[ Cheerfully] I say, Poulder, what have you and James been doing to the Press? |
3254 | LORD W.[ Dubious] What d''you mean by Christianity-- loving-- kindness and that? |
3254 | LORD W.[ Taking out the gum drop and looking at it] What the deuce did I put it in for? |
3254 | La, Conventions? |
3254 | Lady Maiden had remarked to Mrs. Winlow in the drawing- room before dinner:"What is it about that Mrs. Bellew? |
3254 | Lady Malden answered:"Gregory Vigil? |
3254 | Lady Summerhay murmured:"Gyp? |
3254 | Lady Valleys began almost timidly:"My dear, is Eustace out of bed yet?" |
3254 | Land''s an awful bore in these days, do n''t you think?" |
3254 | Larne?" |
3254 | Larry''s smile; and the flowers in his hand? |
3254 | Larry''s still living here? |
3254 | Larry, will there be much pain? |
3254 | Larry-- couldn''t we? |
3254 | Lavender began eagerly;"is it-- are you employing any German prisoners, sir?" |
3254 | Lavender do you tell me they were not Germans?" |
3254 | Lavender eagerly,"would you?" |
3254 | Lavender had come out of his coma at the words,"D''you think we can win this war?" |
3254 | Lavender proceeded:"What, however, must the civilized nations do when at last they have clean sheets? |
3254 | Lavender so horrible that he said:"Why do you look at me like that?" |
3254 | Lavender to be sheer astonishment, began to fidget; then the one next him turned to his neighbour, and said:"Are we, Alf? |
3254 | Lavender''s brain regained its activity, and he was enchanted to hear the voice of his pilot saying:"How are you getting on, sir?" |
3254 | Lavender, aghast, can not wish it to stop until we have destroyed our common enemies?" |
3254 | Lavender, aghast,"to break it in?" |
3254 | Lavender, do you find your work a great strain? |
3254 | Lavender, moved by the human element in her words, was about to say,"But why, madam?" |
3254 | Lavender, suddenly looking up into his face,"do you consider that a man is justified in living a private life? |
3254 | Lavender, when he was alone,"that I am serving God and Mammon? |
3254 | Lavender, while a shiver went down his spine,"what is that?" |
3254 | Lavender, who was extremely nice in money matters;"what shall I do now?" |
3254 | Lavender,"are you certain that therein does not speak the snob inherent in the national bosom? |
3254 | Lavender,"he said, in a raw, forcible voice;"sit down, will you?" |
3254 | Lavender,"pause here with your job half finished? |
3254 | Lavender,"where have you come from? |
3254 | Lavender,"where people congregate?" |
3254 | Leaping out, he cried:"What is it, woman? |
3254 | Least we can do''s to ask for a little shelter; what do you think?" |
3254 | Leave her to profane herself and all womanhood in the arms of a man she hated? |
3254 | Leave the letter? |
3254 | Leave the poor ill baby here alone? |
3254 | Leave your address? |
3254 | Left, as she seemed always to be in these days of open mutiny, Nedda said sadly:"What is coming, Aunt Kirsteen?" |
3254 | Leila said lightly:"Well, Edward, are n''t the men delightful? |
3254 | Leila, gazing at him, thought:''Lost? |
3254 | Lennan kept silence for a moment, then he said quietly:"Can one come between two people who have ceased to have anything in common?" |
3254 | Let each one ask herself: Should I have resisted where she fell?" |
3254 | Let me lend you----? |
3254 | Let me see-- corner of Flight Street, was n''t it? |
3254 | Let us go in?" |
3254 | Let you go? |
3254 | Let''s see, Mary, what else is there? |
3254 | Let''s see, where are we?" |
3254 | Let''s see-- I do n''t know you-- do I? |
3254 | Let''s see-- what did I want? |
3254 | Let''s tell Uncle Tom and go away from him? |
3254 | Letters? |
3254 | Lever to you? |
3254 | Lever, d''you suppose I''d have him in the house? |
3254 | Lever, is this gold mine safe? |
3254 | Lever? |
3254 | Lever? |
3254 | Lever? |
3254 | Liberty? |
3254 | Life with him? |
3254 | Life without him? |
3254 | Life''s a bit of a gamble, is n''t it?" |
3254 | Lift? |
3254 | Like a gentleman, or what?" |
3254 | Like puppies? |
3254 | Like that man? |
3254 | Like the Jackmans''? |
3254 | Like to buy one of my screws?" |
3254 | Like to walk up and down a little? |
3254 | Like to zee over her?" |
3254 | Little Gyp said:"Mum, could we speak to it? |
3254 | Little Jon said critically:"Do you think Bella beautiful, for instance? |
3254 | Little Lady- Anne, have n''t you any authority with these fellows? |
3254 | Little lamb who myde thee? |
3254 | Little soul, that means-- doesn''t it? |
3254 | Living this life? |
3254 | Look at that''t''''y'': that yours? |
3254 | Look here, Annie, what can I do? |
3254 | Look here, Clare; you do n''t mean you''re expecting me to put up with the position of a man who''s neither married nor unmarried? |
3254 | Look here, Jill-- is there anything between you and young what''s- his- name-- Rolf? |
3254 | Look here, why did you? |
3254 | Look you, if a man toes not trust me, am I going to trust him? |
3254 | Looked a bit dicky, eh, Mrs. Jones? |
3254 | Looking at her shrewdly] There''s nothing else, before I answer her? |
3254 | Loose? |
3254 | Lord Dennis answered firmly:"You have asked me a frank question, expecting a frank answer, I suppose?" |
3254 | Lord Valleys uttered the first remark:"Well, my dear fellow, what are you going to do now? |
3254 | Lost her? |
3254 | Lost? |
3254 | Lot of peopled-- always spare time to watch an auction-- ever remark that? |
3254 | Love and Chinese lanterns, or only me?" |
3254 | Love him-- whom? |
3254 | Lovely? |
3254 | Loving, wild, undisciplined, without resource of any kind-- what might she not do? |
3254 | Lutheran, now what do you like besht in all the world?'' |
3254 | MAGISTRATE: Now, now? |
3254 | MAYOR[ Looking at BUILDER] Any questions to ask him? |
3254 | MISS M.[ An elderly female schoolboy] How do you do? |
3254 | MISS S. But where is Anne? |
3254 | MISS S. But-- er-- why are you up there? |
3254 | MISS S. What do you mean, James? |
3254 | MISS S. Where is Anne? |
3254 | MRS. BRADMERE Now then, Mrs. Burlacombe? |
3254 | MRS. H. At least, you''d like to be in a position to help him, if you thought it necessary? |
3254 | MRS. H. Can Dawker see you there, Jack? |
3254 | MRS. H. Charles Hornblower-- how did it happen? |
3254 | MRS. H. Did I ever say you did? |
3254 | MRS. H. Do you suppose this Hornblower will care two straws about that Jack? |
3254 | MRS. H. Do you wish me to-- er--"spit it out,"Jack? |
3254 | MRS. H. I do n''t know what you mean by humbug? |
3254 | MRS. H. Is it true? |
3254 | MRS. H. It begins at three, does n''t it? |
3254 | MRS. H. Or Dawker? |
3254 | MRS. H. Poor thing? |
3254 | MRS. H. Smalley? |
3254 | MRS. H. Well, what weapons does he use against us? |
3254 | MRS. H. What limit did you settle? |
3254 | MRS. H. What''s it worth, Dawker? |
3254 | MRS. H. When are you going? |
3254 | MRS. H. Where did you leave my husband? |
3254 | MRS. H. Who would n''t? |
3254 | MRS. H. Would you have wished to live on in ignorance? |
3254 | MRS. H. You''re sure you have the future, Mr. Hornblower? |
3254 | MRS. H.[ Approaching] What is it? |
3254 | MRS. H.[ Calmly] Are you familiar with the law of divorce, Mr. Hornblower? |
3254 | MRS. H.[ In a low voice] And the ruin of our home? |
3254 | MRS. H.[ Not quite starting] I beg your pardon? |
3254 | MRS. H.[ Pointing to CHLOE, who has stood by herself, forgotten and uncomfortable throughout the scene] May I ask who this lady is? |
3254 | MRS. H.[ To the STRANGERS] Will you make yourselves comfortable? |
3254 | MRS. H.[ Turning with a start] What do you say? |
3254 | MRS. L. Deary- me, wherever du yu get yore notions? |
3254 | MRS. L. Don''they tache Yu that, there? |
3254 | MRS. L. Don''yu discourage''er, Bob; she''m a gude little thing, an''t yu, dear? |
3254 | MRS. L. The mune? |
3254 | MRS. L. What coffin? |
3254 | MRS. L. What''s that? |
3254 | MRS. L. Whose pianner? |
3254 | MRS. L.''Ow''m I lukin'', Bob? |
3254 | MRS. L.[ Placidly, feeling the warmth of the little she has drunk] What thing? |
3254 | MRS. L.[ Placidly] What is? |
3254 | Madam and the young ladies well? |
3254 | Madame is fond of flowers? |
3254 | Madame is waiting for some one? |
3254 | Madame likes it frappe, but not too cold-- yes? |
3254 | Made him? |
3254 | Mademoiselle, will you come and see my wife? |
3254 | Major Winton, is there anything behind-- were they really happy?" |
3254 | Mark, will you dance?" |
3254 | Married-- isn''t it funny? |
3254 | Martin says what matters is to do one''s job; but what is one''s job?'' |
3254 | May I ask how you knew this house? |
3254 | May I ask if you know whose they are? |
3254 | May I ask the gentleman a question? |
3254 | May I ask the name of the gentleman who has given us that striking piece of information? |
3254 | May I ask whom I have the pleasure of speaking to? |
3254 | May I ask you one question? |
3254 | May I ask your name? |
3254 | May I come in? |
3254 | May I go upstairs?" |
3254 | May I have a cigarette? |
3254 | May I have a cigarette?" |
3254 | May I have yours, sir? |
3254 | May I have yours, sir? |
3254 | May I have yours, sir? |
3254 | May I kiss you, for good- night? |
3254 | May I leave the door open into your room to- night, Mum?" |
3254 | May I not love, because I have been bad? |
3254 | May I open the window? |
3254 | May I retire? |
3254 | May I say five thousand six hundred, sir? |
3254 | May I say-- four? |
3254 | May I see her? |
3254 | May I sit down a minute?" |
3254 | May I sit down and talk?" |
3254 | May I stay? |
3254 | May I use your glass?" |
3254 | May n''t I read in the window, Mummy? |
3254 | May n''t they love each other, if they want?" |
3254 | May we sit down for a minute in your garden? |
3254 | May-- may I leave this with you?" |
3254 | Me? |
3254 | Meg did you know----Ronald Dancy''s coat was wet? |
3254 | Megan, when did you begin to love me?" |
3254 | Men like Larry-- weak, impulsive, sentimental, introspective creatures-- did they ever mean what they did? |
3254 | Men of business are excused from decency, you think? |
3254 | Might I have a glass of beer? |
3254 | Might I take my horse round to the stables? |
3254 | Might it be, perhaps, that sepia drawing-- above the''Tantalus''on the oak sideboard at the far end-- of a woman''s face gazing out into the room? |
3254 | Might not this first visit to his chambers be like her old first visit to the little house in Chelsea? |
3254 | Might she not, even now? |
3254 | Might we have a brush? |
3254 | Miss Athene Builder, you were present, I think? |
3254 | Miss Builder live here? |
3254 | Miss Maud Builder, will you tell us what you know of this-- er-- occurrence? |
3254 | Miss Mullins would never sell, would she? |
3254 | Miss Naylor says it is very impressionistick-- what is that? |
3254 | Miss Wallace says he is a hostage-- what does hostage mean, Granny?" |
3254 | Miss Winton-- he believed-- had heard his friend Fiorsen play; but not in London? |
3254 | Mister, is it my voos or Muvver''s yer want? |
3254 | Mister----? |
3254 | Mitchett?" |
3254 | Mitchett?" |
3254 | Money, fame, fashion, talk, learning? |
3254 | Money? |
3254 | Monotony? |
3254 | Monsieur Barra, some tea?" |
3254 | Monsieur, do you know this? |
3254 | Mont?" |
3254 | More body than mind? |
3254 | Mother dear, will you go into the other room with Guy? |
3254 | Mother was married at eighteen, was n''t she, Peachey? |
3254 | Mother would say:"Has she had experience?" |
3254 | Mother, do n''t you love me? |
3254 | Mother, it is n''t true? |
3254 | Mother, must anything be said to father? |
3254 | Mother, she can stay, ca n''t she? |
3254 | Mother-- won''t you? |
3254 | Mr Bly? |
3254 | Mr Chantrey? |
3254 | Mr Foreson? |
3254 | Mr Foreson? |
3254 | Mr Foreson? |
3254 | Mr Graviter gone to the Courts? |
3254 | Mr Graviter, have you noticed the two on the jury? |
3254 | Mr Herringhame in? |
3254 | Mr Ricardos? |
3254 | Mr Twisden''s not in, then? |
3254 | Mr Twisden, what do you really think? |
3254 | Mr Twisden, when will it be over? |
3254 | Mr Vane, we got little Miggs on contract? |
3254 | Mr Vane-- do you think? |
3254 | Mr WINSOR, what time did the gentleman come to you? |
3254 | Mr WINSOR? |
3254 | Mr. Anthony is a rich man, I believe; does he think it brave to fight against those who have n''t a penny? |
3254 | Mr. Dallison, do you think blue or green?" |
3254 | Mr. Dallison, is n''t he funny?" |
3254 | Mr. Forsyde well? |
3254 | Mr. Heatherley-- you up from Devonshire? |
3254 | Mr. Lemmy? |
3254 | Mr. Malise? |
3254 | Mr. More back? |
3254 | Mr. Paramor smiled again, became instantly grave, and said:"We shall want evidence of certain things, Have you got any evidence?" |
3254 | Mr. Pendyce asked uneasily:"What? |
3254 | Mr. Pillin, how do you do? |
3254 | Mr. Pogram rejoined them soon, and they walked on together,"Well?" |
3254 | Mr. Simmons, and are you really doing this?'' |
3254 | Mr. Soames Forsyte? |
3254 | Mr. Stone looked up, and seeing somebody who seemed to be his elder daughter, answered"Yes, my dear?" |
3254 | Mr. Stone said wistfully:"Shall we walk?" |
3254 | Mr. Stone turned, and, seeing his son- in- law beside him, asked:"You spoke to me, I think?" |
3254 | Mr. Strangway does n''t know? |
3254 | Mr. Treffry boomed out again:"Why? |
3254 | Mr. Treffry said gruffly:"You wo n''t give her up? |
3254 | Mr. Treffry tugged at his beard:"Make a woman live with you, if she do n''t want to? |
3254 | Mr. Twisden, will you----? |
3254 | Mr. Ventnor murmured:"Very different from his father, is n''t he?" |
3254 | Mrs Builder, do you wish to give evidence? |
3254 | Mrs Herringhame? |
3254 | Mrs. Bellew answered:"The words are so true, are n''t they?" |
3254 | Mrs. Bellew''s clear voice answered:"Now, Jaspar, what is it that you want?" |
3254 | Mrs. Carruther? |
3254 | Mrs. Decie signalled with her fan:"We are trying to express the inexpressible-- shall we go into the garden?" |
3254 | Mrs. Ercott answered dryly:"You know the House of Commons has a holiday?" |
3254 | Mrs. Fiorsen here?" |
3254 | Mrs. Fullarton? |
3254 | Mrs. Hopgood wriggled, and wriggled, and out came:"Did you get yure tay, my pretty? |
3254 | Mrs. Hughs''voice, which did not dare to break, resumed:"I''ve said to him:''Whatever are you thinking of? |
3254 | Mrs. Lennan ride? |
3254 | Mrs. Megan, will you too come back in half an hour? |
3254 | Mrs. Noel said at last:"Will you ever forgive me?" |
3254 | Mrs. Pendyce broke the silence:"But you, George dear? |
3254 | Mrs. Pendyce said:"Oh, do you think the Liberals will really get in?" |
3254 | Mrs. Pierson, this is n''t like you, is it? |
3254 | Mrs. Roberts, you do n''t want no''arder winter, do you? |
3254 | Mrs. Tallents Smallpeace, sliding her face sideways, with a really charming little smile, asked softly:"In a case like what?" |
3254 | Mrs. Wagge added:"Have you seen her last photograph-- the one where she''s standing between two hydrangea- tubs? |
3254 | Mrs. Wagge answered:"Oh, he''s a naughty dog, are n''t you, Duckie?" |
3254 | Mud of street and market- place gathered in a torrent-- This blind howling"patriotism"--what each man feels in here? |
3254 | Mum?" |
3254 | Music- lessons? |
3254 | Music? |
3254 | Must I go down to the Court to- morrow? |
3254 | Must I then die, like a gnat when the sun goes down? |
3254 | Must I, Sir? |
3254 | Must he go back home with this murk on him; knowing that his brother was a confessed and branded murderer? |
3254 | Must he not then harbour his own daughter, and help her by candid atonement to regain her inward strength and peace? |
3254 | Must he then sit down here in inactivity? |
3254 | Must it be in the papers? |
3254 | Must it come, after all, to giving up the girl? |
3254 | Must it really be neck or nothing? |
3254 | Must know-- indeed, a pretty...? |
3254 | Must she tell him, too, of Rosek-- was it wise, or necessary? |
3254 | Must she, because of it, always need protection? |
3254 | Must we do the history, Chris?" |
3254 | Must we go on with this? |
3254 | Must you go home to- morrow? |
3254 | Must yu go away again? |
3254 | Muzzling order? |
3254 | My answer is, of course:''All three''; but the point is rather: Does one wish to make even an attempt to define God to oneself? |
3254 | My daughter in? |
3254 | My dear Dick, give what up? |
3254 | My dear John, what are you talking about? |
3254 | My dear More, are n''t you rather dropping to our level? |
3254 | My dear More, how can you get up any enthusiasm for those cattle- lifting ruffians? |
3254 | My dear More, what is civilization but the logical, inevitable swallowing up of the lower by the higher types of man? |
3254 | My dear boy, are n''t you drinking too much? |
3254 | My dear boy, do you suppose for a moment anyone would think the worse of you, even if they knew? |
3254 | My dear friend, are you to become that hapless kind of outcast, a champion of lost causes? |
3254 | My dear girl, whatever put such a thought into your head? |
3254 | My dear, what are you talking about? |
3254 | My dear, what is it? |
3254 | My dear, when they-- when they look at you? |
3254 | My dear, why did n''t you order Benson''s fly? |
3254 | My dear? |
3254 | My dear? |
3254 | My father here? |
3254 | My father loves dancing, too; do n''t you, Dad?" |
3254 | My good child, what difference does that make? |
3254 | My name''s Barthwick, so''s my father''s; I''m a Liberal too-- wha''re you? |
3254 | My trick? |
3254 | N-----?" |
3254 | Name? |
3254 | Name? |
3254 | Nanny, d''you know why I was obliged to come down? |
3254 | Naow, wot shall we begin abaht? |
3254 | Naowt I can zay but what she will see yu; zeems crazy, do n''t it?" |
3254 | Nearly a day since she had seen her-- was it possible? |
3254 | Nedda said breathlessly:"Yes; and it''s frightfully hard, is n''t it?" |
3254 | Nedda went quickly up to them and asked:"Has Derek come, Uncle Tod?" |
3254 | Need I, indeed, tell you of the way this flame spreads its feelers, and delicately darts and hovers in the darkness, conjuring things from nothing? |
3254 | Neither spoke again till they were close to the Station, then Soames asked:"When do you expect to have finished?" |
3254 | Nemesis for her happiness? |
3254 | Nestor-- where the deuce----? |
3254 | Never at all? |
3254 | Never loved me? |
3254 | Never loved me? |
3254 | Never rested, for love and hate? |
3254 | Never? |
3254 | News? |
3254 | Next month? |
3254 | Next to you? |
3254 | Nice young fellow, Bob Pillin, is n''t he?" |
3254 | Night and day he was haunted by the thought: How can I, living in defiance of authority, pretend to authority over my fellows? |
3254 | Nine, may I say? |
3254 | No letters?" |
3254 | No lift? |
3254 | No literal portrait would ever do her justice; the essence of her was-- ah I what?... |
3254 | No one saw you going back to her? |
3254 | No one? |
3254 | No prayers or anything? |
3254 | No proof? |
3254 | No shivers, and no aches; quite comfy? |
3254 | No sky to see, no grass to smell, no beast to bear him company; no anything-- for, what resources in himself had this poor creature? |
3254 | No worse than it used to be? |
3254 | No, M''m? |
3254 | No, Monsieur? |
3254 | No, Sir? |
3254 | No, Sir? |
3254 | No, but James-- Henry might be Luke, really? |
3254 | No, but-- I say- are you really quite cut off from everybody? |
3254 | No, no? |
3254 | No, thanks, she could not; only, did she know where Mr. Freeland''s room was? |
3254 | No-- went on June he did not care; what business was it of theirs? |
3254 | No? |
3254 | No? |
3254 | No? |
3254 | No? |
3254 | No? |
3254 | No? |
3254 | No? |
3254 | No? |
3254 | No? |
3254 | No? |
3254 | No? |
3254 | No? |
3254 | No? |
3254 | No? |
3254 | No? |
3254 | No? |
3254 | Nobody marries without love, do they? |
3254 | Nobody would-- would they?" |
3254 | Noel bit her lips, and murmured:"Are you sure we''re really Christians, Daddy?" |
3254 | Noel shook her head, and her eyes seemed to say:"Do you really think I''m so easily mended?" |
3254 | Noel, what have I done?" |
3254 | Noel?" |
3254 | Noel?" |
3254 | None of the windows open? |
3254 | Nor drink? |
3254 | Nor leave in the morning? |
3254 | Nor with it? |
3254 | Nor yours, sir? |
3254 | Norah, who had the more character of the two, added:"Is n''t Father rather dreadful, Mother?" |
3254 | Not Church of England, I think? |
3254 | Not Euripides?" |
3254 | Not Soho? |
3254 | Not a penny, I suppose? |
3254 | Not back to him? |
3254 | Not back? |
3254 | Not been out? |
3254 | Not even adding the''ty''and the nought?'' |
3254 | Not even for Bill''s sake? |
3254 | Not even if you''re asked to? |
3254 | Not even your father? |
3254 | Not for a minute, sir? |
3254 | Not going out, of course, now that the weather was turning chilly? |
3254 | Not going? |
3254 | Not knowing quite whether they were glad to see her, she went forward and began at once:"Is this where you sit, Grandpapa?" |
3254 | Not lockin''the door? |
3254 | Not material? |
3254 | Not old? |
3254 | Not one? |
3254 | Not pack boots again? |
3254 | Not pleasant, are they?" |
3254 | Not seen the girl? |
3254 | Not seriously? |
3254 | Not shame; not fear; reverence perhaps-- for what? |
3254 | Not since you turned out a full- blown-- what d''you call it? |
3254 | Not so bad at forty- seven-- h''m? |
3254 | Not that she deserves any consideration, if she''s been----You do n''t mean to say you think he''ll refuse? |
3254 | Not that there were many letters-- when a man has reached the age of eighty, who should write to him, except to ask for money? |
3254 | Not the old grey mare? |
3254 | Not to confess, and leave him to find it out from Aunt Rosamund? |
3254 | Not your godfathers and godmothers? |
3254 | Not''Shall I go in?'' |
3254 | Not-- not had a rumpus? |
3254 | Not-- that night-- on the river-- not----? |
3254 | Not? |
3254 | Not? |
3254 | Not? |
3254 | Not? |
3254 | Not? |
3254 | Nothing I can get you, sir? |
3254 | Nothing else? |
3254 | Nothing more precise, Miss? |
3254 | Nothing she did was right, nothing turned out well, so what did it all matter? |
3254 | Nothing she wants that she has n''t got, is there? |
3254 | Nothing to me? |
3254 | Nothing''s big enough; nothing''s worth while enough-- is it? |
3254 | Nothing-- desperate? |
3254 | Nothing? |
3254 | Nothing?'' |
3254 | Nothing?'' |
3254 | Now I''ve bought? |
3254 | Now and then the thought would move in him:''Did she come-- or did I dream it?'' |
3254 | Now and then the thought would move in him:''Did she come-- or did I dream it?'' |
3254 | Now can you tell me of the morning on which the discovery of the forgery was made? |
3254 | Now do n''t you agree?" |
3254 | Now do n''t you? |
3254 | Now do you understand?" |
3254 | Now for it-- yes? |
3254 | Now how am I to do that? |
3254 | Now how can I? |
3254 | Now is n''t it, Annie? |
3254 | Now tell me-- who could, except my Gyp?" |
3254 | Now that he was away from her, would he not feel that it was best to break, and forget her? |
3254 | Now that he''s going to be called, ought n''t Dancy to be told of it, so that he may be ready with his explanation, in case it comes out? |
3254 | Now that they had been brought up sharp by service of this petition, had he not a lever with which he could force them apart? |
3254 | Now then, shall we go down and ask Grandy to come up to dinner?" |
3254 | Now then, what is it? |
3254 | Now then? |
3254 | Now what does this chap do? |
3254 | Now what is he-- your husband? |
3254 | Now what is it? |
3254 | Now what is that story? |
3254 | Now what was she thinking about-- sitting back like that? |
3254 | Now what''s your real opinion of the situation? |
3254 | Now wo n''t you let me----? |
3254 | Now you say he had his collar unbuttoned? |
3254 | Now, I hope you''re willing to come together again, and to maintain her? |
3254 | Now, I shimply ask you, d''you call that dentistry?" |
3254 | Now, Ivy; will you do something for me? |
3254 | Now, Sir? |
3254 | Now, can we rely on the cabled refusal, or must we wait till after Christmas to give him a chance to have written-- that''s the point, is n''t it?" |
3254 | Now, did you come in late on the night of Easter Monday? |
3254 | Now, do you consider that a religious revival would help to quiet the country? |
3254 | Now, do you remember the morning of Friday, July 7th? |
3254 | Now, do you? |
3254 | Now, have I ever given you reason to doubt my love for you, or my word?" |
3254 | Now, here''s a proposition that brings it nearer the bone: Would you step out of your way to help them when it was liable to bring you trouble? |
3254 | Now, how was it? |
3254 | Now, look here, Moaney, if I pass it over will you give me your word not to try it on again? |
3254 | Now, ma''am, do you or do you not think that your danger and unhappiness would seriously affect his balance, his control over his actions? |
3254 | Now, mother; did you love father? |
3254 | Now, my boy, how is it that you and your wife are living apart like this? |
3254 | Now, see here, Mr Blewitt Vane, is this my theatre? |
3254 | Now, was this Mrs. Jones in the room alone at any time? |
3254 | Now, what can you do with this baby? |
3254 | Now, what did you do after you came back from your bath? |
3254 | Now, what did you give for that sugar- sifter? |
3254 | Now, what do you think of him? |
3254 | Now, what is to be done? |
3254 | Now, what made you take it? |
3254 | Now, what sort of bird is this? |
3254 | Now, what would you say this was?" |
3254 | Now, what would you say this was?" |
3254 | Now, what''s he going to give her? |
3254 | Now, what''s the meaning of it? |
3254 | Now, what''s the reason you do n''t want me to invest? |
3254 | Now, where are you all going; that''s the point?" |
3254 | Now, who else saw the struggle? |
3254 | Now, who''ll give me seven thousand two hundred? |
3254 | Now, why did you want to blow us up before dinner? |
3254 | Now, why had the fellow said that? |
3254 | Now, would n''t you prosecute''em, sir?" |
3254 | Now, you have heard the male prisoner''s story, what do you say to that? |
3254 | Now-- how much have you forgotten? |
3254 | Now----What''s that behind you, Mercy? |
3254 | Nuse? |
3254 | Obtaining money under false pretences? |
3254 | Of course you ca n''t be a family without, can you? |
3254 | Of course you do n''t; if you could only have proper--- Will you see my doctor if I send him to you? |
3254 | Of course, I believe it''s sacred, but if it''s a failure, I do think it seems awful-- don''t you? |
3254 | Of course, if he was very fond of her, that would have made him pretty mad, would n''t it?" |
3254 | Of course, it might be what middle- class people believed-- she did n''t know; what did Soames think? |
3254 | Of course, what ought we to give?" |
3254 | Of course-- why not? |
3254 | Of course; but which way? |
3254 | Of himself, when his hair was brown like the hair of that young fellow dead before him? |
3254 | Of his grand- daughter, with her broken hopes? |
3254 | Of how, when things went hard, one prayed-- but what did one pray to? |
3254 | Of man-- at any age from five years on-- who can say he has never been in love? |
3254 | Of me?" |
3254 | Of such was Rosamund Larne''s-- a sort of permanent confession, seeming to remark to anyone who entered:''Her taste? |
3254 | Of that other woman? |
3254 | Of the strangeness, and the pity of it? |
3254 | Of what exactly was he thinking? |
3254 | Of what use loveliness that must be lost; of what use loveliness when one could not love? |
3254 | Of what use sentiment? |
3254 | Of what use were words from a mind tuned in one key to a mind tuned in another? |
3254 | Of what use, words? |
3254 | Of what was she thinking, this pretty creature whose life was spoiled; who had done with love, and yet was made for love? |
3254 | Of what was she thinking, this pretty creature whose life was spoiled; who had done with love, and yet was made for love? |
3254 | Of what? |
3254 | Of what? |
3254 | Often and often Dalton said to me:''What''s come to the child? |
3254 | Oh, Dad, do n''t you see? |
3254 | Oh, Gyp, ca n''t you love me? |
3254 | Oh, Jarvis-- what''s the name of the people here? |
3254 | Oh, Jem, whatever made you? |
3254 | Oh, Joy, what is the matter? |
3254 | Oh, Mrs. Fiorsen, why ca n''t they let me die, too?" |
3254 | Oh, Mrs. Fiorsen, you are beautiful, are n''t you?" |
3254 | Oh, Ted? |
3254 | Oh, and, Dick, there''s one thing-- has he relations? |
3254 | Oh, do you? |
3254 | Oh, glad? |
3254 | Oh, how d''you do?" |
3254 | Oh, how do you do?" |
3254 | Oh, how is Count Rosek? |
3254 | Oh, is n''t that Irish? |
3254 | Oh, is n''t that awkward?" |
3254 | Oh, the stick? |
3254 | Oh, was he? |
3254 | Oh, what did it mean? |
3254 | Oh, what do they eat?" |
3254 | Oh, what made me write to both of them, Edward and Jimmy?'' |
3254 | Oh, what was it? |
3254 | Oh, when? |
3254 | Oh, why the hell am I crocked- up like this? |
3254 | Oh-- did that mean they were all coming? |
3254 | Oh? |
3254 | Oh? |
3254 | Oh? |
3254 | Old Heythorp said abruptly:"Are you very fond of your mother?" |
3254 | Old Heythorp said at last:"Well?" |
3254 | Old Heythorp said:"What do you want? |
3254 | Old Jolyon asked again:"Have you seen him?" |
3254 | Old Jolyon looked at him angrily, and James said:"A policeman? |
3254 | Old Jolyon''s heart gave a flutter, and for a second the room was clouded; then it cleared, and he said with a twinkle:"Who''s been dressing her up?" |
3254 | Old Jolyon''s heart gave a flutter, and for a second the room was clouded; then it cleared, and he said with a twinkle:"Who''s been dressing her up?" |
3254 | On a point of reform? |
3254 | On hearing who his visitor was, he muttered nervously:"Now, what''s he want, I wonder?" |
3254 | On his back, with his arms stretched down on both sides? |
3254 | On his face, feet foremost? |
3254 | On his lips were the words:"What made you give the show away like that?" |
3254 | On his stomach, sideways? |
3254 | On our hands? |
3254 | On seeing her granddaughter approach, she said at once:"What is this thing?" |
3254 | On the face of them your words sound a little unphilosophic, do n''t they?" |
3254 | On the other occasion he merely asked:"How am I looking? |
3254 | On the sofa? |
3254 | On the stairs he met a man who said:"How do you do, Mr. Pillin? |
3254 | On what grounds is he good enough to say that? |
3254 | On which day did you alter the counterfoil? |
3254 | Once I was teaching little English children their prayers-- isn''t that funnee? |
3254 | Once admit that, and where was he? |
3254 | Once after they were married he asked her,"What made you refuse me so often?" |
3254 | Once he said:"You will let me paint you now, mademoiselle, I hope?" |
3254 | Once settled back in Dromore''s great chair, with the purring kitten curled up on her neck, she murmured:"Is n''t it nice? |
3254 | One ca n''t run with the hare and hunt with the hounds?" |
3254 | One could not indefinitely extend one''s subscriptions even for the best of causes!--he said gently:"By the way, you know Mrs. Larne, do n''t you?" |
3254 | One could not make a comrade of a man like Keith, even if he were one''s brother? |
3254 | One could not make scenes in public, and short of scenes in public what was there he could do? |
3254 | One day Christian said:"What is your religion?" |
3254 | One day she asked him:"You know about me, I suppose?" |
3254 | One does n''t always know the future, does one? |
3254 | One moment, father: have you thought it out? |
3254 | One more question: Do the police know you, because-- because of your life?" |
3254 | One must either take it as a jest, like Stephen; or, what must one do? |
3254 | One never knows---"Lady Maiden replied:"Did you know her when she was living down here? |
3254 | One of the boys? |
3254 | One of them looked at me, and asked:''Have you seen a policeman travelling on this train?'' |
3254 | One of them, the short grey- bearded Grundy with the rather whispering voice, said to him:"All alone again to- night? |
3254 | One ought to be very careful not to give them-- that is----[ checks himself confused; then hurrying on]--I suppose you and Joy get on all right? |
3254 | One would have thought the Scottish strain might have saved him; and yet, when a Scotsman did begin to go downhill, who could go faster? |
3254 | One''s relations always are, are n''t they?" |
3254 | Only it is a skin game, is n''t it? |
3254 | Only it is important, is n''t it? |
3254 | Only lazy? |
3254 | Only once they came too near to that which instinct told them to avoid, for the Squire said suddenly:"I suppose you saw that woman?" |
3254 | Only six days-- was it possible? |
3254 | Only, about dresses?" |
3254 | Only, was n''t she engaged to Fleur''s father first?" |
3254 | Only, were there any natives? |
3254 | Only, what does it mean?" |
3254 | Only, why had he dismissed his clerk so early? |
3254 | Only, would it be any use? |
3254 | Only, you must begin at the right end, must n''t you? |
3254 | Only-- Mother-- if-- if I wanted to stay out somewhere-- America or anywhere, would you mind coming presently?" |
3254 | Only-- how to introduce himself? |
3254 | Only-- why? |
3254 | Only-- you were n''t the same- were you? |
3254 | Opening the door an inch, he whispered:"Is it late?" |
3254 | Or Aunt Rosamund, with her perpetual rescuings of lost dogs, lame horses, and penniless musicians? |
3254 | Or a little trick of gait, a swaying, seductive balance of body; was it the way her hair waved back, or a subtle scent, as of a flower? |
3254 | Or again, was it, perhaps, but the natural concomitant of youth, a naive effervescence with which thought and brooding had to part? |
3254 | Or could it be that they were both asleep? |
3254 | Or did she not? |
3254 | Or did those that gave up happiness feel noble? |
3254 | Or had colour been drowned? |
3254 | Or had it really body and substance of its own? |
3254 | Or had she really ceased to care the snap of a finger? |
3254 | Or had she...? |
3254 | Or had some chaperon been found? |
3254 | Or have they taken me for some other public man?" |
3254 | Or have you come up to hear Brabrook pitch into us? |
3254 | Or herself hysteria? |
3254 | Or in the drawing- room?" |
3254 | Or is he to have another chance, to be still looked on as one who has gone a little astray, but who will come back? |
3254 | Or is it the isolation or the continual vibration that carries friendship faster and further than will a spasmodic acquaintanceship of weeks? |
3254 | Or is that unworthy of your honour? |
3254 | Or just sleep again? |
3254 | Or let Bryan know? |
3254 | Or on his face, head foremost, in a manner unknown as yet to any but himself? |
3254 | Or one out of the sky?" |
3254 | Or shall we let them ring-- or-- what? |
3254 | Or should he speak to Dromore? |
3254 | Or should she not be just a visitor, coming when she would, possessed for moments which passed, to return only at her own choosing? |
3254 | Or simply that he was very hungry? |
3254 | Or sit there laughing and talking, eating and drinking, as if nothing were behind her? |
3254 | Or the way her hair grew? |
3254 | Or thin air? |
3254 | Or was Jolyon but taking compassion on her loneliness, as he would call it-- sentimental radical chap that he had always been? |
3254 | Or was Philip Bosinney''s spirit diffused in the general? |
3254 | Or was Philip Bosinney''s spirit diffused in the general? |
3254 | Or was he glad of his own age? |
3254 | Or was he one of the joking ones? |
3254 | Or was it June who kept you away? |
3254 | Or was it June who kept you away? |
3254 | Or was it a mere physical illusion-- had he any dreams? |
3254 | Or was it just that he was queer and remote to them? |
3254 | Or was it only one of his jokes? |
3254 | Or was it prevision of what would come some day? |
3254 | Or was it simply that his nature had holes in every pocket? |
3254 | Or was it simply that one hated Germans?... |
3254 | Or was it that he disdained to notice? |
3254 | Or was it that the fierceness of those past moments had killed his power of feeling? |
3254 | Or was it that they were unconscious of struggle or of self- respect, and just let things drift? |
3254 | Or was it winged, and calling in space to the souls of the oppressed? |
3254 | Or was it, once for all, shipwreck? |
3254 | Or was she but the emanation of all the beauty he had loved and must leave so soon? |
3254 | Or was she but the emanation of all the beauty he had loved and must leave so soon? |
3254 | Or was some one noiselessly rifling the room down- stairs? |
3254 | Or was that always a fiction? |
3254 | Or were the stars, perhaps, the souls of men and women escaped for ever from love and longing? |
3254 | Or what have ye made up? |
3254 | Or what? |
3254 | Or will you trust me? |
3254 | Or would he go away without a word? |
3254 | Or would pointing a pistol count? |
3254 | Or would she presently again be face to face with that dread, the nerve of which never stopped aching now, dread of the night when he was near? |
3254 | Or"--he looked hard into her face--"has someone hurt you, my little friend?" |
3254 | Or, indeed, to be any sort of partisan either of the Law or of them that break the Law? |
3254 | Or-- his damnation? |
3254 | Or-- was he? |
3254 | Ought I not, rather, to be true to my private self and leave the course of public affairs to those who have louder voices and no private selves?" |
3254 | Ought I to have whipped him when he shied?" |
3254 | Ought I-- now I''ve just begun? |
3254 | Ought I? |
3254 | Ought he not to have arranged a formal meeting in the presence of her trustee? |
3254 | Ought he to go? |
3254 | Ought n''t I to call him that? |
3254 | Ought n''t I to stop them, eh? |
3254 | Ought n''t the grounds to be searched for footmarks? |
3254 | Ought she not-- ought she not for all their sakes? |
3254 | Ought she to come, please? |
3254 | Ought we to see the men before he comes? |
3254 | Out of her hand? |
3254 | PROF. Good heavens, Blanche, what''s the matter with you to- night? |
3254 | PROF. How does this strike you? |
3254 | PROF. What on earth? |
3254 | PROF. What? |
3254 | PROF. Where are you? |
3254 | PROF. Why? |
3254 | PROF.[ Looking Up] Umm? |
3254 | Painful, or pleasant, or what? |
3254 | Pale as death and quivering all over, Derek answered:"So you think I''ve just been frying fish of my own?" |
3254 | Palliatives-- palliatives-- and whoy? |
3254 | Part II I When a girl first sits opposite the man she has married, of what does she think? |
3254 | Pasiance cried in a sharp whisper:"Is it so hot in here? |
3254 | Peace, rest-- from what? |
3254 | Peachey, duckie, what was Mother''s worst fault? |
3254 | Peachey, go in and tell them tea''ll be ready in a minute, there''s a good soul? |
3254 | Peachey, in the swing? |
3254 | Peachey-- I say, Peachey d''you think there''s-- I mean d''you think there''ll ever be any chance for me? |
3254 | Peering at him from under his hat, Joe Pillin said:"Mr. Ventnor, I think? |
3254 | People are never mysterious, are they, without good reason? |
3254 | People do n''t often see what they do n''t want to, do they? |
3254 | People stared, and he heard a girl ask:"Who''s that against the wall with the hair and dark moustache?" |
3254 | Perhaps I acted wrongly; I do not know what one ought to do in such a case; but before she went I said to her:''Eilie, what is it?'' |
3254 | Perhaps I could use some of that-- that other money, if mine is all tied up?" |
3254 | Perhaps he did not smell quite right? |
3254 | Perhaps his debts are all part of that-- who knows? |
3254 | Perhaps you suggested it really; did you?" |
3254 | Perhaps you''d like to begin again? |
3254 | Perhaps you''d like to locate her somewhere else? |
3254 | Perhaps you''ll say the man''s employer was wrong in dismissing him? |
3254 | Perhaps, they would not bring him there? |
3254 | Petty drew him gently towards the bed, and, having seen him get in, tucked him up and said:"Now, sir, you never break your word, do you?" |
3254 | Petty tossed her head and murmured darkly--"Do you suppose he''s got an example, Sir?" |
3254 | Phew!--isn''t he----? |
3254 | Photographs? |
3254 | Phwhat''s all this morality? |
3254 | Phwhat''s the secret of ut all? |
3254 | Pierson effaced his emotion, and said quite calmly:"Shall you wish to be at home, my dear, or to go elsewhere?" |
3254 | Pierson said mildly:"A bet? |
3254 | Pity, is n''t it? |
3254 | Play cards, then? |
3254 | Please forgive me-- but is there any news? |
3254 | Please shall you? |
3254 | Please, Miss, what shall I tell the Missis? |
3254 | Please, what is Pagans? |
3254 | Please? |
3254 | Please? |
3254 | Poaching charge? |
3254 | Poets? |
3254 | Poor lot, are n''t they? |
3254 | Port or claret?" |
3254 | Port? |
3254 | Poulder, where is Miss Anne? |
3254 | Presently I said to him,''Where do we stop first?'' |
3254 | Presently he asked:"You saw him, you say? |
3254 | Presently she asked:"Have you been dancing at Count Rosek''s again lately?" |
3254 | Pressing his hand to her cheeks, she murmured:"Why not, darling? |
3254 | Pretty slippy with your undressin''as a rule? |
3254 | Pretty? |
3254 | Pretty?" |
3254 | Priestess? |
3254 | Prison? |
3254 | Private, I mean? |
3254 | Prophetess? |
3254 | Put your Mallorings to earn their living on fifteen to eighteen shillings a week, and where would they be? |
3254 | Put yourself in my place, Molly: how can I go to him and say,"This thing may turn out rotten,"when he knows I got you to put your money into it? |
3254 | Putting her into the cab in London, he asked:"Have you still got your key of Bury Street? |
3254 | Putting his hand on my instep, he said:"Do dey vid you here? |
3254 | Putting his hands in his pockets] What made you come to England? |
3254 | Queer, is n''t it? |
3254 | Quite a romantic story, was n''t it, about her fainting from want of food when she first came to sit?" |
3254 | Quite frankly-- what is it you want? |
3254 | Quite sure? |
3254 | Quivering from head to foot, Christian cried:"How dared you?" |
3254 | Rackon the maids wid rather''twas curate; eh, Mr. Burlacombe? |
3254 | Rather a score for Professor Calway, was n''t it? |
3254 | Rather does it foster their pet feeling:"What matter? |
3254 | Rather nice, is n''t he? |
3254 | Read Jellaby''s speech? |
3254 | Read a lot, no doubt? |
3254 | Read any of my novels? |
3254 | Read them? |
3254 | Ready? |
3254 | Really and truly? |
3254 | Really you? |
3254 | Really? |
3254 | Really? |
3254 | Really? |
3254 | Really? |
3254 | Really? |
3254 | Really? |
3254 | Reckon you would know what that means? |
3254 | Recollections of Euphemia''s account of the visit to the theatre-- Mr. Bosinney always at Soames''s? |
3254 | Rector, a dhrop of the craythur? |
3254 | Rector, are you sure it''s safe? |
3254 | Relieved, yet somewhat disconcerted, he murmured:"He wo n''t mind not going, I suppose?" |
3254 | Remember good old Blenker?" |
3254 | Remember the girl at Coaster''s?" |
3254 | Remember? |
3254 | Reprieve? |
3254 | Resistance-- acquiescence? |
3254 | Resuming her bodice, she asked:"When could you let me have it?" |
3254 | Returning to the ballroom on his arm, she overheard an elderly woman say:"Oh, do n''t you know? |
3254 | Right as rain, eh, my girl? |
3254 | Right up to the time of the rupture in their relations he had been wo nt to perch there-- had he now reached such a moment with his own son? |
3254 | Right? |
3254 | Ring, wo n''t you, WINSOR? |
3254 | Rippin'', is n''t it?" |
3254 | Rising? |
3254 | Robert''s quite all right, is n''t he? |
3254 | Roberts in? |
3254 | Roman Catholic? |
3254 | Ronny? |
3254 | Rose Taylor? |
3254 | Row?" |
3254 | Rozsi''s look said,"Would n''t you like to do that?" |
3254 | Rum game, business, is n''t it? |
3254 | Rum? |
3254 | Run your mind over things, Treisure-- has any stranger been about? |
3254 | SECOND S. What do you think? |
3254 | STRANGWAY: You''re staying? |
3254 | Safe? |
3254 | Sare, if I give it to you, and it does''i m''arm, what will my daughter say? |
3254 | Sare, if I tell you, will you give me your good word that my daughter shall not hear of it? |
3254 | Save me? |
3254 | Saving this girl, to save yourself? |
3254 | Say Mr. Charles Ventnor, will you?" |
3254 | Scarlet?" |
3254 | Scoles is a humbug, though, is n''t he?" |
3254 | Scornful of him? |
3254 | Scrivens are your father''s solicitors too, are n''t they? |
3254 | Scrivens?" |
3254 | Search the grounds? |
3254 | Searched? |
3254 | See old Hornblower with Chearlie? |
3254 | See that a man might want, did want, other friendships, even passing moments of passion, and yet could love her just the same? |
3254 | See what? |
3254 | See you at dinner perhaps?" |
3254 | See, I''ve been wearing this pair nearly all the time I''ve been abroad; and they''re not half worn out, are they?" |
3254 | See? |
3254 | See? |
3254 | See? |
3254 | See? |
3254 | See? |
3254 | See?" |
3254 | Seedy- lookin''beggar that last prisoner, ai n''t he? |
3254 | Seeing"Yes"in his eyes, she added quickly:"And M-----?" |
3254 | Senor Don Punctilioso, hein? |
3254 | Sergeant? |
3254 | Seriously enough to write him as you did? |
3254 | Seriously, Chairman, are you going to let the ship sink under you, for the sake of-- a principle? |
3254 | Seven thousand may I say? |
3254 | Shaking them with all his force, he said:"How dare you-- how dare you use that word?" |
3254 | Shall I agree with it? |
3254 | Shall I be disturbing you if I do the winders here? |
3254 | Shall I be safe? |
3254 | Shall I blow out?" |
3254 | Shall I bring them in, sir? |
3254 | Shall I call Guy? |
3254 | Shall I close in, sir? |
3254 | Shall I dispose of her, M''m? |
3254 | Shall I ever find a dog like you again? |
3254 | Shall I explain what I think about that? |
3254 | Shall I fetch John? |
3254 | Shall I get rid of Camille? |
3254 | Shall I get the candle?" |
3254 | Shall I get you a fur? |
3254 | Shall I get you some fresh?" |
3254 | Shall I get you some water? |
3254 | Shall I give you some coffee?" |
3254 | Shall I go and put on my flame- colour, now?" |
3254 | Shall I go over there to- night?" |
3254 | Shall I go to the bank and ask the cashier? |
3254 | Shall I go up, heh?" |
3254 | Shall I have a try to shift him, m''m?" |
3254 | Shall I hold them in check? |
3254 | Shall I keep lunch back? |
3254 | Shall I make the tea? |
3254 | Shall I make you happier by taking you into danger? |
3254 | Shall I pack for you? |
3254 | Shall I put him off, sir? |
3254 | Shall I put them on again? |
3254 | Shall I read some history?" |
3254 | Shall I send him in to you? |
3254 | Shall I shake my tambouline? |
3254 | Shall I shift him? |
3254 | Shall I speak to mother? |
3254 | Shall I take it out of the case?" |
3254 | Shall I take up the matter of that nuisance in Old Compton Street? |
3254 | Shall I talk to Nollie?" |
3254 | Shall I tell him that we''ve got illness, sir? |
3254 | Shall I tell yer mine? |
3254 | Shall I tell yer wot the Press did? |
3254 | Shall I tell you a secret, Julia? |
3254 | Shall I tell you what I think, ma''am? |
3254 | Shall I tell you? |
3254 | Shall I, Dodo? |
3254 | Shall I-- begin it? |
3254 | Shall I----? |
3254 | Shall I--? |
3254 | Shall I?" |
3254 | Shall cases be decided on their individual merits, or according to formal codes? |
3254 | Shall not each attempt be judged on its own merits? |
3254 | Shall we bring a bucket? |
3254 | Shall we find our way down to these savage halls?" |
3254 | Shall we get on with the business, or shall we go back to the other room? |
3254 | Shall we get up early to- morrow morning and go for a walk before breakfast and have it out? |
3254 | Shall we go and look him up?" |
3254 | Shall we go in here, doctor? |
3254 | Shall we go in to lunch?" |
3254 | Shall we go into the house, Professor, and settle the question quietly while the Vicar sees a young man? |
3254 | Shall we go on and see if we can find out what''s the matter?" |
3254 | Shall we go out? |
3254 | Shall we go straight to the room it was taken from? |
3254 | Shall we go up and see the abyss at the top?" |
3254 | Shall we go? |
3254 | Shall we join the ladies?" |
3254 | Shall we pray, Gracie?" |
3254 | Shall we send ye something in from dinner? |
3254 | Shall we start back, my child?" |
3254 | Shall we take a turn round?" |
3254 | Shall we take a turn round?" |
3254 | Shall we take the-- reservoir? |
3254 | Shall we waste breath and ink in condemnation of artists, because their temperaments are not our own? |
3254 | Shall we wish for it? |
3254 | Shall we-- shall we make a move? |
3254 | Shall we--? |
3254 | Shall we? |
3254 | She IS a pig, is n''t she?" |
3254 | She added with fashionably disguised anxiety:"Will there be much publicity about my affair, Soames? |
3254 | She answered coolly:"Did n''t I? |
3254 | She answered, as if to his reflection in the glass"And you have n''t gone too? |
3254 | She answered, startled:"I? |
3254 | She answered, without turning:"Have you ever seen, on jubilee nights, bonfire to bonfire, from hill to hill, to the end of the land? |
3254 | She asked desolately:"Does Major Winton know?" |
3254 | She believed what he had told her, that there had been no more than a kiss-- but was it nothing that they had reached that kiss? |
3254 | She came to him smelling of sweet scents, with a slight rustling of silk, and the sound of her expectant voice, saying,"Yes, dear?" |
3254 | She choked back that feeling, and said stonily:"Do you remember my baby? |
3254 | She clasped her hands:"Do you remember when I danced to you before the fire?" |
3254 | She could almost hear him thinking:''Now, how can I discuss it with this attractive young female, wife of the scoundrel who''s ruined my daughter? |
3254 | She could see all the workings of his face-- passion, reverence, above all amazement; and she heard his awed whisper:"Is it you, Gyp? |
3254 | She did it in a manner very soft for her-- was he not of all living things the hope and pride of her heart? |
3254 | She did n''t want to go away? |
3254 | She did not shrink, did not respond; she looked at him full, looked down, and murmured:"Who would not like it? |
3254 | She did not, however, lose her sense of what was practical, but said calmly:"Your husband was wounded in South Africa, you told me? |
3254 | She does n''t dream-- I suppose? |
3254 | She does n''t like the cold? |
3254 | She felt faint, and to disguise that faintness asked at random,"What does''without prejudice''in this letter mean?" |
3254 | She fled, I suppose? |
3254 | She gave a little laugh, then softly added:"Daddy''s wonderful, is n''t he?" |
3254 | She had been away, had she not-- staying with her father? |
3254 | She had burnt her boats; but what did it matter, if she got him? |
3254 | She had set it going-- what comfort could she get from that? |
3254 | She had taken the bit between her teeth, but could she make him take it too? |
3254 | She had the impudence? |
3254 | She has every reason to favour the prisoner, but what did she say? |
3254 | She heard a sigh, and called out, frightened:"Is that you, Gustav?" |
3254 | She held out her thumb and finger:"Do you mind?" |
3254 | She held up the ring:"What shall I do about this, Gratian?" |
3254 | She is ill.""Now?" |
3254 | She knelt up straight, and said:"Well, Jon?" |
3254 | She lay awake, and every now and then the Squire would ask her,"Are you asleep, Margery?" |
3254 | She looked defiantly round, and Aunt Juley had to intervene again:"Have you bought any pictures lately, Soames?" |
3254 | She looked up at the boy, and said quickly:"Was it a happy day?" |
3254 | She must have turned white, for she could hear the man saying:"Anything I can get you, ma''am?" |
3254 | She need n''t have come, I suppose? |
3254 | She only felt:"What am I to do? |
3254 | She opened her eyes, and seeing the maid, said:"Is it eight o''clock, Stacey?" |
3254 | She opened the door a little way, and said:"Are you asleep, Eusty?" |
3254 | She or me? |
3254 | She ought to be in touch with suffering and the men; that kitchen work will try her awfully just now: Was he very young?" |
3254 | She ought, of course, to be delighted, but what was there to be delighted at? |
3254 | She played a thing of Schumann''s called"Warum?" |
3254 | She put her hand on his forehead and whispered:"Are you comfy?" |
3254 | She reached up, twisted off a blossom and, twirling it in her fingers, said:"I suppose I can call you Jon?" |
3254 | She recoiled when she saw who it was, and said:"Why did you come, Daddy? |
3254 | She replied imperiously:"Of course she''ll like it; why should n''t she?" |
3254 | She rose, and as she rose, such was her unfortunate conformation, it flashed through Mrs. Pendyce''s mind''Why was I afraid? |
3254 | She said almost defiantly:"That old story-- was it so very dreadful?" |
3254 | She said gently:''"Is it as bad as that, my dear?" |
3254 | She said quietly:"Why do you like him, Gustav?" |
3254 | She said softly:"Why do n''t you like those cousins, Father?" |
3254 | She said suddenly:"Are you going to do nothing? |
3254 | She said timidly:"Do you think OUR blood ought to flow, too?" |
3254 | She said:"Have you had a good time at Count Rosek''s?" |
3254 | She said:"How long before?" |
3254 | She said:"If I let you in, will you promise to say what you want to say quickly, and go away?" |
3254 | She said:"Who told you he was in prison?" |
3254 | She sat there without speaking till he said:"What is it, my love?" |
3254 | She saw that he knew she was putting him off, and added:"Have you heard anything of Fleur?" |
3254 | She saw that her son would be against her unless he was told everything; and, yet, how could she tell him? |
3254 | She sighed again, her eyes slid round the room; then in her warm voice she murmured:"Guardy, you were my dear Philip''s father, were n''t you? |
3254 | She slipped her hand under his arm:"Has June forgiven me, Uncle Jolyon?" |
3254 | She slipped her hand under his arm:"Has June forgiven me, Uncle Jolyon?" |
3254 | She so dressed herself that James remarked:"What are you putting on that thing for? |
3254 | She spoke:"I hope Miltoun is taking his own line?" |
3254 | She sprang out of bed and wrote:"How COULD you do such a brutal thing? |
3254 | She stood for several seconds staring at the door, then, turning round again, said:"Well?" |
3254 | She strikes you like that, does she?" |
3254 | She summoned up courage, however, to say:"Did you see about poor Bob Tryst?" |
3254 | She thought him cruel, called him cruel-- what for? |
3254 | She tried so hard to think: What does it matter? |
3254 | She turned to him at once, and said:"Oh, Dad, what am I to do? |
3254 | She tyrannised and bullied, even before she had him at her mercy, did she? |
3254 | She wanted to be good to him, and said almost shyly:"Are you angry with me, Claud?" |
3254 | She was chasing a bluebottle now with a little fan made of wire, and, coming close to Felix, said:"Have you seen these, darling? |
3254 | She was in a raid, and''er nerves are all gone funny; ai n''t they, old girl? |
3254 | She was saying to me only yesterday:''What have you brought home the last four months?'' |
3254 | She was so very pretty-- could he trust himself not to say irrevocable words, passing beyond the limits of discretion? |
3254 | She was taking Profond''s defection with curious quietude; or was his"small"voyage just a blind? |
3254 | She went indoors, took a pen and began to write:"MY FRIEND,--Why have n''t you written to me? |
3254 | She went on, in a quiet, almost dreamy voice:"Why do they come here? |
3254 | She went to sleep, thinking that he would suffer horribly if anybody hurt him; but who would hurt him? |
3254 | She whispered:"Why wo n''t you let me?" |
3254 | She wondered how she had looked when he kissed her so passionately; had she shown her joy before she checked him? |
3254 | She would get it by the first post; but what could he say that was not dangerous, if Cramier chanced to see? |
3254 | She''d still be herself, would n''t she? |
3254 | She''s a country gell; at a''undred and fifty she''ll be a country gell, wo n''t yer, old lydy? |
3254 | She''s a wonder;''yn''t yer, old dear? |
3254 | She''s awfully virtuous, though, is n''t she? |
3254 | She''s going to live in the house, is n''t she?" |
3254 | She''s quite a star now, is n''t she?" |
3254 | She''s rather sweet, is n''t she-- my kitten?" |
3254 | She''s the skeleton in the family cupboard, is n''t she? |
3254 | She''s too- too-- d''you see what I mean? |
3254 | Sheila said:"Why? |
3254 | Shelton and Crocker took two other chairs; they too seemed thinking,"Yes, why did we come and wake him up like this?" |
3254 | Shelton looked at him, and itched to say,"Why should n''t I?" |
3254 | Shelton thought to himself:"Why do n''t I know a place that''s better than Baghdad?" |
3254 | Shelton turned to Halidome:"Can you stand this sort of thing?" |
3254 | Shelton?" |
3254 | Shelton?'' |
3254 | Shivery? |
3254 | Shortman?" |
3254 | Shortman?" |
3254 | Should Hester get Timothy''s map? |
3254 | Should I have asked him here if I''d thought this was going to happen?" |
3254 | Should I have cared?" |
3254 | Should I naturally put my hand on them; or would there be a reaction quick enough to stop me? |
3254 | Should I not be almost glad? |
3254 | Should Miltoun be wired for? |
3254 | Should he consult his wife? |
3254 | Should he get up and leave her alone? |
3254 | Should he give up this nerve- racking, bizarre effort to come at a basis of judgment; go away, and just tell Laurence that he could not advise him? |
3254 | Should he go back and take that pug- faced vulgarian by the throat? |
3254 | Should he go for Flora? |
3254 | Should he go in? |
3254 | Should he go with them? |
3254 | Should he grin and bear it, and by doing nothing show these fellows that he could afford to despise their cowardly device? |
3254 | Should he knock, push the note under, or....? |
3254 | Should he lay his cards on the table? |
3254 | Should he make the farmers sack the lot and get in other labor? |
3254 | Should he seize her hands, drag them down, and kiss her? |
3254 | Should he show it to her? |
3254 | Should he sneak away? |
3254 | Should he speak to her? |
3254 | Should he stop them? |
3254 | Should he suspend wages till they withdrew their demand? |
3254 | Should he''lay it off''at the eight to one to which she had advanced? |
3254 | Should he? |
3254 | Should n''t he have a shot? |
3254 | Should n''t he, Molly? |
3254 | Should she be first to make it up, or should she wait for him? |
3254 | Should she challenge directly that influence, that attraction which was driving him away from her? |
3254 | Should she dash to the door-- escape? |
3254 | Should she go in there? |
3254 | Should she make a dash for the door that opened into the little lane and escape that way? |
3254 | Should she not ask him to keep his promise, now that George----? |
3254 | Should she pretend to feel faint and slip out into the hotel? |
3254 | Should she put everything to the proof? |
3254 | Should she see him again or no? |
3254 | Should she take out those roses and let them fall? |
3254 | Should we go on administering India if it were dead loss? |
3254 | Shut the stable door? |
3254 | Shutting the window? |
3254 | Silence for the blasted traitor? |
3254 | Silence, then, until her awed whisper:"What?" |
3254 | Since her husband knew-- why wait? |
3254 | Since it was no longer the only face for him, what was the use of beauty? |
3254 | Since they used such mean, cruel ways, why need she herself be scrupulous? |
3254 | Since two? |
3254 | Since when is a thief a gentleman? |
3254 | Since you came out, is this the first young man who''s kissed you? |
3254 | Sir James, some pie?" |
3254 | Sir John, you believe that country comes before wife and child? |
3254 | Sir Thomas Hoxton? |
3254 | Sir William still in the dining- room with Mr. Bill, sir? |
3254 | Sir? |
3254 | Sir? |
3254 | Sir? |
3254 | Sir? |
3254 | Sir? |
3254 | Sir? |
3254 | Sir? |
3254 | Sit down, wo n''t you? |
3254 | Sit down, wo n''t you?" |
3254 | Sit there next the Chairman, Harness, wo n''t you? |
3254 | Six thousand? |
3254 | Six? |
3254 | Sixth Pick? |
3254 | Skin game? |
3254 | Slavery? |
3254 | Sleep? |
3254 | Sleep? |
3254 | Slept well?" |
3254 | Slipping her hand under his arm, she said:"Who was that?" |
3254 | Smalley? |
3254 | Smart? |
3254 | Snatching the sleeve of his fur coat away from her grasp, he confronted her:"What?" |
3254 | Sniff the scent out of a wild flower, and-- perhaps-- throw it away? |
3254 | So I must take away this picture, must I not? |
3254 | So I think I ought to leave him, do n''t you, sir? |
3254 | So Winifred would go back, would she, and put up with Dartie all over again? |
3254 | So easy, is n''t it? |
3254 | So he said:"Well, my dear?" |
3254 | So he was quite determined to study Art? |
3254 | So it was coming here too, was it? |
3254 | So it was like this-- was it?... |
3254 | So long ago-- when Phil and she-- And since? |
3254 | So long as Larry goes on with you, he''s tied to this murder, do n''t you see? |
3254 | So near the-- er-- Centre of-- Gravity um? |
3254 | So pretty, seemingly so candid; could she be angling for him? |
3254 | So she counted on his helplessness, had begun to count on that, had she? |
3254 | So that fellow Jolyon was in Paris-- what was he doing there? |
3254 | So that fellow thought he had him beaten, did he? |
3254 | So the feud went on, unto the third generation-- this modern feud which had no overt expression? |
3254 | So they''re married? |
3254 | So what? |
3254 | So you admire her, Madame Gyp?" |
3254 | So you can joke, can you? |
3254 | So you did catch them out? |
3254 | So you have not been out since----? |
3254 | So you think freights will go lower?" |
3254 | So you think it''s a headache, do you? |
3254 | So you want to be our parlour- maid? |
3254 | So you want to come back? |
3254 | So you wo n''t take what I say in bad part? |
3254 | So you''re going to put yourself at the head of the cranks, ruin your career, and make me ashamed that you''re my son- in- law? |
3254 | So you''ve hurt your leg, sir? |
3254 | So you''ve lost your job? |
3254 | So you''ve made up your minds?" |
3254 | So you''ve seen? |
3254 | So you''ve tracked her down? |
3254 | So you''ve tumbled, Mother? |
3254 | So your husband earns nothing? |
3254 | So, do be a darling, wo n''t you?" |
3254 | So, leaning towards him, while a bare- shouldered young lady sang, she had whispered:"Penny?" |
3254 | So, one evening, after dinner, he said quietly:"Tell me frankly, Gyp; do you care for that chap?" |
3254 | So- so it''s gone through?" |
3254 | So-- they''ve done us both down, Mr. Anthony? |
3254 | So-- you''re going? |
3254 | Soames answered surlily:"How could I tell? |
3254 | Soames brought her down, I suppose?" |
3254 | Soames cast a stealthy look at him, and said:"Coming to our place, I suppose to meet her?" |
3254 | Soames had not heard? |
3254 | Soames said icily:"So you admit it?" |
3254 | Soames thought he was looking at him inquisitively, and remembering that he was not in dress clothes, asked:"Anybody here to dinner, Warmson?" |
3254 | Soames went on:"Can you really want to live all your days half- dead in this little hole? |
3254 | Soames, taking one, remarked:"What time''s your play begin?" |
3254 | Soames?" |
3254 | Soames?" |
3254 | Social blackmail? |
3254 | Some one must write and make this known? |
3254 | Something in Felix always stirred at sight of it, and, squeezing Nedda''s arm, he said:"See that silly wall? |
3254 | Something in what? |
3254 | Something is wrong with me, something is wrong-- but where-- what?'' |
3254 | Sometimes the discussion turned on Art-- on points of colour or technique; whether realism was quite justified; and should we be pre- Raphaelites? |
3254 | Soo--? |
3254 | Speak, or keep silent; try to console; try to pretend? |
3254 | Speaking of your own knowledge, Mr Builder? |
3254 | Spending most of his time abroad, then?" |
3254 | Spine? |
3254 | Spite? |
3254 | Splendid, is n''t she? |
3254 | Splendidly situated, I suppose?" |
3254 | Spreading your wings? |
3254 | Spying out his profile, for he was lying on his back, she refrained from saying:"John, are you awake?" |
3254 | Squire not in? |
3254 | St Erth, shall we raise the flag for whist again? |
3254 | Stand for De Levis against one of ourselves? |
3254 | Stand on one leg and crow? |
3254 | Stared at you? |
3254 | Starve us and prison us? |
3254 | Stay an''have a cup of tea, Mrs. Rous? |
3254 | Stealing a glance at him, Gyp said very softly:"Did you ever ride with my mother, Dad?" |
3254 | Stephen back? |
3254 | Stephen continued with greater circumspection"You could n''t get the old boy to finish by Wednesday, I suppose? |
3254 | Stephen get my note? |
3254 | Stephen here yet?" |
3254 | Stephen shook his head, murmuring:"But, I say, our old friend, eh? |
3254 | Stephen, who had jumped up, asked:"Where is she?" |
3254 | Stifling his sense of the unusual for the queer attraction this young man inspired, he said:"I suppose you''re a stranger over here?" |
3254 | Still your advice, is it? |
3254 | Still, it''s for the country, is n''t it? |
3254 | Still, when she said:"Will you come in?" |
3254 | Still, you get out, do n''t you? |
3254 | Stolen or run over? |
3254 | Stone?" |
3254 | Stone?" |
3254 | Stone?" |
3254 | Stop it? |
3254 | Stop? |
3254 | Stopping at last before the only object which seemed unchanged, he said:"Can you tell me where the Ministry is?" |
3254 | Stout? |
3254 | Strange, or what? |
3254 | Stryte-- do yer believe in the noble mission o''the Press? |
3254 | Studdenham''s told you what I want to see you about? |
3254 | Subduing a natural irritation, he said:"Are you a judge of pictures?" |
3254 | Sudden reverse of all that goes before; blind setting forth on a path that leads to where? |
3254 | Suddenly General Pendyce''s voice was heard saying very loud,"Stale? |
3254 | Suddenly Pippin''s voice dropped to a whisper:"I''m disgraced Men, are you going back on me?" |
3254 | Suddenly he said:"Well, girl, are you happy?" |
3254 | Suddenly he sighed, and grasping Scorrier''s arm, said:"Dull, are n''t I? |
3254 | Suddenly holding out the flower] Mr March gave me that flower; would you like it back? |
3254 | Suddenly it shot through her: Suppose Mark had travelled with them, as he had wished to do? |
3254 | Suddenly recollecting that he must not betray emotion, he added:"What message did she leave?" |
3254 | Suddenly she said in her matter- of- fact voice:"I only wanted to ask-- Can''t I come too?" |
3254 | Suddenly she thought:''Suppose I HAD loved him?'' |
3254 | Suddenly?" |
3254 | Suffer so slowly, so horribly? |
3254 | Sullenly George answered:"What do you take me for? |
3254 | Summerhay?" |
3254 | Sundry? |
3254 | Suppose I had robbed Dancy, would you chase him out for complaining of it? |
3254 | Suppose I loved him, too? |
3254 | Suppose I was to speak to Master Johnny? |
3254 | Suppose anybody came?" |
3254 | Suppose he wo n''t budge, can we do anything for the Jackmans? |
3254 | Suppose my wife had come in? |
3254 | Suppose she does suffer a little? |
3254 | Suppose she''s engaged one, Dad? |
3254 | Suppose the dead man''s relationship to her were ferreted out, could she be relied on not to endanger Larry? |
3254 | Suppose we all went an''asked''i m not to go? |
3254 | Suppose we had an ordinary person up before us for striking a woman? |
3254 | Suppose we joined, could n''t we stop it? |
3254 | Suppose you have n''t any news for him, sir?" |
3254 | Sure? |
3254 | Sure? |
3254 | Sure? |
3254 | Sure? |
3254 | Surely he was thin-- or was it a trick of the light? |
3254 | Surely it would n''t be too awkward for you to see her just this once now that Jon''s father is dead?" |
3254 | Surely one ca n''t be too interested in them?" |
3254 | Surely there''s some mistake? |
3254 | Surely you know about that?" |
3254 | Suspicious? |
3254 | Swear? |
3254 | Swear? |
3254 | Swithin growled,"Who says so?" |
3254 | Swithin heard her ask:"Are we going to have an accident, Uncle Swithin?" |
3254 | Swithin muttered,"Is that all?" |
3254 | Swithin, very like a bull- dog at that moment, answered: What business was it of his? |
3254 | Sylvia Doone? |
3254 | Sylvia''s voice, close to him, said:"Mark, that night when your star caught in my hair? |
3254 | THE MAN[ Dully] What''s the good o''stayin''? |
3254 | Take him, hankering after what she could not give him-- youth, white innocence, Spring? |
3254 | Take it like a sensible man, carn''t you? |
3254 | Take it lying down and let whoever it is get clear off? |
3254 | Take the poor themselves--what''s wanted? |
3254 | Take the word''Liberty,''for instance; would you deprive us of it?" |
3254 | Taking a parting look at her baby, Gyp thought bitterly:''My fate? |
3254 | Taking his elder brother by the arm, he added:"Will you come in again, old boy, or shall we go for a stroll?" |
3254 | Talk it over with Soames? |
3254 | Talk? |
3254 | Talkin''business, poor creatures? |
3254 | Tall? |
3254 | Tall?" |
3254 | Tally? |
3254 | Tea, Professor Calway? |
3254 | Tea? |
3254 | Telegraph? |
3254 | Tell Dad he must come home? |
3254 | Tell Uncle-- Tom-- what? |
3254 | Tell me, Ma''moiselle, what is it you think of all day long? |
3254 | Tell me, are they food for men and women? |
3254 | Tell me, for all their talk, is there one of them that will consent to another penny on the Income Tax to help the poor? |
3254 | Tell me, haf you seen many German prisoners? |
3254 | Tell me, monsieur, you would not think it worthy of you to speak to me of your troubles, would you, as I have spoken of mine?" |
3254 | Tell me, what would you do in my place? |
3254 | Tell me, wo n''t you? |
3254 | Tell me-- do you regard women as responsible beings? |
3254 | Tell them you''re engaged when you''re not? |
3254 | Tell us what''s it filled with? |
3254 | Ten 5 16ths, Peachey? |
3254 | Ten thousand, twenty thousand-- how much? |
3254 | Ten thousand, twenty thousand-- how much? |
3254 | That Ventnor-- what''s his holding?" |
3254 | That chap Profond, Mother, is he all right?" |
3254 | That does not make the problem any the less difficult, does it?" |
3254 | That drunken fellow? |
3254 | That first real lover''s kiss- strange, wonderful, still almost innocent-- in which heart did it make the most disturbance? |
3254 | That he was in love with Olive? |
3254 | That her fellow- women should make an outcast of her? |
3254 | That her uncle always wanted more than he could have? |
3254 | That his loot, Mr Vane? |
3254 | That his love of country should express itself in philosophic altruism? |
3254 | That ice- cold, ice- clear remark contained the pith of the whole matter; and Hilary said:"You are not going at once?" |
3254 | That is sure, is n''t it? |
3254 | That leaves out Christ, does n''t it?" |
3254 | That night at Tregaron? |
3254 | That shadowy path of light, with its dancing dust- motes, was it indeed charged with Fate-- indeed the augury of Love or Darkness? |
3254 | That silence of hers seemed to him unjust; what was it she wanted him to say or do? |
3254 | That the man in the street should be a Quixote? |
3254 | That we, who are men, should make a prey of her? |
3254 | That weed Dancy gave you in the Spring? |
3254 | That white cloud trying to fly up? |
3254 | That white slip of moonlight? |
3254 | That woman and her daughter, had they really come? |
3254 | That woman brings destruction-- what is it in her? |
3254 | That you? |
3254 | That young man, Thirza?" |
3254 | That''s his brother in the Guards, is n''t it? |
3254 | That''s his way of finding a job, eh? |
3254 | That''s important, do n''t you think, Mary? |
3254 | That''s lucky for them, is n''t it? |
3254 | That''s queer, is n''t it? |
3254 | That''s queer, is n''t it? |
3254 | That''s something, is n''t it? |
3254 | That''s the girl we met coming out of the theatre, is n''t it?" |
3254 | That''s the only reason I''m telling you now; Mums is there-- but she does n''t count; why do n''t you count, Mums?" |
3254 | That''s what I thinks; but it do n''t''elp, do it? |
3254 | That''s what we been doin'', have n''t we? |
3254 | That''s where we''ve been makin''our mistake this long time past; and who''s to blame fort? |
3254 | That, he had said, was the motto of the middle- class; now, what had he meant by that? |
3254 | That, however, was surely wicked and wasteful, when she ought to be learning such a tremendous lot; and yet, what was there to learn? |
3254 | That; or to say farewell to all she now cared for, to cause despair not only in herself, but in her lover, and-- for what? |
3254 | The 8th? |
3254 | The Duke of Z.... wanted to get hold of them, would have given him double the money, but he had kept them; know a good thing when you have it, eh? |
3254 | The Duke? |
3254 | The General is n''t mentioning the coat, is he? |
3254 | The Holyroods had some trouble with their servants, had n''t they? |
3254 | The Hungarian replied,"But you are coming with me, for a glass of wine?" |
3254 | The Inspector asked softly:"You identify the gentleman, sir?" |
3254 | The Mayfly strain-- was it any better than any other? |
3254 | The Missis says she''ll be very angry if you do n''t put your worms away; and would you come and help kill earwigs in the blue----? |
3254 | The Professor could see him, WELLWYN? |
3254 | The Russian proverb,"The heart of another is a dark forest,"gashed into his mind, while he said:"Well, Hodson, what news of your son?" |
3254 | The Smart Set, eh? |
3254 | The Stormers not back?" |
3254 | The agent returned that stare till a voice behind him said:"Yes, sir?" |
3254 | The attendant coming to take his order, gazed at his pale, furious face, and said mechanically:"What can I get you, please?" |
3254 | The beating and rattling have recommenced, and the voice:"Are you coming?" |
3254 | The blood rushed up into Gregory Vigil''s forehead; he put his hand to his head, and said:"Like him? |
3254 | The car had stopped, and Lady Valleys said:"Will you come in, or are you too tired? |
3254 | The celebrated Felsman? |
3254 | The chief thought left by that meeting was:"Is that how he begins to everyone?" |
3254 | The coachman turned his broad red face, and his juicy lips answered:"The lady in grey, sir?" |
3254 | The coachman turned his broad red face, and his juicy lips answered:"The lady in grey, sir?" |
3254 | The conductor said:''We are late, can we start?'' |
3254 | The constable? |
3254 | The cook, was n''t it? |
3254 | The country''s not what it was, is it, Fellows? |
3254 | The custom is the other way; but you do n''t believe in customs? |
3254 | The day he got up again he began afresh:"When are the assizes?" |
3254 | The death of justice? |
3254 | The defendant said nothing? |
3254 | The door is locked; I can hear her crying-- why have you been cruel?" |
3254 | The dreamer spoke to her:"Who are you, standing there in the darkness with those eyes that I can hardly bear to look at? |
3254 | The expression; what is she waiting for?" |
3254 | The eyes of that tiny scrap of grey humanity seemed saying:''You are not my mother, I believe?'' |
3254 | The fossil rumbled and said in that almost inaudible voice:"I suppose you''re beginning to look forward to your father''s shoes?" |
3254 | The further you look back the more dependable the times get;''ave you noticed that, sir? |
3254 | The girl answered, with piteous eagerness:"Oh, would you like it? |
3254 | The girl at the typewriter blushed vividly, and, without looking round, said:"How can I tell, Mr. Vigil? |
3254 | The girl flashed a look at him that said:''Could I make you jealous?'' |
3254 | The girl-- who cared about the wretched girl? |
3254 | The good Lord knows the truth-- she asked for brandy; have you any brandy, sir? |
3254 | The grin died on the rich curves of his face, and he added:"Have n''t you attorneys invented a way yet of dodging this damned income tax? |
3254 | The harm we do to others-- is it so much? |
3254 | The idea is pretty, anyway; but is there any need for an idea at all? |
3254 | The impression of cleanliness, order, and good taste was confirmed when the girl got up, saying,"You wish to see Maman, Monsieur?" |
3254 | The joke, your honour? |
3254 | The judge said gently:"Well, my child?" |
3254 | The leaves were turning very soon? |
3254 | The little director asked explosively:"See our last dividend? |
3254 | The little model gritted her teeth, and, twisting at her dirty gloves, said:"Mr. Dallison, d''you know the first thing I''d buy if I was rich?" |
3254 | The maid Bilson was in the hall, and in answer to his question:"Where is your mistress?" |
3254 | The maid looked at it, at Gyp, and at two brown- painted doors, as much as to say,"Where will you have it?" |
3254 | The major away and all-- what was I to do? |
3254 | The man who struck him was an odd- looking person; kindly inform me whether it is possible for my friend to meet him?'' |
3254 | The man with a lot of greyish hair? |
3254 | The master, my lady? |
3254 | The men who work with you; the men you make friends of-- d''you think they''ll let you be? |
3254 | The mine? |
3254 | The moment his hands relaxed, she got up and said:"You know there''s a baby in the house?" |
3254 | The music ceased; the maid said from the doorway:"Will you walk in, sir?" |
3254 | The night is so quiet-- I have n''t heard a sound; is she asleep, awake, crying, triumphant? |
3254 | The old man turned his eyes on her and muttered,"How do you do, ma''am?" |
3254 | The old man''s voice:"Where did you get hold of that cock- and- bull story?" |
3254 | The old miner next Scorrier called out suddenly:"Anny that''s Cornishmen here to stand by the superintendent?" |
3254 | The old''un or the young? |
3254 | The only thing I might say is: One does not press oneself where one is n''t wanted; all the same-- who knows? |
3254 | The other night--""Yes; the other night?" |
3254 | The pale, low- cut amber, or that white, soft one, with the coffee- dipped lace? |
3254 | The policeman asked the conductor:''Did you see him get out there?'' |
3254 | The policeman passed a second time; his gaze seemed to say,"Now, what''s a toff doing on that seat with those two rotters?" |
3254 | The prince of fellows, and of what use was one? |
3254 | The question is simply: How are our pockets going to be affected? |
3254 | The question is, Megan: Will you take your wife home? |
3254 | The question is, do you feel the gravity of what you did? |
3254 | The question, however, was: What should he do? |
3254 | The reasons against such an engagement have occurred to you, I suppose? |
3254 | The result of this case would ruin Bosinney; a ruined man was desperate, but-- what could he do? |
3254 | The seeds of grief were already sown, what flowers of darkness, or of tumult would come up? |
3254 | The self- possessed young voice was saying:"Would you mind if I showed you my drawings? |
3254 | The shape of Death coming from her door? |
3254 | The silence of sensation was broken by Francie saying:"What? |
3254 | The son answered:"How are you, Dad?" |
3254 | The son looked at his mother with beaming eyes, and she remarked:"An''I says to him, says I, I says,''What?'' |
3254 | The sound of his breathing could be heard distinctly; he twisted a chair round and said:"Take a seat, wo n''t you?" |
3254 | The storm is wanted; you feel that? |
3254 | The sun do n''t shine in your inside, do it? |
3254 | The thing is to get human interest, is n''t it?" |
3254 | The thought flashed through Gyp:''To how many has he knelt, I wonder?'' |
3254 | The two walked some way from the''hut''in silence, before Anna said:"You did n''t like me when I laughed?" |
3254 | The variations my mind spins-- wouldn''t I just swap them for the tunes your mind is making?" |
3254 | The violet- grey spirit with the dark eyes and the crown of amber hair, who walks the dawn and the moonlight, and at blue- bell time? |
3254 | The violet- grey spirit with the dark eyes and the crown of amber hair, who walks the dawn and the moonlight, and at blue- bell time? |
3254 | The visitor smiled and said:"What were you thinking about when we came in?" |
3254 | The voice of Mrs. Ercott, sharper than its wo nt, said:"What day does Robert say he wants you back, my dear?" |
3254 | The whizz of a motor- car rapidly approaching them became a sort of roar, and out of it a voice shouted:"How are you?" |
3254 | The woman-- have you-- since--? |
3254 | The word"home"hurt him, and he only answered:"Very well, Gyp; when?" |
3254 | The words rushed from her lips:"Is there any message for me?" |
3254 | The words, just a little satirically spoken:"What is, my dear young man?" |
3254 | The yaller Press''as got no blood--''as it? |
3254 | The young man is veree nice, but-- what would you? |
3254 | The young woman added hastily:"What style would you like-- something modish?" |
3254 | The"Goat and Bells,"--what is that? |
3254 | Then Anna was her Christian and Dyomene her surname? |
3254 | Then Bianca spoke:"Well?" |
3254 | Then Cethru spoke:"So please your Highnesses,"he said,"can I help what my lanthorn sees?" |
3254 | Then Emily''s real voice said:"Have you had a nice nap, James?" |
3254 | Then I suppose you want to- morrow''s? |
3254 | Then John rose and, holding out his hand to his nephew, said:"That''s the end of the trouble, then, Derek?" |
3254 | Then Kentman and Goole lied-- for no reason? |
3254 | Then Mr. Ventnor said:"Will you submit your pass books?" |
3254 | Then Mrs. Small, twisting her fingers and gazing round with''pathetic calm'', asked:"And how is dear June?" |
3254 | Then Oliver suddenly burst out:"Why ca n''t she care? |
3254 | Then bring Dancy up, will you? |
3254 | Then coming to a halt he said:"Suppose I am lending money to your mother, what does it matter? |
3254 | Then for a few moments he talked of the war and old College days, and Pierson looked at him and thought:''What has he come for?'' |
3254 | Then he pulled himself together, and said:"What has happened to you, child?" |
3254 | Then he said quietly:"When?" |
3254 | Then he said:"D''you mind telling the others that I''m here?" |
3254 | Then he said:"If you could only have one tree, which would you have?" |
3254 | Then how does the box come to be here? |
3254 | Then is Thomas Matthew? |
3254 | Then it all narrowed to one fierce, insistent question:"What is it-- WHAT is it you''re afraid of?" |
3254 | Then looking at Bob Pillin, he remarked:"Going my way? |
3254 | Then looking sideways at FREDA, but in a gentler voice] And when did you tell him about-- what''s come to you? |
3254 | Then our instincts are taking us down? |
3254 | Then perhaps you''ll tell me what these mean? |
3254 | Then said the oldest of the Judges:"Cethru, you have heard; what answer do you make?" |
3254 | Then she began:"Why did we come down again? |
3254 | Then she noticed that the little figure before her was also trembling; drawing up a chair, she said:"Wo n''t you sit down?" |
3254 | Then she sat down again and asked:"Will you have some tea?" |
3254 | Then she was here? |
3254 | Then some one cried,''Who are you?'' |
3254 | Then suddenly came the words she had dreaded:"D''you think they''ll let me go, miss?" |
3254 | Then suddenly, as though something had hurt him, he grunted,"The''Froggies''? |
3254 | Then the bitterness of her disappointment rising up again, she said coldly:"Are you going to live together openly?" |
3254 | Then what are you talking about? |
3254 | Then what do you talk about-- your minds? |
3254 | Then what was it-- did she drink? |
3254 | Then where am I to put him for goodness sake? |
3254 | Then where was she? |
3254 | Then who supplied the-- er-- momentum? |
3254 | Then why ca n''t you go to the girl? |
3254 | Then why did one love, if there''s to be no meeting after?" |
3254 | Then why did you say you did? |
3254 | Then why did you--[He is going to say:"Kiss me,"but checks himself]--let me think you had n''t any friends? |
3254 | Then why do n''t you keep it? |
3254 | Then why do you do it? |
3254 | Then why do you want him? |
3254 | Then why wo n''t you stay? |
3254 | Then you are to lose that, too? |
3254 | Then you ca n''t suggest any one who could have known? |
3254 | Then you do n''t want to stand in his way, do you? |
3254 | Then you heard? |
3254 | Then you think I''ve got it? |
3254 | Then you think you''d like him, Miss DOT? |
3254 | Then you were n''t fond of her? |
3254 | Then you''d better keep away, had n''t you? |
3254 | Then you''ll take the thing into your hands? |
3254 | Then, and only then, she whispered:"How long before he--?" |
3254 | Then, conscious that her father was gazing at her, she turned and said:"Well, was it nice in the Park?" |
3254 | Then, holding up the flowers, she said:"Did you give me these because of the one I gave you?" |
3254 | Then, in an impulse of sheer affection, he said with startling suddenness:"My dear, I''ve often meant to ask, are you happy at home?" |
3254 | Then, in the closed cab, she heard her husband''s:"Are n''t you going to kiss me?" |
3254 | Then, looking very straight at Nedda, he said:"Nothing in it? |
3254 | Then, obviously making conversation, she asked:"Are you going to church? |
3254 | Then, out of a silence Winlow asked: What was to be done? |
3254 | Then, pointing to a chair, he said:"Wo n''t you sit down, sir?" |
3254 | Then, seeing a shareholder close to the door get up, thought:''Who''s that? |
3254 | Then, taking Betty by the shoulder, he asked quietly:"What happened to HIM?" |
3254 | Then, the question was, what were they to do? |
3254 | Then, what are you talking about? |
3254 | Then, why wo n''t you see that people who beg are rotters? |
3254 | Then, why--? |
3254 | Then, with a friendly pressure of his brother''s arm, he added:"Look here, old boy, can I be of any use?" |
3254 | Then, with a great effort, the boy brought out his question:"You''ve heard about poor Bob?" |
3254 | Then, with a jerk of suspicion,"You have n''t brought your friends?" |
3254 | Then, with a quaver in his voice, the father said:"How are you, my boy?" |
3254 | Then, with her eyes still on his face, she went on quickly:"Only we wo n''t talk about that now, will we? |
3254 | There are no more bulls, I suppose, between us and this woman?" |
3254 | There are some chairs there against the wall, Roberts; wo n''t you draw them up and sit down? |
3254 | There could not be, seemingly, any more rigid law laid down; how do you reconcile it with the essence of Christ''s teaching? |
3254 | There is a little pause; then, with sharp fright, RUTH says:"Who''s that?" |
3254 | There is a place just here where we Belgians go; would you like to see how true my words are? |
3254 | There passed through Miltoun''s mind the rapid thought:''Does he know?'' |
3254 | There she lies, white and supple, with dewy, wistful eyes, sighing:''What is my meaning? |
3254 | There was a lady standing at the window, and Mr. Pendyce said:"I beg your pardon?" |
3254 | There was a silence; then Peacock said:"What about those gates of mine, Squire?" |
3254 | There was another pause, and then Soames said:"I suppose you do n''t want to, go?" |
3254 | There was another silence, till she said:"He does pull, rather-- doesn''t he, going home?" |
3254 | There was real feeling in his words; then, catching sight of Courtier''s face, he added:"Do you know this lady?" |
3254 | There was something behind all this-- had she been seeing Bosinney? |
3254 | There would be a clerk or someone to beard, and what name could she give? |
3254 | There would be no train for Kestrel till the morning-- and did she really want to go there, and eat her heart out? |
3254 | There''s been nothing between us, has there? |
3254 | There''s her-- and my father-- and--""And what?" |
3254 | There''s more ways of killing a cat-- eh, Freda? |
3254 | There''s some that''s for pullin''of''em down, but that''s talkin''rubbish; where are you goin''to get the money for to do it? |
3254 | There''s something bizarre about it, is n''t there? |
3254 | There''s something in character, is n''t there? |
3254 | There''s time for a hundred up before dinner if you care for a game, Winlow?" |
3254 | There, drawing the coarse grass blades through her fingers, she said, with a shiver:"I did n''t try to make you, did I? |
3254 | There-- how can you do it? |
3254 | These are your''trenches,''and you''re not going to be downed, are you?" |
3254 | They WERE English Grundys, were n''t they-- every one?" |
3254 | They all stick together; why should n''t we? |
3254 | They can stand what we can stand, I suppose, ca n''t they? |
3254 | They goin''to pitch him after all? |
3254 | They let us down as easy as ever they can; you ca n''t get blood from a stone, can you?" |
3254 | They received her most cordially: And how was her dear grandfather? |
3254 | They said it must always come once to every man and woman-- this witchery, this dark sweet feeling, springing up, who knew how or why? |
3254 | They sat down on a great root, and leaning against him, looking up at the dark branches, she said:"Have you had a hard day?" |
3254 | They say''es a poet; does''e leave''em about? |
3254 | They spoke no more till they had entered the avenue; then Lady Casterley said sharply:"Who is this coming down the drive?" |
3254 | They tell me I do n''t look like a dyin''woman? |
3254 | They were simply so much aching that had to be got through somehow-- so much aching; and what relief at the end? |
3254 | They why do you say so? |
3254 | They would mean such happiness if-- if his love for her were more than a summer love? |
3254 | They''ll drink too much, wo n''t they? |
3254 | They''re not beggars, do n''t you know, and so what can one do?" |
3254 | They''re welcome to the worst that can happen to me, to the worst that can happen to us all, are n''t they-- are n''t they? |
3254 | They''ve discovered who he was-- you know that? |
3254 | They''ve had fifteen tea- sets- so dull, is n''t it?" |
3254 | They''ve only the one child, I think?" |
3254 | Thick as thieves-- a good motto, is n''t it? |
3254 | Things going badly? |
3254 | Think he will what? |
3254 | Think of all these other fellows? |
3254 | Think of their sins and business? |
3254 | Think yet again, perhaps it is not quite all settled; it is not possible that a maiden should not a way out leave?" |
3254 | Think you selfish-- of course I do n''t; why should I? |
3254 | Thinking of these things he answered curtly:"When shall I start?" |
3254 | Thinking of those Hillcrists? |
3254 | This Captain Dancy got the D.S.O., did n''t he? |
3254 | This Glove Lane-- this arch way? |
3254 | This Mrs. Jones-- how long has she been working here? |
3254 | This Walenn-- was it his first reappearance after an absence? |
3254 | This business at Malloring''s-- what''s it going to lead to, Tod? |
3254 | This is a beastly business, old girl?] |
3254 | This is our maker of saws, is n''t it? |
3254 | This is really the same tobacco, then?" |
3254 | This is the modern spirit; why not give it a look in?" |
3254 | This is where I came to- dy,''yn''t it? |
3254 | This last business-- what do you mean by that? |
3254 | This lease of Boulter''s-- am I to send it to counsel? |
3254 | This morning, I believe, Jill? |
3254 | This the beastie? |
3254 | This thing with the calm, pathetic look of one who asks of his own fled spirit: Why have you abandoned me? |
3254 | This to the Cottage Hospital-- shall I say you will preside? |
3254 | This was the beginning of-- what? |
3254 | This way? |
3254 | This woman tire of George? |
3254 | This young man, Mr Herringhame, I take it, is a friend of the family''s? |
3254 | This your dog?" |
3254 | This your lighting? |
3254 | This''ll be your first interest- on six thousand pounds? |
3254 | Thish yer tea''s foreign, ai n''t it? |
3254 | Thomas? |
3254 | Those feelers of a woman who loves-- can anything check their delicate apprehension? |
3254 | Those qualities to him more dear almost than life, those indispensable attributes of property and culture, where were they? |
3254 | Those things? |
3254 | Those young people-- where had they got to? |
3254 | Those? |
3254 | Thou? |
3254 | Though she had come to ask his advice on a very different subject, she saw at once that he was vexed, and said:"What''s the matter, Geoff?" |
3254 | Though you knew she was a married woman? |
3254 | Though-- what did it matter, now? |
3254 | Threading the streets in his cab, he mused:"Did I do anything that really shocked her last night? |
3254 | Three?" |
3254 | Through all his ministrations had he ever come to know their hearts? |
3254 | Through every crevice of the rough, stolid mask the spirit was peeping, a sort of quivering suppliant, that seemed to ask all the time:"Is it true?" |
3254 | Throwin''things? |
3254 | Thunder? |
3254 | Thyme suddenly burst out:"Why do n''t you leave him, Mrs. Hughs? |
3254 | Tibby Jarland? |
3254 | Tibby gone for''em? |
3254 | Till, she met you? |
3254 | Time to go home and paint, is it not? |
3254 | Timothy''s greeting to them all was somewhat identical; and rather, as it were, passed over by him than expressed:"How de do? |
3254 | Timothy?" |
3254 | Tire of her son? |
3254 | Tired of answering them with his sidelong glance:"You think so?" |
3254 | Tis one deprived, whose lover''s heart is weeping, Just his cry:''How long?''" |
3254 | To Durford? |
3254 | To Fitzroy Street? |
3254 | To Widrington, to some smart house- party, or even back to Scotland? |
3254 | To a clergyman, who does? |
3254 | To a woman? |
3254 | To attract a man who has attracted many, what is it but a proof that one''s charm is superior to that of all those others? |
3254 | To be her father was the most warming thing in his life; but if he avowed it, how far would he injure her love for him? |
3254 | To confess that Fiorsen was here, having omitted to speak of him in her letters? |
3254 | To do that you had to watch your opportunity, I suppose? |
3254 | To faint like that? |
3254 | To fight to a finish; knowing you must be beaten-- is anything better worth it? |
3254 | To follow my conscience? |
3254 | To get away from his reproachful eyes and voice I hastily remarked:"What have you done to your shop?" |
3254 | To girls who smother their babies? |
3254 | To go on dancing indefinitely with one young man could that possibly be good for her? |
3254 | To go with Emily was of no use, for who could really talk to anyone in the presence of his own wife? |
3254 | To have had the waters broken up; to be plunged into emotion; to feel desperately, instead of stagnating-- some day he might be grateful-- who knew? |
3254 | To her father:"What''s the matter with Mother?" |
3254 | To her mother she said:"What''s the matter with Father?" |
3254 | To him it signified:''What the deuce do you look at me for?'' |
3254 | To keep silent, and disappear? |
3254 | To leave somewhere else? |
3254 | To part with his secret? |
3254 | To save me? |
3254 | To show her how utterly she was his? |
3254 | To sit still meekly and see it snatched from her by a slip of a soft girl? |
3254 | To stay here quietly for the next two years? |
3254 | To that appeal Mr. Stone responded:"Yes, what is it?" |
3254 | To the war there? |
3254 | To this hard old woman, who personified the world? |
3254 | To touch them[ She clasps her chest] is a bit obvious, is n''t it? |
3254 | To us, then? |
3254 | To wait for her, and have it, without showing anything-- how could he do that? |
3254 | To what depth of still green silence? |
3254 | To what end did the river wander up and down; and a human river flow across it twice every day? |
3254 | To what end were men and women suffering? |
3254 | To whom, to what should she speak? |
3254 | To whom? |
3254 | To whom? |
3254 | To your mother?" |
3254 | To your neighbour, or only to God? |
3254 | To your people again? |
3254 | To yourself?" |
3254 | To- morrow, when you have climbed-- will you not come back? |
3254 | To- morrow-- she had told him-- she was to go down, alone, to the river- house; would she not come now, this very minute, to him instead? |
3254 | To- night, too? |
3254 | Toast? |
3254 | Tod, who was looking at the sky, said suddenly:"Are you hungry?" |
3254 | Tomorrow I shall get a room for three shillin''s a week, do n''t you think so, sir? |
3254 | Ton''t you hear her, then? |
3254 | Too cooped- up? |
3254 | Too late? |
3254 | Toof- pahder? |
3254 | Torture her-- one way or the other? |
3254 | Touching her shoulder timidly, he said:"I was talking to you, I think, my dear; where were we?" |
3254 | Touching the bandage reverently, Pierson said:"Well, my dear fellow- still bad?" |
3254 | Touching, is it not, Monsieur? |
3254 | Transportation for life and then to be fined forty pounds''? |
3254 | Trick? |
3254 | Turn up the light, would you, Graviter? |
3254 | Turning to his wife, who was looking at the speaker with an angry expression on her thin face, he said:"You see, dear?" |
3254 | Twenty per cent; eh, what?" |
3254 | Twisden not back, Graviter? |
3254 | Twisting the car sharp round at the gate, he said:"When is young Jon coming?" |
3254 | Two months? |
3254 | Two thousand? |
3254 | Two years? |
3254 | Two? |
3254 | Typhus? |
3254 | Um? |
3254 | Um? |
3254 | Um? |
3254 | Uncle, why did n''t you come back with Guy? |
3254 | Understand?" |
3254 | Understand?" |
3254 | Undress-- go to bed? |
3254 | Unlovely men, unlovely laws-- what can you expect?" |
3254 | Until you met the prisoner-- was that it? |
3254 | Up from the country?" |
3254 | Up to London without a word to him? |
3254 | Us, Dodo? |
3254 | Used he to whack you? |
3254 | V What did he know of women, that should make him understand? |
3254 | Val, who hankered to talk of Robin Hill, because Robin Hill meant Holly, turned to Emily and said:"Was that the house built for Uncle Soames?" |
3254 | Vapourings, dreams, moonshine I.... What does she see in this painter fellow? |
3254 | Venus Anna Diomedes?" |
3254 | Very disfigured? |
3254 | Very gently touching Annette''s arm, he said:"How do you like my place, Annette?" |
3254 | Very low she said:"Then you do n''t love me for myself?" |
3254 | Very nice for them; she supposed June heard from Phil every day? |
3254 | Very well, then, how do you account for the fact that this nought was added to the nine in the counterfoil on or after Tuesday? |
3254 | Vicar, what''s become of that little flower- seller I was painting at Christmas? |
3254 | Visited by a sudden dread, Lady Valleys said:"Is it-- you''ve not-- there is n''t going to be a scandal?" |
3254 | WHAT were they carrying like that? |
3254 | Wait a few minutes, would you? |
3254 | Walenn?" |
3254 | Walk up in this heat? |
3254 | Walking all those miles? |
3254 | Want Parson? |
3254 | Want anything? |
3254 | Want to have a look? |
3254 | Wanting? |
3254 | Warmson''s broad face looked almost narrow; he took the fur coat with a sort of added care, saying:"Will you have a glass of wine, sir?" |
3254 | Was I too dull? |
3254 | Was I, ma''am? |
3254 | Was Jon"touched in the wind,"then, as Val would have called it? |
3254 | Was Lennan disappointed? |
3254 | Was Mother revengeful, like me? |
3254 | Was Olive, then, to be pitied? |
3254 | Was SHE-- Anna-- strong- willed? |
3254 | Was THIS why that something had gone out of his eyes? |
3254 | Was Turgenev a realist? |
3254 | Was anything found on him? |
3254 | Was ever anything so beautiful as she had looked with her face turned to the rain? |
3254 | Was ever anything so lovely as she looked just then? |
3254 | Was ever courtship more strange than that which followed? |
3254 | Was ever so squeamish an exhibition? |
3254 | Was everyone talking of the murder he had committed? |
3254 | Was he a realist? |
3254 | Was he before her? |
3254 | Was he doing a foolish thing? |
3254 | Was he drunk now, that he kept lurking out there by the door? |
3254 | Was he fit to hear the truth? |
3254 | Was he fond of his father? |
3254 | Was he glad or sorry when she let his hand go? |
3254 | Was he going from her? |
3254 | Was he going to make a scene in the street? |
3254 | Was he going to try and put them off again? |
3254 | Was he just a towny college ass like Robert Garton, as far from understanding this girl? |
3254 | Was he laughing at him? |
3254 | Was he likely to divorce her if she did? |
3254 | Was he never going to give the view- halloo? |
3254 | Was he never going to speak, never going to say whatever it was he had in mind to say? |
3254 | Was he not a member of the party notoriously opposed to fussy legislation? |
3254 | Was he not thereby acting as a true Christian, in by far the hardest course he and she could pursue? |
3254 | Was he out there, then? |
3254 | Was he reading her secret? |
3254 | Was he really going mad? |
3254 | Was he really going to break through innocence, and steal? |
3254 | Was he relieved, disturbed, pleased at their coming back, or only uneasily ashamed? |
3254 | Was he sorry? |
3254 | Was he the man to carry her off, that tender, passive being, who would never stir a step for herself? |
3254 | Was he to let loose that flood of foulness? |
3254 | Was he to let them tear her in two between them, destroying her, because she was so pretty? |
3254 | Was he to pass through the curtains now and reach her? |
3254 | Was he very miserable; had he perhaps sunk into a stupor of debauchery? |
3254 | Was he very much upset that Friday morning, or was he fairly calm? |
3254 | Was he violent on the way to the station, and did he use bad language, and did he several times repeat that he had taken the box himself? |
3254 | Was he wrong in letting Noel see so much of Leila? |
3254 | Was he, Falder? |
3254 | Was he, after all, more faithful to her than she had ever been, could ever be-- who did not love, had never loved him? |
3254 | Was her hair nice? |
3254 | Was her little daughter going to turn out like herself? |
3254 | Was his departed soul coherent? |
3254 | Was irresponsibility ever so divine as this, of birds waking? |
3254 | Was it Burns who followed the plough, or only Piers Plowman? |
3254 | Was it Fleur thus staring at the water? |
3254 | Was it a craving to be thought distinguished, a dread of being dull, or merely an effect of overfeeding? |
3254 | Was it a hot day? |
3254 | Was it a living face, or was its beauty that of death? |
3254 | Was it a message from walking spirit; or but the instinct of his sire living on within him? |
3254 | Was it all a mare''s nest, after all? |
3254 | Was it all to begin again? |
3254 | Was it always something hateful and tragic that spoiled lives? |
3254 | Was it an illusion of light that made her whole spirit seem to shine through a half- startled glance? |
3254 | Was it an omen? |
3254 | Was it any good to refuse? |
3254 | Was it any worse than life? |
3254 | Was it anything beastly? |
3254 | Was it at her or at the girl he had been looking? |
3254 | Was it at her? |
3254 | Was it because he did not dare to come up to her, or only because he saw the old lady sitting alone? |
3254 | Was it by chance that he passed one day on his way home from chambers, and that, after this, they sat there together constantly? |
3254 | Was it earthiness to love as he did? |
3254 | Was it fancy that a little smile was hovering about Miltoun''s lips? |
3254 | Was it fancy? |
3254 | Was it for her or for that flying nymph? |
3254 | Was it for me to give our dignity away? |
3254 | Was it for myself?" |
3254 | Was it for this that he had signed that contract? |
3254 | Was it for this that he was going to spend some ten thousand pounds? |
3254 | Was it fussy to make a simple decision and stick to it? |
3254 | Was it fussy to try and help the Church to improve the standard of morals in the village? |
3254 | Was it good in the Town-- that kept thee so long? |
3254 | Was it her fault if she had made his life a hell with her jealousy, as he had cried out that morning before he went for her, and was"put away"? |
3254 | Was it her return to Fiorsen that they aimed at-- or the giving up of her lover? |
3254 | Was it her youth? |
3254 | Was it his failure with her? |
3254 | Was it interesting?" |
3254 | Was it jolly in the Abbey, Daddy?" |
3254 | Was it just a word? |
3254 | Was it light in them? |
3254 | Was it like this in the trenches, James? |
3254 | Was it love? |
3254 | Was it moonlight? |
3254 | Was it not absurd, dangerous, to have come? |
3254 | Was it not all a dream? |
3254 | Was it not his invariable principle to be moderate in speed as in all other things? |
3254 | Was it not perfectly true that the Empire could only be saved by voting blue? |
3254 | Was it not possible? |
3254 | Was it not proof of misery? |
3254 | Was it not she who was now the real object for chivalry and pity? |
3254 | Was it not simply that she liked the feeling of fascinating him? |
3254 | Was it not that past which gave him what chance he had? |
3254 | Was it not to something in oneself? |
3254 | Was it on that girl, on other women, that he spent it all? |
3254 | Was it on the ground floor?" |
3254 | Was it part of a dream; or was it, could it have been she, in her moonlight- coloured frock? |
3254 | Was it possible that he was not incorrigibly gentle, but had in him some of that animality which she, in a sense, admired? |
3254 | Was it possible that he, too, dreaded something? |
3254 | Was it possible that she could have taken part in such a horrid little scene? |
3254 | Was it possible that was only six years ago? |
3254 | Was it possible? |
3254 | Was it possible? |
3254 | Was it quite good enough? |
3254 | Was it real that he was going to her, or only some fantastic trick of Fate, a dream from which he would wake to find himself alone again? |
3254 | Was it really as Polteed suggested? |
3254 | Was it really the same man standing there with those bright, doubting eyes, with grey already in his hair? |
3254 | Was it remorse that kept her awake, or the intoxication of memory? |
3254 | Was it simply heredity from a hard- drinking ancestry? |
3254 | Was it something absolute and solid, that he-- Felix Freeland-- had missed? |
3254 | Was it spring tickling her senses-- whipping up nostalgia for her''clown,''against all wisdom and outraged virtue? |
3254 | Was it that letter? |
3254 | Was it that quick way of lifting her eyes, and looking at him with such clear directness? |
3254 | Was it the day, or the thought of leaving this place where she had so enjoyed herself? |
3254 | Was it the fugitive noon sunshine? |
3254 | Was it the girl? |
3254 | Was it the long walk alone, or being up there so high? |
3254 | Was it the memory of last night come on her again; or, indeed, someone there? |
3254 | Was it the sight of him, or was she preserving the illusion that she was drowned? |
3254 | Was it the vague, unseizable likeness between them which had pushed him over the edge? |
3254 | Was it then as real as all that? |
3254 | Was it too dark to go out just to look at the old house by night? |
3254 | Was it too late? |
3254 | Was it too tragic, too painful, too strange-- not"pretty"enough? |
3254 | Was it true that people always disliked and condemned those who acted differently? |
3254 | Was it true that twenty- six years had passed, or had he dreamed and awakened to find Megan waiting for him by the big apple tree? |
3254 | Was it was it your Mother? |
3254 | Was it wise to push things so far? |
3254 | Was it wise to put himself into a position where he might have to eat his words? |
3254 | Was it worth while? |
3254 | Was it"style,"or was it the streak of something not quite typical-- the brand left on him by the past? |
3254 | Was it''that person''? |
3254 | Was it, perhaps, just that little lack in her-- that lack of poignancy, which had prevented her from becoming a mother? |
3254 | Was it-- were they-- more than summer loves? |
3254 | Was it? |
3254 | Was it? |
3254 | Was it?--would there be--? |
3254 | Was love down there, too? |
3254 | Was my dad at all like him, Guardy? |
3254 | Was n''t he going to kiss her-- not to kiss her? |
3254 | Was n''t he with you when you went for your holiday this summer? |
3254 | Was n''t it funny? |
3254 | Was n''t it-- English? |
3254 | Was n''t she going to make a sign? |
3254 | Was n''t she? |
3254 | Was n''t the''man of property''going to live in his new house, then? |
3254 | Was not Annette French? |
3254 | Was not Fiorsen, with his great talent, and his dubious reputation, proof of that? |
3254 | Was not Fleur as self- possessed, quick, glancing, pretty, and hard as the likeliest Muskham, Mont, or Charwell filly present? |
3254 | Was not all man''s unhappiness caused by nervous anticipations of the future? |
3254 | Was not that the disease, and the misfortune, of the age; perhaps of all the countless ages man had lived through? |
3254 | Was not that what she had come for? |
3254 | Was she always to be put off thus, and forced to undergo this torturing suspense? |
3254 | Was she as bad to teach as me? |
3254 | Was she asleep? |
3254 | Was she beautiful?" |
3254 | Was she chaffing him? |
3254 | Was she chaffing him? |
3254 | Was she enticing him? |
3254 | Was she ever sorry? |
3254 | Was she exactly a kid? |
3254 | Was she expecting him to dance? |
3254 | Was she flattering him? |
3254 | Was she flattering him? |
3254 | Was she glad? |
3254 | Was she going to cry, and torture him still more? |
3254 | Was she going to meet someone after all? |
3254 | Was she grateful to him? |
3254 | Was she loose in her behaviour? |
3254 | Was she lumpy? |
3254 | Was she mocking him, in that voice of hers, which still kept some Welsh crispness against the invading burr of the West Country? |
3254 | Was she mocking him? |
3254 | Was she mocking, or trying to draw him on? |
3254 | Was she not his wife? |
3254 | Was she one of those women who feed on men''s admiration, and give them no return? |
3254 | Was she only waiting to make her conquest more secure? |
3254 | Was she playing with him? |
3254 | Was she praying? |
3254 | Was she really going to her mother? |
3254 | Was she really mistress of herself-- and him; able to dispose as she wished? |
3254 | Was she really the mother of one old enough to love? |
3254 | Was she sleeping, or lying awake perhaps, disturbed-- unhappy at his absence? |
3254 | Was she sorry? |
3254 | Was she still beautiful? |
3254 | Was she trying to change his protective weakness for her to another sort of weakness? |
3254 | Was she trying to conjure somebody from the shades of that space where the colouring was all pearl- grey and silver? |
3254 | Was she trying to conjure somebody from the shades of that space where the colouring was all pearl- grey and silver? |
3254 | Was she trying to weave a spell over him too, with her mute, stubborn adoration? |
3254 | Was she very fond of him?" |
3254 | Was she, then, hurt, after all? |
3254 | Was she, then, like those flowers of hers? |
3254 | Was she-- was she much in love with Father then? |
3254 | Was that Bill? |
3254 | Was that an accident too? |
3254 | Was that cry true? |
3254 | Was that defeat of youth, then, nothing? |
3254 | Was that his father?) |
3254 | Was that in the office, before you ran out? |
3254 | Was that the advice he was going to give Larry to- morrow morning? |
3254 | Was that the meaning of it all? |
3254 | Was that the reason you took it? |
3254 | Was that true? |
3254 | Was that true? |
3254 | Was that what Derek was doing with the laborers-- giving them half the smell of a liberty that was not there? |
3254 | Was that young Richards coming here to- day after the clerk''s place? |
3254 | Was that your father sitting with you under the statue?" |
3254 | Was that your mother on the platform?" |
3254 | Was that, then, the uttermost truth, was faith a smaller thing? |
3254 | Was the door into Ronny''s dressing- room open? |
3254 | Was the fellow going to jilt her? |
3254 | Was the house all right this morning? |
3254 | Was the mistress to be in? |
3254 | Was the possessor of that crown of hair and those divine young shoulders the little Babs who had ridden with him in the Row? |
3254 | Was there a man on the stairs as you came up? |
3254 | Was there anything in the course of that morning-- I mean before the discovery-- that caught your attention? |
3254 | Was there blood in him at all? |
3254 | Was there colour? |
3254 | Was there no memory since-- of his old infectious gaiety? |
3254 | Was there no way to bring her to the window, no way his spirit could climb up there and beckon hers out to him? |
3254 | Was there not enough in this great world for her, Anna, to have a little? |
3254 | Was there not still time to save the situation from that, if he caught the first train? |
3254 | Was there nothing that would put an end to this emotion? |
3254 | Was there really going to be complete disruption between him and Bianca-- worse, an ugly scandal? |
3254 | Was there something fatal about her that must destroy the men she had to do with? |
3254 | Was there then nothing to be done-- nothing? |
3254 | Was there, indeed, all this going on all day and every day, to be seen and heard for so few shillings? |
3254 | Was there, then, something in his face? |
3254 | Was this a den of tigers? |
3254 | Was this another? |
3254 | Was this fine of him, or was it hateful? |
3254 | Was this new dodge of firing till the last second going to do them in? |
3254 | Was this really the same girl who had clung to him, cloyed him with her kisses, her tears, her appeals for love-- just a little love? |
3254 | Was this the end? |
3254 | Was this the moment she had longed for? |
3254 | Was this the secret of the impotence which he sometimes felt; the reason why charity and love were not more alive in the hearts of his congregation? |
3254 | Was this true? |
3254 | Was what he had done so very dreadful? |
3254 | Was young Lennan all right? |
3254 | Was your mother in the House?" |
3254 | Was-- did anyone see? |
3254 | Wasting himself-- on what?--on his life with her down here? |
3254 | Watch him like a lynx-- wouldn''t she? |
3254 | Watching her smile, he thought:''That''s not sour grapes"--What is the trouble, then?'' |
3254 | Watching him drink his port, Winton would mark:"We can get you at any time, ca n''t we?" |
3254 | We English who have neglected brain and education-- how much mercy are we getting in this war? |
3254 | We all know if there were anything you could do, you''d do it at once, would n''t she, Peachey? |
3254 | We are five members of this Board; if we were four against it, why did we let it drift till it came to this? |
3254 | We ca n''t all see people in the same light, can we? |
3254 | We ca n''t take you, I suppose, Mr. Bosinney? |
3254 | We can stand a little private roasting, I hope; or has the sand run out of us altogether?" |
3254 | We engineers have stood by you; ye''re ready now, are ye, to give us the go- by? |
3254 | We hate to see the blood fly, eh?" |
3254 | We might get his opinion, do n''t you think? |
3254 | We must all be artists in our professions, must n''t we? |
3254 | We need n''t go into it again, need we? |
3254 | We never mentioned her; what was the good? |
3254 | We seem to have decided that things are not, or, if they are, ought not to be-- and what is the good of thinking of things like that? |
3254 | We shall, sha n''t we? |
3254 | We tested her, did n''t we, Mary? |
3254 | We tune them, not to the key of:"Is it good?" |
3254 | We were n''t-- Joy ca n''t know-- why should she? |
3254 | We were silent too-- great trees have that effect on me...."Who can say when changes come? |
3254 | We wo n''t go near, will we?" |
3254 | We wo n''t take it; eh, George? |
3254 | We''d better keep him out of the question, had n''t we? |
3254 | We''d better not pursue the subject;"and turning to Winifred, she said:"How is Montague?" |
3254 | We''ll go to the theatre, shall we? |
3254 | We''ll take care of each other, wo n''t we, Wreford? |
3254 | We''re all here, Chairman; what do you say? |
3254 | We''re married, are n''t we? |
3254 | We''re not going to let them down us, are we? |
3254 | Weapons? |
3254 | Wearing a nightshirt, for instance? |
3254 | Well mother? |
3254 | Well, Camille? |
3254 | Well, Captain Dancy? |
3254 | Well, Chearlie? |
3254 | Well, Dancy? |
3254 | Well, Dawker? |
3254 | Well, General, what''s the first move? |
3254 | Well, I pocketed my pride and I said:"Are n''t you going to give me your hand, Jim? |
3254 | Well, Jack, what do you say? |
3254 | Well, Jim? |
3254 | Well, Johnny, has Mary told you? |
3254 | Well, Mam''zelle-- good sermon?" |
3254 | Well, Mam''zelle-- good sermon?" |
3254 | Well, Mary, have I done it? |
3254 | Well, Mayor, what''s gone wrong with the works? |
3254 | Well, Missis? |
3254 | Well, Mr. More? |
3254 | Well, Reggie? |
3254 | Well, TIBBY JARLAND, what''ve yu come for, then? |
3254 | Well, Thomas, how''s it to be? |
3254 | Well, Tibby Jarland, what do you want here? |
3254 | Well, Uncle Tom? |
3254 | Well, about that Welsh contract? |
3254 | Well, and what now? |
3254 | Well, are you satisfied? |
3254 | Well, can I go and see Canynge? |
3254 | Well, cocky,''oo are you starin''at?" |
3254 | Well, did he help you to open the door, as he says? |
3254 | Well, did you see him at all between the Friday and that morning? |
3254 | Well, do n''t we want a maid? |
3254 | Well, does n''t he impress you? |
3254 | Well, how was I to know? |
3254 | Well, how would you express it? |
3254 | Well, if I''d thought you''d have forgotten what you said this morning and turned about like this, d''you suppose I''d have spoken to you at all? |
3254 | Well, if you do n''t, none of us are very likely to, are we? |
3254 | Well, is it up or down to get so''ard that you ca n''t take care of others? |
3254 | Well, is she there now? |
3254 | Well, it must be gone through with, and he said:"What made you ask?" |
3254 | Well, look here, ni- ice boy, what sort of world is it, where millions are being tortured, for no fault of theirs, at all? |
3254 | Well, maid? |
3254 | Well, mother, did you-- I mean quite calmly? |
3254 | Well, my child, there''s just one thing you wo n''t go sailing near the wind, will you? |
3254 | Well, my dear, you''ve not seen it, I suppose? |
3254 | Well, my dear? |
3254 | Well, now what do you say? |
3254 | Well, now, sir, what precisely do you mean by that word? |
3254 | Well, now, what line shall we take?" |
3254 | Well, sir, we ca n''t get over the facts, can we? |
3254 | Well, sir? |
3254 | Well, that''s one wy o''YOU doin''somefink,''yn''t it? |
3254 | Well, then, my boy? |
3254 | Well, then, what d''you think? |
3254 | Well, then--[With natural recklessness] Are n''t you going to kiss me? |
3254 | Well, then? |
3254 | Well, were n''t we? |
3254 | Well, what am I to do with you? |
3254 | Well, what can we do for you? |
3254 | Well, what do you suggest?" |
3254 | Well, what do you think I feel? |
3254 | Well, what do you think of yourself?" |
3254 | Well, what does he say? |
3254 | Well, what is it? |
3254 | Well, what is it? |
3254 | Well, what lies have ye been hearin''? |
3254 | Well, what luck? |
3254 | Well, what more have you to say? |
3254 | Well, what on earth have I said? |
3254 | Well, what shall I say? |
3254 | Well, what the devil----? |
3254 | Well, what were you looking at these papers for? |
3254 | Well, what''s the good? |
3254 | Well, what''s the proposition? |
3254 | Well, what''s the sentence, brother? |
3254 | Well, what''s to be done? |
3254 | Well, where do you come in? |
3254 | Well, where then? |
3254 | Well, who is to sleep there then? |
3254 | Well, who was it? |
3254 | Well, why did you send me there? |
3254 | Well, why do they drop bombs?'' |
3254 | Well, why do you imagine they do it? |
3254 | Well, will you speak, or shall I speak for you? |
3254 | Well, wot, about''er; who''s to make up to''er for this? |
3254 | Well, would you marry him if you were n''t? |
3254 | Well, you hardly know them at their best, do you? |
3254 | Well, young woman, what do you want of me? |
3254 | Well,''Arris? |
3254 | Well-- damn it, what could I have done? |
3254 | Well-- if he did? |
3254 | Well; wot''s the''eritage like, now we''ve got it? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well? |
3254 | Well?" |
3254 | Well?" |
3254 | Welsh? |
3254 | Went to bed? |
3254 | Were my kisses, then, too rude? |
3254 | Were n''t we jolly well like brothers? |
3254 | Were n''t you veree frightened when they ordered you to attack? |
3254 | Were not his old favourite words from that old favourite book still true? |
3254 | Were not the only minutes when he himself was really happy those when he lost himself in work, or love? |
3254 | Were people, then, to know nothing of the real cause of the revolt-- nothing of the Tryst eviction, the threatened eviction of the Gaunts? |
3254 | Were there not, in Stephen''s words, a hundred things he did not know about her? |
3254 | Were these household gods, and all these works of his, indeed the same he had left twenty days ago? |
3254 | Were they all gathered round this bed? |
3254 | Were they cunning enough? |
3254 | Were they decent to you? |
3254 | Were they never going to stop? |
3254 | Were they realists? |
3254 | Were they talking of this last night at the WINSOR''s? |
3254 | Were they veree sad? |
3254 | Were they? |
3254 | Were we not arbiters of men''s fates, purifiers of Society, more important by far than Judge or Common Jury? |
3254 | Were we, then, to be haunted by those bewildering uncanny ones, flitting past ever from the same direction? |
3254 | Were ye ever called Vane? |
3254 | Were you at the concert before you spoke to me? |
3254 | Were you ever homeseeck? |
3254 | Were you ever really fond of me? |
3254 | Were you fond of the chap who--? |
3254 | Were you in love with Ronny? |
3254 | Were you in the war? |
3254 | Were you lookin''for Antonia? |
3254 | Were you lying to me, then? |
3254 | Were you never in a woman''s arms? |
3254 | Were you pressed for money? |
3254 | Were you sick? |
3254 | Were you so good as to put them down my chimneys?" |
3254 | Were you there alone? |
3254 | Were you very bad?" |
3254 | Were your chivalrous notions any good, then? |
3254 | Westminister, sir?" |
3254 | Wet''s this? |
3254 | Wha''s your name? |
3254 | Wha''was I about to say? |
3254 | What HAVE I done?" |
3254 | What I am is my affair-- not yours-- do you understand? |
3254 | What I ask myself is this: What do you know about what''s best for you? |
3254 | What I did to Tam Jarland is not the real cause of what you''re doing, is it? |
3254 | What IS the use?" |
3254 | What Miss Thomas-- d''you mean a----? |
3254 | What WERE you crying about?" |
3254 | What a beastly thing-- are you quite certain, Joy? |
3254 | What about Harper''s? |
3254 | What about Miss joy''s frock, Rose? |
3254 | What about bombs, Mr. Lemmy? |
3254 | What about dresses? |
3254 | What about her headache? |
3254 | What about her? |
3254 | What about her? |
3254 | What about him? |
3254 | What about its night- things? |
3254 | What about lunch, Enid? |
3254 | What about that purse? |
3254 | What about that woman he was mixed up with? |
3254 | What about that? |
3254 | What about the Sermon on the Mount? |
3254 | What about the Union? |
3254 | What about the mine? |
3254 | What about the people who buy? |
3254 | What about the women? |
3254 | What about this fellow Courtier?" |
3254 | What about those poor devils of laborers, now? |
3254 | What about young BARTHWICK? |
3254 | What about''i m? |
3254 | What about? |
3254 | What about? |
3254 | What about? |
3254 | What about? |
3254 | What age was she? |
3254 | What alternatives indeed were now before him? |
3254 | What am I but a poltroon, unworthy to lace the shoes of the great leaders of my land? |
3254 | What am I going to do?'' |
3254 | What am I going to say?" |
3254 | What am I saying?'' |
3254 | What am I to do with your master? |
3254 | What am I to do? |
3254 | What am I to do?" |
3254 | What am I to do?" |
3254 | What am I to do?'' |
3254 | What am I to say to her when I go back?" |
3254 | What am I to start it at? |
3254 | What answer should he make to this letter? |
3254 | What are his people like, Dad? |
3254 | What are the middle classes? |
3254 | What are they making? |
3254 | What are they, if I may ask? |
3254 | What are they?" |
3254 | What are things coming to? |
3254 | What are those? |
3254 | What are we doing? |
3254 | What are we doing? |
3254 | What are we goin''to say? |
3254 | What are we to do in the meantime? |
3254 | What are we to understand by that? |
3254 | What are we waiting for? |
3254 | What are ye laughing at? |
3254 | What are you afraid of? |
3254 | What are you after? |
3254 | What are you doin''there? |
3254 | What are you doing here? |
3254 | What are you doing round there? |
3254 | What are you doing, Peachey? |
3254 | What are you going to do about it? |
3254 | What are you going to do about the rum? |
3254 | What are you going to do for a living when it comes? |
3254 | What are you going to do then, sir? |
3254 | What are you going to do with yourself in life? |
3254 | What are you going to do, Sylvanus?" |
3254 | What are you going to do, then-- fold your hands? |
3254 | What are you going to do? |
3254 | What are you going to do? |
3254 | What are you going to do?" |
3254 | What are you going to say to your people? |
3254 | What are you sitting on?" |
3254 | What are you smiling at? |
3254 | What are you smiling at?" |
3254 | What are you talking about, Henry Thomas? |
3254 | What are you talking about, Peachey? |
3254 | What are you talking about? |
3254 | What are you talking about?" |
3254 | What are you thinking of, Sylvanus? |
3254 | What are you thinking of?" |
3254 | What are you two quarrelling about? |
3254 | What are you? |
3254 | What are your breeches goin''to be like? |
3254 | What are your views? |
3254 | What are? |
3254 | What arrangements have you made, Swithin?" |
3254 | What attraction had he? |
3254 | What bag had she taken? |
3254 | What bag-- whose bag? |
3254 | What bargain did this represent? |
3254 | What became of Aunt Irene? |
3254 | What became of the money he earned? |
3254 | What becomes of the marriage tie?" |
3254 | What bitter; dreadful ending? |
3254 | What blew you down, then? |
3254 | What brings you so early? |
3254 | What brought him down then, but''is own black obstinacy? |
3254 | What business had he to gossip? |
3254 | What business had he to touch me, a magistrate? |
3254 | What business had his father to come and upset his wife like this? |
3254 | What business had that Judge to make things human suddenly? |
3254 | What business had they in this crowd? |
3254 | What business had you to? |
3254 | What business has he to be tired of my mother? |
3254 | What business has she with love, at her age? |
3254 | What business have they with each other? |
3254 | What business have we to meddle with them? |
3254 | What but a child''s feathery warmth, one of those flying peeps at the mystery of passion that young things take? |
3254 | What can I do to brighten and equip my mind and divest it of all those prejudices in which it may unconsciously have become steeped? |
3254 | What can I do? |
3254 | What can I do? |
3254 | What can I have the pleasure of doing for you? |
3254 | What can a workin''girl do with a baby born under the rose, as they call it? |
3254 | What can anyone say? |
3254 | What can he do?" |
3254 | What can he know about the things that I''ve been through?" |
3254 | What can he want, coming all this way? |
3254 | What can one expect when your father carries on like a lunatic over his paper every morning? |
3254 | What can they do with me, Monsieur, with that girl, or with that old man? |
3254 | What can we do for Dancy, WINSOR? |
3254 | What can we do for you now? |
3254 | What can we do for you? |
3254 | What can we do to help you? |
3254 | What can we do without?" |
3254 | What can you do? |
3254 | What can you expect in a counthry where the crimson, emotions are never allowed to smell the air? |
3254 | What chance do you think you have? |
3254 | What chance had he of catching them? |
3254 | What chance has a fellow if she once gets hold of him?" |
3254 | What chance? |
3254 | What college?" |
3254 | What colour does Jimmy like? |
3254 | What colour?" |
3254 | What conceivable good was there in it? |
3254 | What could I do? |
3254 | What could I have done?" |
3254 | What could I say? |
3254 | What could Winton answer? |
3254 | What could be more insane than to tell a man that he owned his wife, and punish him when someone unlawfully took her away from him? |
3254 | What could he do to help her? |
3254 | What could he do? |
3254 | What could he do? |
3254 | What could he expect when Life was all the time knocking with that muffled tapping at his door? |
3254 | What could he expect? |
3254 | What could he give her to make amends? |
3254 | What could he say, since he did not know himself? |
3254 | What could he say, then? |
3254 | What could he say-- do? |
3254 | What could n''t he help? |
3254 | What could one expect-- a girl and French? |
3254 | What could one want? |
3254 | What could seem less likely ever more to move, and change again to day? |
3254 | What could she do for them? |
3254 | What could she do for them? |
3254 | What could she have seen in that fellow Bosinney to send her mad? |
3254 | What could that mean? |
3254 | What could they do together? |
3254 | What could they do-- if indeed it was''they''--without money? |
3254 | What could we ever have more perfect? |
3254 | What could you expect with his ideas?" |
3254 | What couples? |
3254 | What crime had she committed? |
3254 | What d''ye come sneaking in at night for? |
3254 | What d''ye want for this secret? |
3254 | What d''you call it-- to dog a woman down like this, just because you happen to have a quarrel with a man? |
3254 | What d''you call that, eh? |
3254 | What d''you find interesting in him? |
3254 | What d''you get? |
3254 | What d''you imagine stands between you and your class and these men that you''re so sorry for? |
3254 | What d''you make of me? |
3254 | What d''you mean by that, disrespectful little creature? |
3254 | What d''you mean by that? |
3254 | What d''you mean? |
3254 | What d''you say, old girl?" |
3254 | What d''you think of her picture? |
3254 | What d''you think she wants me to do now? |
3254 | What d''you want Mr. John for? |
3254 | What d''you want me to do? |
3254 | What d''you want me to do? |
3254 | What d''you want? |
3254 | What d''you want?" |
3254 | What d''yu du that for? |
3254 | What dared she say? |
3254 | What desperations were hatching in his disorderly brain? |
3254 | What devil of pride has got into you, Stephen? |
3254 | What did Father look like when he came in, Biddy?" |
3254 | What did Hughs call this-- disgracin''of the house at this time in the mornin''? |
3254 | What did I come for? |
3254 | What did I do? |
3254 | What did I say, Daddy? |
3254 | What did I say? |
3254 | What did I tell you, Tom? |
3254 | What did Jill want this afternoon? |
3254 | What did Molly want to bring him for? |
3254 | What did Monsieur desire? |
3254 | What did Soames want now? |
3254 | What did Soames want to go into the country for? |
3254 | What did a girl know? |
3254 | What did anything matter when the whole thing was so big-- and he such a tiny scrap of it? |
3254 | What did girls do who had no money, and no friends to go to? |
3254 | What did he feel at the simplicity and candour of those words? |
3254 | What did he mean by:"Done us both down?" |
3254 | What did he object to? |
3254 | What did he say? |
3254 | What did he say? |
3254 | What did he say?" |
3254 | What did he take?" |
3254 | What did he want with boots at his age? |
3254 | What did he want with boots at his age? |
3254 | What did her father know about Jon? |
3254 | What did his neighbour say? |
3254 | What did it all mean? |
3254 | What did it ever do? |
3254 | What did it matter if she were nice to that fellow in the brown coat? |
3254 | What did it matter? |
3254 | What did it matter? |
3254 | What did it matter? |
3254 | What did it mean? |
3254 | What did it mean? |
3254 | What did it mean? |
3254 | What did it mean? |
3254 | What did it mean? |
3254 | What did it want of him? |
3254 | What did she do in the evenings? |
3254 | What did she do with herself evening after evening in that little hole? |
3254 | What did she know of his life, of his interests, of him, except that he said he loved her? |
3254 | What did she know? |
3254 | What did she mean? |
3254 | What did she mean?" |
3254 | What did she mean?" |
3254 | What did she say?" |
3254 | What did she want to know for? |
3254 | What did that portend? |
3254 | What did that woman, Lady Maiden, mean by talking as she did? |
3254 | What did the Chairman tell me up in London? |
3254 | What did the boy know? |
3254 | What did the child mean? |
3254 | What did the great writer say? |
3254 | What did the waggling of his head mean, the deepening of his crow''s- feet, the odd contraction of the mouth? |
3254 | What did this fellow really know? |
3254 | What did this mean? |
3254 | What did this mean? |
3254 | What did this mean? |
3254 | What did this mean? |
3254 | What did we do to you-- compared with this? |
3254 | What did we get last year? |
3254 | What did we go to her stuffy drawing- room for? |
3254 | What did we want-- to kill that man? |
3254 | What did you do all the time? |
3254 | What did you do in the feud, Father?" |
3254 | What did you expect? |
3254 | What did you hear? |
3254 | What did you make of that? |
3254 | What did you ring for, Tommy? |
3254 | What did you say to her? |
3254 | What did you say to that swine? |
3254 | What did you say?" |
3254 | What did you think of, um? |
3254 | What difference does it make if he did know? |
3254 | What difference would it make? |
3254 | What do I care about the estate? |
3254 | What do I care how the place looks? |
3254 | What do I owe you? |
3254 | What do the men want? |
3254 | What do they do, then? |
3254 | What do we know about him, or any of them?" |
3254 | What do we know of this girl?" |
3254 | What do we want to know about that sort of thing? |
3254 | What do you call such treatment of a man who gave you the mare out of which you made this thousand pounds? |
3254 | What do you do for a livin''? |
3254 | What do you do for them?" |
3254 | What do you do for them?" |
3254 | What do you do, Uncle Ralph? |
3254 | What do you expect? |
3254 | What do you get out of it? |
3254 | What do you imagine would happen to the Royal Family if they were allowed to marry as they liked? |
3254 | What do you know about necessity? |
3254 | What do you know of life? |
3254 | What do you mean by harping on your mother? |
3254 | What do you mean by it? |
3254 | What do you mean by nothing, Jack? |
3254 | What do you mean by that? |
3254 | What do you mean by-- that? |
3254 | What do you mean to do? |
3254 | What do you mean, sir? |
3254 | What do you mean? |
3254 | What do you mean? |
3254 | What do you mean? |
3254 | What do you mean? |
3254 | What do you mean? |
3254 | What do you mean? |
3254 | What do you propose to do? |
3254 | What do you recommend, sir?" |
3254 | What do you say about this attempt to bomb you? |
3254 | What do you say to leaving him five thousand?" |
3254 | What do you say to me now; do you tell me it is Nature to come to you in spite of everything, and so, that it must be right? |
3254 | What do you say to that, Chairman? |
3254 | What do you say to that, constable? |
3254 | What do you say to this blow? |
3254 | What do you say to this matter? |
3254 | What do you say, Anna? |
3254 | What do you say, Clifton?" |
3254 | What do you say, De Levis? |
3254 | What do you say, Doctor Clements? |
3254 | What do you say, Eustace?" |
3254 | What do you say, George?" |
3254 | What do you say, Jon?" |
3254 | What do you say, Sir James?" |
3254 | What do you say,''Arris? |
3254 | What do you say? |
3254 | What do you say?" |
3254 | What do you say?" |
3254 | What do you suggest? |
3254 | What do you suppose?" |
3254 | What do you think Bee said? |
3254 | What do you think about that, sir?" |
3254 | What do you think in your heart, mother? |
3254 | What do you think of Joan''s engagement? |
3254 | What do you think of Jon?" |
3254 | What do you think of her, Val?" |
3254 | What do you think of his playing?" |
3254 | What do you think of his wife? |
3254 | What do you think of it?" |
3254 | What do you think of my idea?" |
3254 | What do you think of people nowadays, Soames?" |
3254 | What do you think of the war?" |
3254 | What do you think ought to be done?" |
3254 | What do you think will happen, Joe, when we are no longer obliged to sacrifice ourselves? |
3254 | What do you think, Aunt Hester?" |
3254 | What do you think, Leila? |
3254 | What do you think, monsieur?" |
3254 | What do you think, sir?" |
3254 | What do you think? |
3254 | What do you think? |
3254 | What do you think? |
3254 | What do you think? |
3254 | What do you think?" |
3254 | What do you want the Colonel for? |
3254 | What do you want to know?" |
3254 | What do you want with him, if I may ask?" |
3254 | What do you want with him? |
3254 | What do you want with that? |
3254 | What do you want with wills of your own till you''re married? |
3254 | What do you want, Inspector? |
3254 | What do you want-- money? |
3254 | What do you want? |
3254 | What do you want? |
3254 | What do you want? |
3254 | What do you want? |
3254 | What do you want? |
3254 | What do you want?" |
3254 | What do you want?" |
3254 | What do you wish to say about your conduct towards the constable? |
3254 | What do you?" |
3254 | What do, you wish it to be? |
3254 | What does Cook want with corsets? |
3254 | What does Fiorsen think of her?" |
3254 | What does George Laird think about it? |
3254 | What does Harness want this interview for? |
3254 | What does Mr Bly say to it? |
3254 | What does Tod say?" |
3254 | What does he do to them?" |
3254 | What does he feel about it? |
3254 | What does he matter? |
3254 | What does he say? |
3254 | What does he say? |
3254 | What does he think to gain by that? |
3254 | What does he want at his age?" |
3254 | What does he want, for goodness''sake? |
3254 | What does it all mean? |
3254 | What does it matter about the wretched shares now? |
3254 | What does it matter what one does in that way if one does not care? |
3254 | What does it matter, now?" |
3254 | What does it matter, too?" |
3254 | What does it matter-- all that past- compared with this?" |
3254 | What does it matter? |
3254 | What does it matter? |
3254 | What does it matter? |
3254 | What does it mean? |
3254 | What does my father say? |
3254 | What does one do with a glad eye that belongs to some one else? |
3254 | What does that body- snatcher say? |
3254 | What does that make her? |
3254 | What does that matter?" |
3254 | What does that matter?" |
3254 | What does that mean but swallowing this country? |
3254 | What does that mean, Horace?" |
3254 | What does that mean, mademoiselle?" |
3254 | What does the chairman say? |
3254 | What does the doctor say?" |
3254 | What does the manager use? |
3254 | What does the nation care about social justice? |
3254 | What does this young fellow do with himself?" |
3254 | What does your aunt see in him?" |
3254 | What does your father say? |
3254 | What does your husband use, Mrs. Underwood? |
3254 | What does your son say? |
3254 | What doing? |
3254 | What du yu say, Mr. Trustaford? |
3254 | What du yu want with th''birds of the air? |
3254 | What earthly chance has she had? |
3254 | What earthly good did they think they got by coming here? |
3254 | What earthly good? |
3254 | What else can a man do? |
3254 | What else can it be in this case? |
3254 | What else could you have done? |
3254 | What else did he say?" |
3254 | What else had he been doing himself, all these years, ever since she could remember, ever since her mother died, but just passing the time? |
3254 | What else have you that connects you with her?" |
3254 | What else in the world could she say? |
3254 | What else is marrying for? |
3254 | What else is there? |
3254 | What else to be said? |
3254 | What else was worth having? |
3254 | What else? |
3254 | What else? |
3254 | What else? |
3254 | What exactly had she come to do? |
3254 | What excuse had he to make? |
3254 | What explanation have you got? |
3254 | What fate could compare with that? |
3254 | What fate could compare with that? |
3254 | What feud?" |
3254 | What for? |
3254 | What for? |
3254 | What for? |
3254 | What for? |
3254 | What for?" |
3254 | What for?" |
3254 | What force had moved her to paint like that? |
3254 | What gave him those long hours of dejection, following the maddest gaiety? |
3254 | What good are you doing? |
3254 | What good can you possibly do? |
3254 | What good have they done him? |
3254 | What good in crying? |
3254 | What good''s it doing you? |
3254 | What good, when she could not tell in the least where he might be? |
3254 | What gossip? |
3254 | What grotesque juggling amongst shadows, what strange and ghastly eccentricity was all this? |
3254 | What had Dromore come for? |
3254 | What had George named him? |
3254 | What had Timothy said? |
3254 | What had been the previous existences of his father and his mother? |
3254 | What had been wrong with him? |
3254 | What had brought her here? |
3254 | What had brought him at eleven o''clock in the morning? |
3254 | What had brought him here? |
3254 | What had brought him in? |
3254 | What had got into them? |
3254 | What had happened in these five days to make her like this to him? |
3254 | What had happened to him? |
3254 | What had happened? |
3254 | What had he brought her here for? |
3254 | What had he come up to tell him? |
3254 | What had he done that she should be so unbelieving-- should think him such a shallow scoundrel? |
3254 | What had he done that she should go like this? |
3254 | What had he done with that letter of Diana''s? |
3254 | What had he done, said, lost? |
3254 | What had he done? |
3254 | What had he done? |
3254 | What had he done? |
3254 | What had he missed? |
3254 | What had he missed? |
3254 | What had made him so certain from the first moment, if she were not meant for him? |
3254 | What had made them so late? |
3254 | What had moved her to put on this blue cloak? |
3254 | What had possessed him to give his card to a rackety young fellow, who went about with a thing like that? |
3254 | What had possessed the child to give him that? |
3254 | What had put this yearning spirit into so gross a frame, destroying its solid coherence? |
3254 | What had she done for anyone, that people should be so sweet-- he especially, whom she had so grievously distressed by her wretched marriage? |
3254 | What had she done? |
3254 | What had she felt while the girl was standing before her, still as some pale flower placed in a cup of water? |
3254 | What had she missed? |
3254 | What had she picked up? |
3254 | What had she seen beyond the candle flames? |
3254 | What had she? |
3254 | What had stirred-- some window opened? |
3254 | What had the fellow said or done? |
3254 | What had the holy folk to give you compared with the comfort of a good dinner? |
3254 | What had the man come for? |
3254 | What had there been to teach them anything of life? |
3254 | What had they all done in the War? |
3254 | What had they come for? |
3254 | What had they come here for-- inherently illicit creatures, rebels from the Victorian ideal? |
3254 | What happened this morning? |
3254 | What happens if one of your girls wants to do an improper thing? |
3254 | What happens to hundreds of laborers all over the country who venture to differ in politics, religion, or morals from those who own them?" |
3254 | What harm have I done you? |
3254 | What harm have I done you? |
3254 | What has become of them all, I wonder?'' |
3254 | What has it done for me?" |
3254 | What has she better than I? |
3254 | What has she done? |
3254 | What has that to do with it? |
3254 | What has the nation to do with the mishaps of gamblers? |
3254 | What have I but a heart that is broken?" |
3254 | What have I done? |
3254 | What have I done?" |
3254 | What have I the right to do?'' |
3254 | What have I----? |
3254 | What have principles to do with it for goodness sake? |
3254 | What have they answered Kruger?" |
3254 | What have they done for the laborers, for instance?" |
3254 | What have they done to warrant their making a virtuous nose at those who do not walk as they do? |
3254 | What have ye done with our subscriptions? |
3254 | What have you been doing? |
3254 | What have you been doing? |
3254 | What have you been saying, then? |
3254 | What have you been up to, to get into a state like this? |
3254 | What have you come for, please? |
3254 | What have you come for?" |
3254 | What have you done about that dilapidation notice in Vere Street?" |
3254 | What have you done since? |
3254 | What have you done to your hair? |
3254 | What have you done? |
3254 | What have you done? |
3254 | What have you got in that thing? |
3254 | What have you got to give her, eh? |
3254 | What have you got under there?" |
3254 | What have you got?" |
3254 | What have you noticed? |
3254 | What have you said to him? |
3254 | What have you to say about his demeanour that morning? |
3254 | What have you to say for the men? |
3254 | What height are these rooms from the ground, Treisure? |
3254 | What help have I ever had?" |
3254 | What hotel? |
3254 | What human spirit could emerge untrammelled and unshrunken from that great encompassing host of material advantage? |
3254 | What if Irene were to take it into her head to-- he could hardly frame the thought-- to leave Soames? |
3254 | What if Thyme had inherited her grandfather''s single- mindedness? |
3254 | What if he had chosen this as the most merciful way of leaving her? |
3254 | What if it had killed in him trust, brushed off the dew, tumbled a star down? |
3254 | What if it were a matter of heredity? |
3254 | What if it were all a plot to get him to marry her? |
3254 | What if it were the end? |
3254 | What if she did? |
3254 | What if she made him a confession? |
3254 | What if someone who had burned and ached were now spreading over him this leafy peace-- this blue- black shadow against the stars? |
3254 | What if their address were not known here? |
3254 | What if those fellows, too, were only after L. s. d....? |
3254 | What in God''s name is your idea? |
3254 | What in God''s name shall I do? |
3254 | What in God''s name was he about? |
3254 | What in the name of goodness did these staid bourgeois mean by making up to vice? |
3254 | What indeed was this young man, who, in becoming engaged to June, old Jolyon''s acknowledged heiress, had done so well for himself? |
3254 | What innocent girl would have come to his room like that? |
3254 | What innocent girl? |
3254 | What interest is that?" |
3254 | What interest is that?" |
3254 | What is Liberty? |
3254 | What is Society-- a few men in good coats? |
3254 | What is a cad? |
3254 | What is a cosmogony, Uncle? |
3254 | What is a darn? |
3254 | What is a little blighter? |
3254 | What is all that? |
3254 | What is all the rest, but''sound and fury, signifying nothing?" |
3254 | What is an anti- patriot, stop- the- war one, Mummy? |
3254 | What is class hatred, James? |
3254 | What is cruelty?" |
3254 | What is going to happen? |
3254 | What is he like?" |
3254 | What is he? |
3254 | What is he? |
3254 | What is he?" |
3254 | What is her name?" |
3254 | What is her real name?" |
3254 | What is her story?" |
3254 | What is his name?" |
3254 | What is it birds do after the first Chorale? |
3254 | What is it for mankind at large? |
3254 | What is it makes one love it so? |
3254 | What is it now, I wonder? |
3254 | What is it now? |
3254 | What is it standing on? |
3254 | What is it then you do to make face against the necessities of life? |
3254 | What is it to me if she''s had four husbands?" |
3254 | What is it to you? |
3254 | What is it to you? |
3254 | What is it to you?" |
3254 | What is it you want, for goodness sake? |
3254 | What is it you want? |
3254 | What is it, Camille? |
3254 | What is it, Dad? |
3254 | What is it, Joy? |
3254 | What is it, Peachey? |
3254 | What is it, Ted? |
3254 | What is it, after all? |
3254 | What is it, darling? |
3254 | What is it, then, you would have? |
3254 | What is it, then? |
3254 | What is it, then? |
3254 | What is it-- can you tell?" |
3254 | What is it-- what is it? |
3254 | What is it-- where is it? |
3254 | What is it----what is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it? |
3254 | What is it?" |
3254 | What is it?" |
3254 | What is it?" |
3254 | What is it?" |
3254 | What is it?" |
3254 | What is it?" |
3254 | What is it?" |
3254 | What is left for a girl like me-- when she once love? |
3254 | What is love? |
3254 | What is more sacred than each breath we draw? |
3254 | What is n''t true? |
3254 | What is natural?" |
3254 | What is safety? |
3254 | What is she like on second thoughts?" |
3254 | What is so infectious as delight? |
3254 | What is sweeter than life? |
3254 | What is that but a deeper concern with self? |
3254 | What is that old lady, your aunt, looking forward to?" |
3254 | What is that, Monsieur? |
3254 | What is that-- the----?" |
3254 | What is the good of all this padlock business for such as she; are we not making mountains out of her mole hills? |
3254 | What is the good of owning riches if we do n''t know how to use them?" |
3254 | What is the gryve? |
3254 | What is the matter with them? |
3254 | What is the matter? |
3254 | What is the meaning of that word so wildly used? |
3254 | What is the population of High Barnet?" |
3254 | What is the spirit? |
3254 | What is the use of pretending that it is n''t?" |
3254 | What is there against it? |
3254 | What is there left to me? |
3254 | What is there to believe in? |
3254 | What is there to prevent its running out here to the East? |
3254 | What is there to respect in persons of this sort? |
3254 | What is there to spy on? |
3254 | What is there, now? |
3254 | What is this slime, Paramor?" |
3254 | What is this, Paramor? |
3254 | What is up and what is down? |
3254 | What is your husband? |
3254 | What is your name, old man?" |
3254 | What is your name, please? |
3254 | What is your name? |
3254 | What is your name? |
3254 | What is your name? |
3254 | What is your view of life, Mrs. Lemmy? |
3254 | What is''t she''s a- done...?" |
3254 | What kind of an old baby is it, anyway? |
3254 | What lay beneath all that bright water-- what strange, deep, swaying, life so far below the ruffling of wind, and the shadows of the willow trees? |
3254 | What less could youth want in the very heart of Spring? |
3254 | What like is he? |
3254 | What link was there between him and this man; between his love and this man''s love? |
3254 | What loss have we made by this strike, Tench? |
3254 | What luck to- day? |
3254 | What made him chuck the Army? |
3254 | What made him, in the midst of serious playing, break into some furious or desolate little tune, or drop his violin? |
3254 | What made you choose the arch?" |
3254 | What made you choose this place?" |
3254 | What made you come by the towing- path? |
3254 | What made you do that? |
3254 | What made you strike the officer a blow? |
3254 | What made you? |
3254 | What made you?" |
3254 | What makes this art you talk of different from any other call in life? |
3254 | What makes you stand like that? |
3254 | What makes you think she''s fond of you? |
3254 | What mattered a few supplementary lies? |
3254 | What memory could make that log so dear to her? |
3254 | What memory could make that log so dear to her? |
3254 | What more could a country want? |
3254 | What more could she do? |
3254 | What more do you want? |
3254 | What more ignoble fate than to die in, one''s bed?" |
3254 | What more natural than that he should grope about to see how this could be? |
3254 | What name did you say?" |
3254 | What name? |
3254 | What name? |
3254 | What name?" |
3254 | What nationality was he, may I ask?" |
3254 | What necessity, he seemed continually to be saying, what real necessity is there for change of any kind whatever? |
3254 | What next then?" |
3254 | What next? |
3254 | What next?" |
3254 | What now, Cook? |
3254 | What now? |
3254 | What now? |
3254 | What now?'' |
3254 | What now?'' |
3254 | What nyme?" |
3254 | What of his heart and his wife''s heart? |
3254 | What of?" |
3254 | What on earth d''you mean, Dot? |
3254 | What on earth did she do with herself, if she really lived quite alone? |
3254 | What on earth did such a woman do with her life, back- watered like this? |
3254 | What on earth did you come here for? |
3254 | What on earth do you expect? |
3254 | What on earth do you mean? |
3254 | What on earth do you mean? |
3254 | What on earth got into him? |
3254 | What on earth had he been doing to forget that horrible business even for an instant? |
3254 | What on earth has the war to do with it? |
3254 | What on earth is all the fuss about? |
3254 | What on earth made him rush at the thing like that? |
3254 | What on earth made him use his whip? |
3254 | What on earth made me send George to Eton?" |
3254 | What on earth makes you run a show like this?" |
3254 | What on earth was he about to come in by himself like that? |
3254 | What on earth were young men about, deliberately lowering their class with these tooth- brushes, or little slug whiskers? |
3254 | What on earth''s he been doing? |
3254 | What on earth''s the pleasure of it? |
3254 | What on earth''s to be done, Roper? |
3254 | What other pleasures were there at his age? |
3254 | What other reason could she find to keep him from her room? |
3254 | What others?" |
3254 | What ought he to do? |
3254 | What paper does Cook take? |
3254 | What part did they play in this stage of Soames''subterranean tragedy? |
3254 | What pleasure was there left but to give? |
3254 | What poor departed soul in this House of Melancholy? |
3254 | What position at Tod''s? |
3254 | What prevented him from following her? |
3254 | What price that Peach Melba? |
3254 | What price the Uitlanders?" |
3254 | What price the little and weak, now? |
3254 | What price your argument with Runny now? |
3254 | What promise?" |
3254 | What proof''s that? |
3254 | What proportion of the upper classes do you imagine is even conscious of that necessity? |
3254 | What provision can you make for them? |
3254 | What put it into him to go on like that?" |
3254 | What race is being run this afternoon, then, Topping? |
3254 | What race was that? |
3254 | What rate of interest are these Preference shares to pay? |
3254 | What real good can I be to him-- I, without freedom, and with my baby, who will grow up?'' |
3254 | What reason does he give? |
3254 | What right had he to ask her to fly against the world, to brave everything, to have such faith in him-- as yet? |
3254 | What right had she to talk, who had married him out of vanity, out of-- what? |
3254 | What right had the Englishman to pursue a young girl? |
3254 | What right had we to scorn them? |
3254 | What right have I to lead, if I ca n''t follow? |
3254 | What right have you to assume that? |
3254 | What right? |
3254 | What room for states between-- on their poor wage, in their poor cottages? |
3254 | What room was this? |
3254 | What secret griefs and joys were they carrying about with them? |
3254 | What secret instincts are responsible for this inveterate distaste? |
3254 | What shall I do, Keith? |
3254 | What shall I do? |
3254 | What shall I do? |
3254 | What shall I do? |
3254 | What shall I do?" |
3254 | What shall I do?" |
3254 | What shall I do?'' |
3254 | What shall I put on? |
3254 | What shall I tell him, sir? |
3254 | What shall we do? |
3254 | What shall you do, Soames?" |
3254 | What should I go back to? |
3254 | What should I have become if I''d been born into his kind of life?" |
3254 | What should a father do? |
3254 | What should be the matter?" |
3254 | What should he be doing in that galley? |
3254 | What should he do if she failed him? |
3254 | What should he do if she were not back by nightfall? |
3254 | What should he do that for?" |
3254 | What should he do, Uncle Tom? |
3254 | What should he do? |
3254 | What should he do? |
3254 | What should he do? |
3254 | What should he have felt, what would he have done? |
3254 | What should he say to his uncle? |
3254 | What should he wire to Noel? |
3254 | What should it be but hot?'' |
3254 | What should she do when she had his hand in hers? |
3254 | What should she do? |
3254 | What should she do? |
3254 | What sin has my father committed? |
3254 | What solemn freak was this which made it come and sing to one who had no longer any business with the Spring? |
3254 | What sort o''bird, then? |
3254 | What sort o''things, this lovely day? |
3254 | What sort of a bounder was he to look at? |
3254 | What sort of a day is it? |
3254 | What sort of a fellow is young Summerhay? |
3254 | What sort of a lady? |
3254 | What sort of a physiognomy has it, anyway? |
3254 | What sort of books could he write? |
3254 | What sort of bringing up did he give you? |
3254 | What sort of circumstances is this Mrs. Jones in? |
3254 | What sort of companion should I be to you, or you to me? |
3254 | What sort of conduct did he call this? |
3254 | What sort of father and mother have you got, Annie? |
3254 | What sort of girl is she? |
3254 | What sort of mercy do you suppose you''d get if no one stood between you and the continual demands of labour? |
3254 | What sort of person? |
3254 | What sort of state are they really in, Frank? |
3254 | What sound was that? |
3254 | What state? |
3254 | What steps, indeed, could he take without confessing that Horace Pendyce had gone too far, that Horace Pendyce was in the wrong? |
3254 | What steps? |
3254 | What stock have you got that gives four and a half per cent.?" |
3254 | What story? |
3254 | What stream? |
3254 | What suffering? |
3254 | What the deuce was the good of talking about regularity and self- respect? |
3254 | What the devil am I to do about her?'' |
3254 | What the devil made you quarrel with Swells?" |
3254 | What the devil shall we do with it?" |
3254 | What the devil would they do with her? |
3254 | What then is the heart of this term still often used as an expression almost of abuse? |
3254 | What then is the reason of my existence? |
3254 | What then would be gained? |
3254 | What then-- I thought-- is Art? |
3254 | What then? |
3254 | What then? |
3254 | What then? |
3254 | What then? |
3254 | What then? |
3254 | What then? |
3254 | What then? |
3254 | What time did my mother say they''d be here for Bridge? |
3254 | What time did you come up? |
3254 | What time did you go to bed? |
3254 | What time did you shut up? |
3254 | What time does he say the money was taken? |
3254 | What time is it?" |
3254 | What time is it?" |
3254 | What time is it?" |
3254 | What time is that train? |
3254 | What time was it when he was awakened by that delicate''rat- tat''to see his tutor standing in the door- way with a cup of tea? |
3254 | What time''ll the men be here? |
3254 | What time''s Molly coming, Peachey? |
3254 | What time? |
3254 | What time? |
3254 | What time?" |
3254 | What to do with it-- how meet her next time? |
3254 | What to do with this wayward chicken just out of the egg, and wanting to be full- fledged at once? |
3254 | What troubles have you brought?" |
3254 | What tyranny could equal this tyranny of your freedom? |
3254 | What tyranny in the world like that of this''free''vulgar, narrow street, with its hundred journals teeming like ants''nests, to produce- what? |
3254 | What use making plans-- for lovers the chief theme? |
3254 | What use-- what satisfaction? |
3254 | What was Dad looking like that for? |
3254 | What was Davis''s ship? |
3254 | What was HE doing?" |
3254 | What was I about? |
3254 | What was I to do? |
3254 | What was Mr De Levis doing out of his room, if I may ask, sir? |
3254 | What was William about? |
3254 | What was a letter? |
3254 | What was all this talk about Soames and Irene? |
3254 | What was behind her hands? |
3254 | What was coming? |
3254 | What was happening to him of late? |
3254 | What was he about? |
3254 | What was he after, standing there as if listening? |
3254 | What was he dreaming of, that old fellow, whose cigar- ash grew so long? |
3254 | What was he going to get by this? |
3254 | What was he going to say? |
3254 | What was he grinning at? |
3254 | What was he like after ten years? |
3254 | What was he like, Keith? |
3254 | What was he thinking of, standing there with that smile? |
3254 | What was he waiting for with that smile on his lips and in his eyes? |
3254 | What was he? |
3254 | What was he? |
3254 | What was her behaviour? |
3254 | What was his answer? |
3254 | What was his father? |
3254 | What was his-- er-- conduct in the-- er-- cab? |
3254 | What was in a name that she should like him because of it? |
3254 | What was it all worth, what was anything worth in a world like this? |
3254 | What was it gave them their look of strange detachment? |
3254 | What was it in her? |
3254 | What was it in this girl that reminded him of that one with whom he had lived but two years, and mourned fifteen? |
3254 | What was it in this woman that made her laugh, when his own heart was heavy? |
3254 | What was it made him love her so? |
3254 | What was it she said:''I do n''t care if I never get home?" |
3254 | What was it that I was about to do? |
3254 | What was it that had taken away from him all his restless feeling, made him happy and content? |
3254 | What was it that she so disliked in him? |
3254 | What was it that was so terrifying? |
3254 | What was it the prophet was without in his own country? |
3254 | What was it which struggled against pity and this feverish longing, and kept him there paralysed in the warm sand? |
3254 | What was it young Mont had said-- some nonsense about the possessive instinct-- shutters up-- To let? |
3254 | What was it, if true, but a duplicate of some bit of fiction or drama which they daily saw described by that word"sordid"? |
3254 | What was it, then, that he had lost? |
3254 | What was it, when he danced with her, that kept him happy in her silence and his own? |
3254 | What was it-- where was it-- when would it come and wake her, and kiss her to sleep, all in one? |
3254 | What was it? |
3254 | What was it? |
3254 | What was it? |
3254 | What was it? |
3254 | What was it? |
3254 | What was it? |
3254 | What was it? |
3254 | What was it? |
3254 | What was it? |
3254 | What was it? |
3254 | What was it? |
3254 | What was old Stormer talking about? |
3254 | What was passing behind those pale rounds of flesh turned towards the posters? |
3254 | What was passing in that silent, living creature there so close? |
3254 | What was she brooding over, what planning, in that dark, round, pretty head? |
3254 | What was she feeling? |
3254 | What was she going to say to him, who had in his heart such things to say to her? |
3254 | What was she like when you were kids? |
3254 | What was she seeing among those white camellias? |
3254 | What was she thinking and brooding over into small hours when she ought to have been asleep? |
3254 | What was she thinking of? |
3254 | What was she, herself, but just a feast for a man''s senses? |
3254 | What was she, who was she, did she exist? |
3254 | What was she, who was she, did she exist? |
3254 | What was that Paul had said about her music- lessons? |
3254 | What was that fellow hanging round Irene for? |
3254 | What was that figure in blue? |
3254 | What was that light, below and to the left? |
3254 | What was that odious word? |
3254 | What was that scent? |
3254 | What was that? |
3254 | What was that? |
3254 | What was that? |
3254 | What was that? |
3254 | What was that? |
3254 | What was that? |
3254 | What was the address? |
3254 | What was the fellow about? |
3254 | What was the good of being angry? |
3254 | What was the good of it all? |
3254 | What was the good of pretending that he did? |
3254 | What was the good of this? |
3254 | What was the matter with him? |
3254 | What was the matter with him? |
3254 | What was the matter with that? |
3254 | What was the matter with the fellow that he looked so happy? |
3254 | What was the matter with them? |
3254 | What was the meaning of that? |
3254 | What was the nature of his trouble? |
3254 | What was the nature of your relations with him? |
3254 | What was the secret of her fascination? |
3254 | What was the significance-- exactly the significance of this? |
3254 | What was the stanza of that patriotic poet? |
3254 | What was the trouble? |
3254 | What was the use even of loving, if love itself had to yield to death? |
3254 | What was the use of being pretty? |
3254 | What was the use of keeping half a dozen servants eating their heads off? |
3254 | What was the use of that? |
3254 | What was the use of waking everybody up? |
3254 | What was the use of words? |
3254 | What was the use? |
3254 | What was their attitude towards this vaguely threatened cataclysm? |
3254 | What was there about that scent of burned- leaf smoke that had always moved him so? |
3254 | What was there he could say? |
3254 | What was there in her to make up to him for all that he was losing-- his power of work, his dignity, his self- respect? |
3254 | What was there in the fellow that made it so difficult to be sorry for him? |
3254 | What was there objectionable in that? |
3254 | What was there of memory in this night, this garden? |
3254 | What was there to respect in such a marriage? |
3254 | What was there-- what was there in this woman that would not fit into the four corners of his hate or condemnation? |
3254 | What was there? |
3254 | What was this affair, if real, but the sort of episode that they read of in their papers? |
3254 | What was this life they all lived but a ceaseless worrying over what was to come? |
3254 | What was this new- fangled way of talking? |
3254 | What was this news then? |
3254 | What was this something that seemed so terribly between them? |
3254 | What was this to be-- this vestibule, or whatever they called it? |
3254 | What was this? |
3254 | What was to be done about it? |
3254 | What was to be done? |
3254 | What was to be gained by it? |
3254 | What was your game? |
3254 | What way? |
3254 | What went before, mother? |
3254 | What were his intentions-- as they say towards this loving- hearted girl? |
3254 | What were men made of that they could go on day after day, year after year, watching others suffer? |
3254 | What were they doing? |
3254 | What were they doing? |
3254 | What were they standing there for, talking-- talking? |
3254 | What were they? |
3254 | What were you doing, if you did n''t go to bed? |
3254 | What were you doing?" |
3254 | What were you going to say?" |
3254 | What were? |
3254 | What will Mr. Brune say?'' |
3254 | What will he do? |
3254 | What will he think?" |
3254 | What will the Missis say? |
3254 | What will you do? |
3254 | What will you live on? |
3254 | What wiser provision for a man passionately in love could possibly have been devised? |
3254 | What won the Cambridgeshire? |
3254 | What work now performed by humble men was less monotonous than work on the land? |
3254 | What work was even a tenth part so varied? |
3254 | What would Cookie say if she knew? |
3254 | What would Dad think? |
3254 | What would Fleur say to him? |
3254 | What would Thyme think if she heard this story about her uncle? |
3254 | What would a good week be, Mrs. Lemmy? |
3254 | What would a man of sound common sense, like Mr. Purcey, think of it? |
3254 | What would be the use of living?" |
3254 | What would become of her? |
3254 | What would come of this arrest? |
3254 | What would give her strength to go through with it? |
3254 | What would happen now? |
3254 | What would have happened then? |
3254 | What would he ask? |
3254 | What would he do? |
3254 | What would he say? |
3254 | What would he say? |
3254 | What would her feeling be about her dead mother? |
3254 | What would her mother have advised? |
3254 | What would love be like? |
3254 | What would night be like without owls and stars? |
3254 | What would she call him-- after this? |
3254 | What would she do under this blow? |
3254 | What would she have said--with you in the camp of his enemies? |
3254 | What would she have wished? |
3254 | What would she herself think, if he were to fail her at their first tryst after those days of bliss? |
3254 | What would she know? |
3254 | What would she think? |
3254 | What would that be?" |
3254 | What would the chairman do now? |
3254 | What would the sight of this little creature stir in him? |
3254 | What would you do, Canon Bertley, with a man who''s been drinking father''s rum? |
3254 | What would you do? |
3254 | What would you have done? |
3254 | What would you have? |
3254 | What would you have? |
3254 | What would you say if you were out there?" |
3254 | What would you think of me if I ran away from it? |
3254 | What would your mother say, Mary? |
3254 | What you back so soon for? |
3254 | What you doin''with yourself? |
3254 | What''d you like-- daffydils? |
3254 | What''does it matter if anything happens to me?" |
3254 | What''ll be his position even if he wins? |
3254 | What''ll become of me? |
3254 | What''ll he do now, I wonder? |
3254 | What''ll you do with yourself? |
3254 | What''ll you drink?" |
3254 | What''ll your aunt say to me if I do n''t get you down? |
3254 | What''ll''e du now, I wonder? |
3254 | What''s Rolf? |
3254 | What''s a blighter like that to old Fritz''s shells? |
3254 | What''s a kiss? |
3254 | What''s a month? |
3254 | What''s all this? |
3254 | What''s behind it? |
3254 | What''s brought you up? |
3254 | What''s coming? |
3254 | What''s down there?" |
3254 | What''s gentility worth if it ca n''t stand fire? |
3254 | What''s happened to them?" |
3254 | What''s happened? |
3254 | What''s happened? |
3254 | What''s happened? |
3254 | What''s happened? |
3254 | What''s he been doing since he came out? |
3254 | What''s he been talking about? |
3254 | What''s he like, this gentleman? |
3254 | What''s he like? |
3254 | What''s he like? |
3254 | What''s he like?" |
3254 | What''s he up to now?'' |
3254 | What''s he want, coming down into these parts?" |
3254 | What''s her father, the old Rector, like? |
3254 | What''s her life been? |
3254 | What''s his business? |
3254 | What''s his name? |
3254 | What''s in that head o''yours? |
3254 | What''s it doing out there at night?" |
3254 | What''s it like bein''a-- a sculptor? |
3254 | What''s life, anyway? |
3254 | What''s made them strong? |
3254 | What''s open to you if you do n''t go back? |
3254 | What''s our line of country to be? |
3254 | What''s she got to do with it? |
3254 | What''s spun? |
3254 | What''s that about gold mines? |
3254 | What''s that door? |
3254 | What''s that girl''s name? |
3254 | What''s that he''s got on''i m? |
3254 | What''s that in blue on the rails?" |
3254 | What''s that letter about? |
3254 | What''s that noise of crying, Marlow? |
3254 | What''s that smell of flowers?" |
3254 | What''s that to do with it? |
3254 | What''s that, in Heaven''s name? |
3254 | What''s that, m''lady? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that? |
3254 | What''s that?" |
3254 | What''s that?" |
3254 | What''s that?" |
3254 | What''s the Union''s game, Tench? |
3254 | What''s the difference out there? |
3254 | What''s the gentleman in buttons for? |
3254 | What''s the good of anything else to me at my time of life? |
3254 | What''s the good of asking me? |
3254 | What''s the good of mopin''and lookin''miserable? |
3254 | What''s the good of that? |
3254 | What''s the good of that? |
3254 | What''s the good of these questions? |
3254 | What''s the good of this? |
3254 | What''s the good of waiting? |
3254 | What''s the good of your coming up like this? |
3254 | What''s the good of your work, for instance? |
3254 | What''s the good, they''d say, of your going there if you have n''t seen the salt- mines?" |
3254 | What''s the good? |
3254 | What''s the matter with everybody? |
3254 | What''s the matter with her, Molly? |
3254 | What''s the matter with him? |
3254 | What''s the matter with him? |
3254 | What''s the matter with him? |
3254 | What''s the matter with me? |
3254 | What''s the matter with that door? |
3254 | What''s the matter with the poor creatures? |
3254 | What''s the matter with their man? |
3254 | What''s the matter with you, Freda? |
3254 | What''s the matter with you, Larry? |
3254 | What''s the matter with you, Larry?" |
3254 | What''s the matter with you? |
3254 | What''s the matter with you? |
3254 | What''s the matter with young Mrs. Hornblower? |
3254 | What''s the matter wiv you? |
3254 | What''s the matter, Peachey? |
3254 | What''s the matter? |
3254 | What''s the matter? |
3254 | What''s the matter? |
3254 | What''s the matter? |
3254 | What''s the matter? |
3254 | What''s the matter? |
3254 | What''s the matter? |
3254 | What''s the matter? |
3254 | What''s the matter? |
3254 | What''s the matter?" |
3254 | What''s the matter?" |
3254 | What''s the matter?'' |
3254 | What''s the meaning of that? |
3254 | What''s the meaning of that? |
3254 | What''s the menu?" |
3254 | What''s the move now, General? |
3254 | What''s the mystery about me?" |
3254 | What''s the mystery about young Mrs. Hornblower? |
3254 | What''s the other side? |
3254 | What''s the point?" |
3254 | What''s the result of your meeting? |
3254 | What''s the time, Dodo? |
3254 | What''s the time, Jim? |
3254 | What''s the time? |
3254 | What''s the time? |
3254 | What''s the time? |
3254 | What''s the time? |
3254 | What''s the time?" |
3254 | What''s the trick in that? |
3254 | What''s the trouble exactly?" |
3254 | What''s the use o''bringin''''em into a state o''things like this? |
3254 | What''s the use of all these lofty ideas that you ca n''t live up to? |
3254 | What''s the use of all this fuss about him? |
3254 | What''s the use of being alive if one is n''t? |
3254 | What''s the use of developing if you have to stop?" |
3254 | What''s the use of pretending it''s like what it was, and being cautious, and all that? |
3254 | What''s the use of that with me? |
3254 | What''s the use, now?" |
3254 | What''s the use?" |
3254 | What''s the young man like? |
3254 | What''s their tone? |
3254 | What''s this story about her being seen in Durford? |
3254 | What''s this war, really, but a death carnival of proof that man''s will is invincible?'' |
3254 | What''s this, Mother? |
3254 | What''s this? |
3254 | What''s this? |
3254 | What''s this? |
3254 | What''s this? |
3254 | What''s this? |
3254 | What''s to be done about Dancy? |
3254 | What''s to be done for her?" |
3254 | What''s to be done for us?" |
3254 | What''s to be done with these pretty things, now? |
3254 | What''s to be done, Roper? |
3254 | What''s to be done? |
3254 | What''s to be done? |
3254 | What''s to be done? |
3254 | What''s to be done?" |
3254 | What''s to be said to them? |
3254 | What''s to prevent it? |
3254 | What''s to prevent the gold going down indefinitely? |
3254 | What''s to save them? |
3254 | What''s turned him round? |
3254 | What''s turned you to blacklegging? |
3254 | What''s up?" |
3254 | What''s what? |
3254 | What''s wrong now? |
3254 | What''s yore point of order? |
3254 | What''s your address-- Green''s Hotel? |
3254 | What''s your brother like?" |
3254 | What''s your definition of a gentleman, Dodo? |
3254 | What''s your father telegraphing to me like this for? |
3254 | What''s your feeling? |
3254 | What''s your motive? |
3254 | What''s your name? |
3254 | What''s your name? |
3254 | What''s your name? |
3254 | What''s your objection? |
3254 | What''s your own feeling?" |
3254 | What''s your proposition, man? |
3254 | What''s your remedy? |
3254 | What''s your view of the war?" |
3254 | What''s''e duin'', then, lettin''''is wife runoff? |
3254 | What''ve you got in the pot that smells so good?" |
3254 | What, even now, did she understand? |
3254 | What, exactly, had he said? |
3254 | What, however, would she drink? |
3254 | What, if I may ask, does it represent?" |
3254 | What, no one? |
3254 | What, sir? |
3254 | What, then, are to be the main channels down which the renascent English drama will float in the coming years? |
3254 | What, then, had attracted her? |
3254 | What, then, in the light of the proved justice and efficiency of the Censorship of Drama, is the reason for the absence of the Censorship of Art? |
3254 | What, then, is left? |
3254 | What, then, would be his own position? |
3254 | What, then? |
3254 | What,"Aunt Juley dwelt on the word,"do you think ought to be done?" |
3254 | What-- don''t you like music? |
3254 | What-- was that? |
3254 | What-- what''s that? |
3254 | What-- what''s the matter with that? |
3254 | What-- when the woman came here for it this morning? |
3254 | What-- you, Timson? |
3254 | What----? |
3254 | What----Are you feeling faint, Margery?" |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | What? |
3254 | Whatever made Blanca choose such a subject? |
3254 | Whatever made you choose"Caste,"DOT? |
3254 | Whatever made you come here?" |
3254 | Whatever she been duin''? |
3254 | Wheels? |
3254 | When Davis gave you the cheque was it exactly like this? |
3254 | When Dawney had examined him, he asked:"Well?" |
3254 | When Felix ceased he said, rather dryly:"Sir Gerald Malloring? |
3254 | When I get on my legs, we might go down there, you and I? |
3254 | When Lucy delivered it she asked,''Who is he, Miss Eilie? |
3254 | When Megan brought his tea, he said:"What''s the gipsy bogle, Megan?" |
3254 | When Swithin approached his usual seat, who should be sitting there but Rozsi--"Good- morning,"he stammered;"you knew this was my seat then?" |
3254 | When a feather dies, is it not loving the wind-- the unknown? |
3254 | When a thing is new how shall it be judged? |
3254 | When a thing like this happens, all you can do is to cry out: Why did n''t he--? |
3254 | When are they coming back?" |
3254 | When are they coming back?" |
3254 | When are we going to another concert together?" |
3254 | When are you coming to dine with me? |
3254 | When are you coming to see us? |
3254 | When can I come?" |
3254 | When can we see each other? |
3254 | When d''you sail? |
3254 | When did he arrive? |
3254 | When did he give you this money? |
3254 | When did he go to bed? |
3254 | When did you feed it last?" |
3254 | When did you leave the girl again? |
3254 | When do you come to town? |
3254 | When do you start?" |
3254 | When does the mother come?" |
3254 | When exactly did you come up, Dance? |
3254 | When had he danced last? |
3254 | When he discovered, later, would not the effect undo the good of lies now? |
3254 | When he had finished telling her, she only said:"Why ca n''t we go on in secret?" |
3254 | When he had gone Cecilia thought:''Oh dear, how shall I get through the evening? |
3254 | When he had left her alone, she remained where she was standing, by her wardrobe, without sound or movement, thinking: What am I going to do? |
3254 | When he left the room, James said:"What''s he brought back?" |
3254 | When her father called out:''What''s the matter with you, Elie?'' |
3254 | When in the old days she told Greta stories, the latter, whose instinct was always for the definite, would say:"And what came at the end, Chris? |
3254 | When is Miltoun''s election?" |
3254 | When is she going to let me teach her drawing?" |
3254 | When is the night of your coming- out?" |
3254 | When one comes to stand over at the knees, it''s no such easy matter, eh?" |
3254 | When people marry, do you believe they ought to be in love with each other? |
3254 | When shall I bring you news?" |
3254 | When shall we be men, I wonder? |
3254 | When she brought out his tea, he said:"How did you like my friend, Megan?" |
3254 | When she had left the room, he filled his glass with wine and said:"Anybody been here this afternoon?" |
3254 | When she had lured them to the open gate, little Gyp raised herself, and said:"Are n''t you duffies, dears? |
3254 | When she lived with him last-- where was that? |
3254 | When she was gone, Ashurst thought:''Did she think I was chaffing her? |
3254 | When the girl rose from her knees he asked her:"What did you see?" |
3254 | When the long one was over, she said:"Then I can come and be near you till you go out? |
3254 | When the man servant, whom she remembered well, opened the door, her lips were so dry that they could hardly form the words:"Is Mr. Fiorsen in, Ford?" |
3254 | When the old man was seated there, the valet asked:"How long shall I give you, sir?" |
3254 | When the young woman was once more at the typewriter she rose and said:"Have you given him my card yet?" |
3254 | When they were installed, Fleur asked suddenly:"Are you going back to Robin Hill? |
3254 | When they were off, Felix said:"Would you like to stop at the church and have a look at the brasses to your grandfather and the rest of them?" |
3254 | When told it was to be a tiled court with plants in the centre, he turned to Irene:"Waste this on plants? |
3254 | When was he going to see the man who had cured Paul Post? |
3254 | When was he up last? |
3254 | When was that? |
3254 | When was that? |
3254 | When was this exactly? |
3254 | When we began this fight, we had clean hands-- are they clean''now? |
3254 | When were you married to him, Mrs. Jones? |
3254 | When will it end? |
3254 | When would you like to begin that?" |
3254 | When you do, you do n''t know where you''ll stop, do you? |
3254 | When you led your forlorn hope-- did you ask yourself what good you were doing, or, whether you''d come through alive? |
3254 | When you see Daisy, will you please give her my love?" |
3254 | When you spoke of the defendant seeing red, what exactly did you mean? |
3254 | When you were my age were n''t you trying hard to find the truth yourself, and differing from your father?" |
3254 | When you were nineteen what would you have thought of your mother if she had done what I have?" |
3254 | When''ll it come on?" |
3254 | When''ll you be comin''back? |
3254 | When''s he going to don the wild khaki?" |
3254 | When''s the sale?" |
3254 | When, Miss Freeland, when?" |
3254 | When-- when-- what----? |
3254 | When? |
3254 | When? |
3254 | When? |
3254 | When? |
3254 | When? |
3254 | When?" |
3254 | When?" |
3254 | Whence came it, or was it ghost of scent-- sheer emanation from memory? |
3254 | Whence comes it, how comes it-- Death? |
3254 | Whence had that ill- advised, indelicate grey bird flown into this great haunt of men and shadows? |
3254 | Whence, then, comes the one which is not me? |
3254 | Whenever he looked at him he thought,''If he were only clean?'' |
3254 | Where HAVE you come from? |
3254 | Where am I to go? |
3254 | Where am I, here? |
3254 | Where am I? |
3254 | Where am I?'' |
3254 | Where are Bill and Harold? |
3254 | Where are Toombs and Body?" |
3254 | Where are the cigarettes? |
3254 | Where are the maids?" |
3254 | Where are their souls and sympathies? |
3254 | Where are they all? |
3254 | Where are they? |
3254 | Where are those two fellows? |
3254 | Where are ye? |
3254 | Where are you goin''to put him? |
3254 | Where are you going? |
3254 | Where are you going? |
3254 | Where are you going? |
3254 | Where are you going?" |
3254 | Where are you hurt?" |
3254 | Where are you off to?" |
3254 | Where are you running now? |
3254 | Where are you, nowadays? |
3254 | Where are you?" |
3254 | Where are your saucers?" |
3254 | Where are yu? |
3254 | Where are yu? |
3254 | Where could he watch, without her seeing him? |
3254 | Where could it come from? |
3254 | Where could the young fellow be? |
3254 | Where could they get''em then? |
3254 | Where d''you suppose she''s gone? |
3254 | Where did I go after? |
3254 | Where did Kentman pay you? |
3254 | Where did Marlow say? |
3254 | Where did you find it? |
3254 | Where did you get it, mate? |
3254 | Where did you get that idea?" |
3254 | Where did you get this? |
3254 | Where did you go? |
3254 | Where did you leave her? |
3254 | Where did you pick him up? |
3254 | Where did you pick''em up?" |
3254 | Where did you put them? |
3254 | Where did you sleep last night? |
3254 | Where do you get it from? |
3254 | Where do you get your lingo? |
3254 | Where do you live? |
3254 | Where do you live?" |
3254 | Where do you?" |
3254 | Where does that central force come from? |
3254 | Where does the stone staircase go to?" |
3254 | Where had he gone? |
3254 | Where had he gone? |
3254 | Where had he got to? |
3254 | Where had she gone? |
3254 | Where had she gone? |
3254 | Where had she seen somebody like him? |
3254 | Where had the boy got to? |
3254 | Where have you been? |
3254 | Where have you been?" |
3254 | Where have you been?" |
3254 | Where is Daddy? |
3254 | Where is Hilary?" |
3254 | Where is Noel, now, I wonder? |
3254 | Where is Noel?" |
3254 | Where is Uncle Nic going? |
3254 | Where is he? |
3254 | Where is it-- what-- what time is it? |
3254 | Where is my poor treasure? |
3254 | Where is our sense of proportion, and our sense of humour? |
3254 | Where is our young friend Lennan off to, with his luggage--looking like a lion cub in trouble?" |
3254 | Where is she? |
3254 | Where is she? |
3254 | Where is she? |
3254 | Where is she? |
3254 | Where is she?" |
3254 | Where is the mother? |
3254 | Where is this place? |
3254 | Where is your hat? |
3254 | Where is your heart?" |
3254 | Where is your master, dear?" |
3254 | Where is your room? |
3254 | Where may I go? |
3254 | Where one man was successful, others should surely not fail? |
3254 | Where should I go?" |
3254 | Where should he dine her? |
3254 | Where should they go? |
3254 | Where that sensation of the intoxication of life and of his own power to enjoy it all? |
3254 | Where the devil is Roper? |
3254 | Where to, sir? |
3254 | Where too were Miltoun''s wings? |
3254 | Where was Annette? |
3254 | Where was Soames? |
3254 | Where was Soames? |
3254 | Where was he brought up? |
3254 | Where was he-- dining in his room? |
3254 | Where was he--? |
3254 | Where was he? |
3254 | Where was he? |
3254 | Where was it, sir; if you please, sir? |
3254 | Where was it? |
3254 | Where was she? |
3254 | Where was that old feeling in the heart as he waited for one of those great singers? |
3254 | Where was that, by the way? |
3254 | Where was the home of this mighty secret feeling that sprang so suddenly out of the dark, and caught you by the throat? |
3254 | Where were all the women, the pretty women, the house used to be so full of? |
3254 | Where were her wings- the wings that in sleep had borne her to the stars; the wings that would never lift her-- waking-- from the ground? |
3254 | Where were these young people? |
3254 | Where were you educated? |
3254 | Where were you? |
3254 | Where were yu, then, Tim Clyst? |
3254 | Where will it appear?" |
3254 | Where would she be-- in the hall of the hotel waiting, or upstairs still? |
3254 | Where would they be by now? |
3254 | Where would those waters carry him? |
3254 | Where yu goin''? |
3254 | Where''d he better go?" |
3254 | Where''s Bill, Ronny? |
3254 | Where''s Charlie? |
3254 | Where''s Clare? |
3254 | Where''s Dawker? |
3254 | Where''s Larry? |
3254 | Where''s Miss Joy, Rose? |
3254 | Where''s More? |
3254 | Where''s Mother? |
3254 | Where''s Mr Bly? |
3254 | Where''s Mr. Strangway? |
3254 | Where''s Peachey? |
3254 | Where''s Soames?" |
3254 | Where''s Uncle Tom? |
3254 | Where''s Uncle Tom? |
3254 | Where''s father, Uncle Ralph? |
3254 | Where''s he? |
3254 | Where''s his wife now? |
3254 | Where''s mercy there? |
3254 | Where''s my daughter?" |
3254 | Where''s she gone? |
3254 | Where''s that cider, Mr. Godleigh? |
3254 | Where''s that girl? |
3254 | Where''s that litter of little foxes? |
3254 | Where''s the ciga----? |
3254 | Where''s the girl? |
3254 | Where''s the joke, O''Cleary? |
3254 | Where''s the mother? |
3254 | Where''s the syringe? |
3254 | Where''s this bomb, Poulder? |
3254 | Where''s your common sense, Joan? |
3254 | Where''s your commonsense? |
3254 | Where''s your heart? |
3254 | Where''s your knife, Freda?" |
3254 | Where''s your mother? |
3254 | Where''s your mother? |
3254 | Where''s''e goin''? |
3254 | Where''s''e got to now, Gladys? |
3254 | Where''s''er''usband? |
3254 | Where-- have you been? |
3254 | Where-- then? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Where? |
3254 | Wherever does she think we are?" |
3254 | Which are you for, Mummy-- us or them? |
3254 | Which do you elect to do?" |
3254 | Which do you like to be called-- John or James? |
3254 | Which end up is it? |
3254 | Which end-- do you suggest-- inflicted this injury? |
3254 | Which follow-- her lover or her child? |
3254 | Which is it to be, Maurice, dancing-- or sitting out? |
3254 | Which is it to be? |
3254 | Which is it to be? |
3254 | Which is the best kind? |
3254 | Which is the man who banged on his door this morning? |
3254 | Which is the very shortest way? |
3254 | Which is which? |
3254 | Which of her frocks did he like best? |
3254 | Which of them was Timothy''s? |
3254 | Which one can I spare, I wonder?" |
3254 | Which one? |
3254 | Which other two, my dear? |
3254 | Which to choose?.... |
3254 | Which was the less deplorable? |
3254 | Which was worse? |
3254 | Which was worst? |
3254 | Which way had Larry turned? |
3254 | Which way under that grisly burden? |
3254 | Which way? |
3254 | Which way?" |
3254 | Which would it have been, worst for, you or me?" |
3254 | Which would she give up? |
3254 | Which would you rather-- be safe, or have fun? |
3254 | Which would you?" |
3254 | Which, said Nedda, had Mr. Cuthcott? |
3254 | Which-- which? |
3254 | Which? |
3254 | Which? |
3254 | Which? |
3254 | Which? |
3254 | Which? |
3254 | Which? |
3254 | While he stood there waiting, he thought:''Shall I ask her to come?'' |
3254 | Whither was he going-- to what sort of fate? |
3254 | Who am I to tell what''s wicked and what is n''t? |
3254 | Who are the others? |
3254 | Who are they for? |
3254 | Who are they-- man with the little spitfire wife? |
3254 | Who are they? |
3254 | Who are they?" |
3254 | Who are those two? |
3254 | Who are ye callin''blacklegs, Rat? |
3254 | Who are you kiddin''? |
3254 | Who are you, to dictate their private lives? |
3254 | Who are you? |
3254 | Who are you? |
3254 | Who are you?" |
3254 | Who are you?" |
3254 | Who black- legged? |
3254 | Who bolted it? |
3254 | Who cares for the world simple or the world beautiful, in days like these? |
3254 | Who cares where we go, or what we do?" |
3254 | Who cares where you slept; what does it matter if he mentions the-- the-- a perfect disgrace? |
3254 | Who cares? |
3254 | Who cares?" |
3254 | Who cashed that nine- pound cheque? |
3254 | Who could blame him? |
3254 | Who could grudge it them? |
3254 | Who could have passionate thoughts or wild desires in the presence of that swaying, white- clothed girl with the seraphic head? |
3254 | Who could have put it there-- but she? |
3254 | Who could help it? |
3254 | Who could imagine? |
3254 | Who could it be? |
3254 | Who could say? |
3254 | Who could say? |
3254 | Who could tell what his son''s circumstances really were? |
3254 | Who could tell? |
3254 | Who could tell? |
3254 | Who did the room this morning? |
3254 | Who did? |
3254 | Who do you bar, James? |
3254 | Who drew it? |
3254 | Who else then could it be? |
3254 | Who else would ever say a prayer for him, like her who at this moment must be waiting-- waiting to see him come down the lane? |
3254 | Who gave you those names? |
3254 | Who gives this woman away? |
3254 | Who goes there? |
3254 | Who had dared to say he was wasting himself? |
3254 | Who had dared upset his darling? |
3254 | Who had given her those clothes? |
3254 | Who had put it there? |
3254 | Who had spoken thus? |
3254 | Who had the cheek? |
3254 | Who is he? |
3254 | Who is it? |
3254 | Who is it? |
3254 | Who is it? |
3254 | Who is it? |
3254 | Who is it? |
3254 | Who is it? |
3254 | Who is it?" |
3254 | Who is it?" |
3254 | Who is responsible for this?" |
3254 | Who is she? |
3254 | Who is this Mrs. Larne? |
3254 | Who is this boy-- what is he? |
3254 | Who is this fellow? |
3254 | Who knew to what it might lead in these days? |
3254 | Who knew whether these laboring fellows might n''t take that as a grievance, if trouble began to spread? |
3254 | Who knew you''d got that money? |
3254 | Who knows anything of her? |
3254 | Who knows of your relations with her? |
3254 | Who knows where things end when they and begin? |
3254 | Who knows-- who knows? |
3254 | Who knows? |
3254 | Who laughed in there? |
3254 | Who let it in? |
3254 | Who lived there now? |
3254 | Who made the quarrel? |
3254 | Who on earth could have foreseen a thing like this? |
3254 | Who pays any attention to that sort of thing now? |
3254 | Who plays this Orphoos? |
3254 | Who put you up to this? |
3254 | Who said anything about lurch? |
3254 | Who said there was suffering? |
3254 | Who says that? |
3254 | Who sent me these?" |
3254 | Who shall tell of what he was thinking? |
3254 | Who so to be trusted to ride the best as Johnny Dromore? |
3254 | Who talked of despairing? |
3254 | Who talks of dying? |
3254 | Who that was free would wish to become a slave? |
3254 | Who the deuce are we if we leave this place? |
3254 | Who the devil was Crum, to say that? |
3254 | Who the devil were all these people? |
3254 | Who told you that rubbish? |
3254 | Who told you?" |
3254 | Who took you there?" |
3254 | Who understands a young girl? |
3254 | Who valets Mr De Levis? |
3254 | Who wants chivalry? |
3254 | Who wants the natural? |
3254 | Who wants to surrender? |
3254 | Who wants to? |
3254 | Who was he? |
3254 | Who was it had called her once"a wise little owl,"in that dress? |
3254 | Who was it laughed there in the old slave- market-- laughed at these white eyeballs glaring from out of the blackness of their dark cattle- pen? |
3254 | Who was it saw her coming out of Dr. Desart''s house yesterday? |
3254 | Who was it told us that George had made a funny drawing of him with the words,''He wo n''t be happy till he gets it''?" |
3254 | Who was it? |
3254 | Who was she? |
3254 | Who was she? |
3254 | Who was that sittin''on the other side of you? |
3254 | Who was that, Dodo? |
3254 | Who was that? |
3254 | Who was that?" |
3254 | Who was there he could go to? |
3254 | Who were these people, what were they, where had they come from into the West End? |
3254 | Who were you speaking to, Daddy? |
3254 | Who will ask me? |
3254 | Who would dance with a dry stick like that, all eaten up with a piety which was just sexual disappointment? |
3254 | Who would go out alone under this grey sky of yours, and the hatreds of the war in every face? |
3254 | Who would have thought noises made out of string and wood could have stolen her away from him? |
3254 | Who would have? |
3254 | Who would not be?" |
3254 | Who''d be happy in a household like mine? |
3254 | Who''d ha''thought the product of an''armless insect could''a done''i m in like this?" |
3254 | Who''d have thought a child like that could root up two fossils like us? |
3254 | Who''d have thought he could rally his voice like that? |
3254 | Who''d have thought it? |
3254 | Who''d have thought those young men cared for music-- good music-- German music, too?" |
3254 | Who''d miss him if he did die out? |
3254 | Who''d want to blow it up? |
3254 | Who''ll hold him for me? |
3254 | Who''s June?" |
3254 | Who''s been down here? |
3254 | Who''s been in here? |
3254 | Who''s been in the room this morning? |
3254 | Who''s beyond them? |
3254 | Who''s for a cooler?" |
3254 | Who''s getting a tall girl?" |
3254 | Who''s going to live in a town like that, or with it on his walls?" |
3254 | Who''s he in love with-- Peachey? |
3254 | Who''s next him? |
3254 | Who''s next to me? |
3254 | Who''s talkin''o''blacklegs-- mind what you''re saying, will you? |
3254 | Who''s that next to Dawker? |
3254 | Who''s that with father? |
3254 | Who''s that? |
3254 | Who''s that? |
3254 | Who''s that? |
3254 | Who''s that? |
3254 | Who''s there? |
3254 | Who''s there? |
3254 | Who''s there? |
3254 | Who''s this? |
3254 | Who''s to give''er back''er good name? |
3254 | Who''s your visitor?" |
3254 | Who? |
3254 | Who? |
3254 | Who? |
3254 | Who? |
3254 | Who? |
3254 | Who? |
3254 | Who?" |
3254 | Who?" |
3254 | Whom did you want to see, madam? |
3254 | Whom do I deal with-- Herring''s?" |
3254 | Whom have I the pleasure of addressing, Ma''am? |
3254 | Whom should I tell, Keith? |
3254 | Whom was he talking to? |
3254 | Whom''ave I--?" |
3254 | Whose fault is it? |
3254 | Whose hand? |
3254 | Whose room? |
3254 | Whose? |
3254 | Whose? |
3254 | Whose? |
3254 | Whoy do n''t they kill us off? |
3254 | Whu else is there, tu? |
3254 | Whu funked the doctor? |
3254 | Whu pushed t''door open? |
3254 | Whu seconds that? |
3254 | Whu wid a''thought it? |
3254 | Why a shop? |
3254 | Why are n''t you married to him? |
3254 | Why are you back? |
3254 | Why are you so bitter against my father? |
3254 | Why be unhappy? |
3254 | Why bruise your head against walls? |
3254 | Why ca n''t I see the bids, Dodo? |
3254 | Why ca n''t he see? |
3254 | Why ca n''t people buy things because they like them?" |
3254 | Why ca n''t they exclude fellows like Profond, instead of a lot of hard- working Germans?'' |
3254 | Why ca n''t we leave them alone?" |
3254 | Why ca n''t you be content with what the grandest nation-- the grandest men on earth-- have found good enough for them? |
3254 | Why ca n''t you express yourself, Margery? |
3254 | Why ca n''t you let me be? |
3254 | Why ca n''t you speak? |
3254 | Why ca n''t you wait quietly?" |
3254 | Why can not a woman see things as they are? |
3254 | Why care, if next day have different face and spirit? |
3254 | Why cornflowers?" |
3254 | Why could he not be just simply happy, as this morning was happy? |
3254 | Why could he not be lying out there in that up- country hospital, and his boy safe at home? |
3254 | Why could he not be wholly true to her who was and always had been wholly true to him? |
3254 | Why could he not feel more? |
3254 | Why could he not give the simple and direct expression to his feeling that she gave to hers? |
3254 | Why could he not have that pain to bear instead? |
3254 | Why could he not say simply:''Friend, I''m better off than you; help me not to feel so unfairly favored''? |
3254 | Why could he not stir without bringing disaster upon one or other? |
3254 | Why could he not wrench this feeling from his heart, banish this girl from his eyes? |
3254 | Why could n''t father be prevented without its being made public?" |
3254 | Why could n''t he be self- confident and ready? |
3254 | Why could n''t he come and live at home? |
3254 | Why could n''t he think without bringing himself in-- get out of himself and see what he ought to do? |
3254 | Why could n''t she have been more sympathetic? |
3254 | Why could n''t she look at him like that? |
3254 | Why could n''t they build country- houses? |
3254 | Why could n''t they do something for him? |
3254 | Why could n''t they leave her alone? |
3254 | Why could n''t we have been told that before? |
3254 | Why could n''t you have let me in? |
3254 | Why could not human beings let their troubles be as this cow left the flies that clung about her eyes? |
3254 | Why could not she and Stephen keep that lid on, too? |
3254 | Why could one not put happiness into Local Loans, gild its edges, insure it against going down? |
3254 | Why d''you look at me like that? |
3254 | Why did Daddy always want to choose the way she should go? |
3254 | Why did I ever ask that wretch De Levis? |
3254 | Why did I fall in love again?'' |
3254 | Why did I take the beastly thing? |
3254 | Why did Stormer jeer like that? |
3254 | Why did doggerel start up in the mind like that? |
3254 | Why did he keep her suffering like this-- not telling her? |
3254 | Why did he take things so hardly? |
3254 | Why did he, HOW did he get into debt like this? |
3254 | Why did his eyes often fix her with a stare that did not seem to see her? |
3254 | Why did it come now and not then, for this one and not that other? |
3254 | Why did it come? |
3254 | Why did n''t Dad go? |
3254 | Why did n''t Farney or one of those young fellows come and help him up? |
3254 | Why did n''t Fleur come, so that he could get away? |
3254 | Why did n''t Fleur come? |
3254 | Why did n''t I face it? |
3254 | Why did n''t I go in the water?" |
3254 | Why did n''t I marry him? |
3254 | Why did n''t I say I hate dancing?" |
3254 | Why did n''t I wait for her this morning and find out the worst?" |
3254 | Why did n''t he come in?... |
3254 | Why did n''t he grow the rest of those idiotic little moustaches, which made him look like a music- hall buffoon? |
3254 | Why did n''t he like Val Dartie? |
3254 | Why did n''t he pinch something more precious? |
3254 | Why did n''t he play the game at the beginning? |
3254 | Why did n''t he-- why did n''t some one, speak? |
3254 | Why did n''t he? |
3254 | Why did n''t she come? |
3254 | Why did n''t she speak? |
3254 | Why did n''t she, Mrs. Shortman, why did n''t she?" |
3254 | Why did n''t she--? |
3254 | Why did n''t that barrage lift? |
3254 | Why did n''t they come and tell him? |
3254 | Why did n''t you divorce me then? |
3254 | Why did n''t you go in, Tommy? |
3254 | Why did n''t you let me know? |
3254 | Why did n''t you refuse to give him up?" |
3254 | Why did n''t you tell me then? |
3254 | Why did n''t you tell me, Father?" |
3254 | Why did n''t you tell me? |
3254 | Why did n''t you?" |
3254 | Why did not that doctor come? |
3254 | Why did she laugh? |
3254 | Why did she look at him like that? |
3254 | Why did she love it-- the face of a man who could n''t love her? |
3254 | Why did she not come in? |
3254 | Why did she take them? |
3254 | Why did she tell him that, unless-- unless she was just a little on his side? |
3254 | Why did she want to put him off? |
3254 | Why did that scent so make one ache? |
3254 | Why did they leave him alone? |
3254 | Why did this family somehow make him feel inferior? |
3254 | Why did trouble come like this the moment one felt deeply? |
3254 | Why did we give women the vote? |
3254 | Why did you come by the towing- path, was n''t it cooking? |
3254 | Why did you come?" |
3254 | Why did you give me away like this? |
3254 | Why did you go together?" |
3254 | Why did you have that dinner? |
3254 | Why did you insult her? |
3254 | Why did you knock? |
3254 | Why did you knock? |
3254 | Why did you let him, now? |
3254 | Why did you play the deuce with us in there?" |
3254 | Why did you resist the police in the execution of their duty? |
3254 | Why did you send back the jelly? |
3254 | Why did you send for me?" |
3254 | Why did you spy, HERE? |
3254 | Why did you tell General Canynge you did n''t know Kentman had paid me in cash? |
3254 | Why did you tell me it was? |
3254 | Why did you write such a tiny little note?" |
3254 | Why did you? |
3254 | Why do I not speak the truth? |
3254 | Why do I say these things, Charlotte? |
3254 | Why do faces gazing in through glass from darkness always look hungry-- searching, appealing for what you have and they have not? |
3254 | Why do n''t I love him? |
3254 | Why do n''t I?" |
3254 | Why do n''t they come out in the open? |
3254 | Why do n''t they come out into the open?" |
3254 | Why do n''t ye answer? |
3254 | Why do n''t you act? |
3254 | Why do n''t you and your son make up your minds without more ado to let your granddaughter go out to service? |
3254 | Why do n''t you believe me? |
3254 | Why do n''t you come and see us?" |
3254 | Why do n''t you drive down to Hurlingham with us? |
3254 | Why do n''t you get him locked up? |
3254 | Why do n''t you go?" |
3254 | Why do n''t you make the men come in? |
3254 | Why do n''t you say outright that you want me to marry Mabel Lanfarne? |
3254 | Why do n''t you spread your wings? |
3254 | Why do n''t you take up woodcarving?" |
3254 | Why do n''t you take your children and leave him? |
3254 | Why do n''t you trust me more?" |
3254 | Why do n''t you? |
3254 | Why do they treat them like that, just because they disagree? |
3254 | Why do you all speak as if it were the man who mattered? |
3254 | Why do you come to see me now?" |
3254 | Why do you dislike me?" |
3254 | Why do you do it? |
3254 | Why do you feel you must? |
3254 | Why do you hate him? |
3254 | Why do you let him come? |
3254 | Why do you let it upset you? |
3254 | Why do you let things lie about in the street like this? |
3254 | Why do you live with a brute like that?" |
3254 | Why do you not want to be painted?" |
3254 | Why do you say such things? |
3254 | Why do you smile? |
3254 | Why do you smile?" |
3254 | Why do you speak to me like that? |
3254 | Why do you speak to them at all? |
3254 | Why do you stay? |
3254 | Why do you think he knows about me?" |
3254 | Why do you think it matters so terribly that Jon should know about his mother? |
3254 | Why do you torture me? |
3254 | Why do you want to see him? |
3254 | Why does he go on doing it? |
3254 | Why does it come-- why the stars and the flowers, if God does n''t care any more than that?" |
3254 | Why does n''t Martin come?'' |
3254 | Why does n''t Val come and see us?" |
3254 | Why does n''t he come in?" |
3254 | Why does n''t someone ask the woman?" |
3254 | Why ever did you force me to take this girl? |
3254 | Why falter? |
3254 | Why free slaves; why anything decent for the little and weak? |
3254 | Why fuss? |
3254 | Why go on-- a waif at the mercy of his own nature, a straw blown here and there by every gust which rose in him? |
3254 | Why go on? |
3254 | Why had Barbara condescended to mention the wretched brute? |
3254 | Why had Fate flung this feeling into her heart, lighted up her life suddenly, if God refused her its enjoyment? |
3254 | Why had Irene gone, leaving her mistress of the field? |
3254 | Why had Swithin left his charges the night before? |
3254 | Why had he been so pusillanimous all this time? |
3254 | Why had he been suffered to meet her, to love her, and to be loved by her? |
3254 | Why had he come? |
3254 | Why had he come? |
3254 | Why had he come? |
3254 | Why had he gone? |
3254 | Why had he made friends with this family of innocents just when he was saying good- bye to innocence, and all the rest of it? |
3254 | Why had he never married? |
3254 | Why had he not let her know? |
3254 | Why had he not made the most of this unexpected chance; why had he not made desperate love to her? |
3254 | Why had he not realized long ago that youth was over, passion done with, autumn upon him? |
3254 | Why had he not spoken to her roughly then-- told her she was a romantic little fool? |
3254 | Why had he not stayed awake? |
3254 | Why had he not? |
3254 | Why had he promised? |
3254 | Why had he said such a silly thing? |
3254 | Why had he spoken and put an end to their quiet friendship, and left her to such heart- searchings all by herself? |
3254 | Why had he stayed so long up there? |
3254 | Why had his mother married his father, if he was a''bounder''? |
3254 | Why had his son not gone to the dogs? |
3254 | Why had it come with its arrowy flight and mocking cry to pierce the heart and set it aching? |
3254 | Why had it such possession of her, that a little thing-- yes, a little thing-- only the sight of him with another, should make her suffer so? |
3254 | Why had n''t she either cut him altogether or taken the sweets the gods had sent? |
3254 | Why had not George answered? |
3254 | Why had she been made so that nobody could love her? |
3254 | Why had she behaved in this mad way-- given him this fearful shock? |
3254 | Why had she come into his life-- to her undoing, and his own? |
3254 | Why had she let herself be trapped like this? |
3254 | Why had she never loved him? |
3254 | Why had she not felt from the first that he was overwrought and only fit for bed? |
3254 | Why had she not flown long ago? |
3254 | Why had she not sent him that promised note? |
3254 | Why had she not tapped on the window? |
3254 | Why had she not told her uncle? |
3254 | Why had she not waited as usual for him to ride with her? |
3254 | Why had she refrained, left him there, vanished out of his arms? |
3254 | Why had she to do all the work to secure their love? |
3254 | Why had she watched like that? |
3254 | Why had that smile so moved him? |
3254 | Why haf they made the world so miserable--why haf they killed all our lives-- hundreds and thousands and millions of lives-- all for noting? |
3254 | Why hateful, my Gyp? |
3254 | Why have to employ spies to peer into my private troubles? |
3254 | Why have you been so long? |
3254 | Why have you come to me like this? |
3254 | Why have you come? |
3254 | Why him?" |
3254 | Why in heaven''s name do you behave in this crazy way? |
3254 | Why is he so beastly keen on it?" |
3254 | Why is he so keen on mother''s getting a divorce?" |
3254 | Why is it a pity, Miss Naylor?" |
3254 | Why is it better? |
3254 | Why is n''t Harness here? |
3254 | Why is n''t it fair? |
3254 | Why is n''t it fittin''? |
3254 | Why is there in one something so much too soft?'' |
3254 | Why is this the chief characteristic of our art? |
3254 | Why let these Dromores into his life like this? |
3254 | Why lobsters? |
3254 | Why make a fuss about a letter? |
3254 | Why make her father uneasy-- when there was nothing to be uneasy about-- by letting him come too often to Bury Street? |
3254 | Why make what might never be needed? |
3254 | Why must n''t he say they had met? |
3254 | Why must people grow old and helpless, like that Grandfather Gaunt she had seen at Becket? |
3254 | Why must the poor old fellow who had driven her look so anxious and call on God to bless her for giving him that little present? |
3254 | Why must things come to an end? |
3254 | Why need ye flow so fast?" |
3254 | Why not Blafard''s? |
3254 | Why not act vigorously? |
3254 | Why not before her eyes? |
3254 | Why not have done with it for ever, and take it out in sleep? |
3254 | Why not here-- in this room? |
3254 | Why not let her stay, and make Johnny promise only to see her in the presence of a third party? |
3254 | Why not pity that red- haired girl, with the skin so white that it burns you, and the eyes so brown that they burn you-- don''t they?" |
3254 | Why not risk it, sir? |
3254 | Why not speak to Mr Bly? |
3254 | Why not start tomorrow? |
3254 | Why not take up wood- carving? |
3254 | Why not try? |
3254 | Why not, as Stephen had suggested, drop it? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not? |
3254 | Why not?" |
3254 | Why on earth could n''t you have written? |
3254 | Why on earth should she? |
3254 | Why on earth should we--? |
3254 | Why one could not love more than one man at a time? |
3254 | Why people had to suffer; and the world be black to so many millions? |
3254 | Why pretend? |
3254 | Why pretend? |
3254 | Why should I ask these people, when I''ve settled everything already? |
3254 | Why should I have to sit in judgment on that poor beggar, and condemn him?'' |
3254 | Why should I pray for George''s life to One whose ends are just His own? |
3254 | Why should I spare him? |
3254 | Why should I suffer so? |
3254 | Why should I think myself fit to legislate for the unhappy wretches one sees about in the streets? |
3254 | Why should I? |
3254 | Why should I? |
3254 | Why should I?" |
3254 | Why should Oi give up me only pleasure to keep me wretched life in? |
3254 | Why should any spirit yearn, why should any body, full of strength and joy, wither slowly away for want of love? |
3254 | Why should he be worried like this? |
3254 | Why should he help her to get this boy, who was killing her affection for himself? |
3254 | Why should he leave her where she was? |
3254 | Why should he love her? |
3254 | Why should he marry her? |
3254 | Why should he mind so long as she was happy? |
3254 | Why should he not send for Jo? |
3254 | Why should he? |
3254 | Why should it all be such a skin game? |
3254 | Why should it be better if I thought it a sin? |
3254 | Why should it be so? |
3254 | Why should n''t he marry her, and go to Canada? |
3254 | Why should n''t she amuse herself? |
3254 | Why should n''t she come back to me? |
3254 | Why should not Soames buy some of the pictures of Eric Cobbley-- her last lame duck? |
3254 | Why should one go on living, when life is rotten?" |
3254 | Why should one suffer? |
3254 | Why should people hate? |
3254 | Why should people interfere with others like that? |
3254 | Why should she be sorry for herself, she who had everything in life she wanted-- except love-- the love she had thought she would never want? |
3254 | Why should she be?" |
3254 | Why should she grudge-- she who did not love? |
3254 | Why should she harry them? |
3254 | Why should she have his money if she married again? |
3254 | Why should she not go down to him? |
3254 | Why should she not travel as she was? |
3254 | Why should she treat him as if he were utterly unreliable? |
3254 | Why should that blighter have everything and I nothing?" |
3254 | Why should that one night, that one act, have this uncanny power to drive her this way or that, to those arms or these? |
3254 | Why should the beginning of one life mean the ending of another, one love the destruction of another? |
3254 | Why should the old chap be so keen on getting it through? |
3254 | Why should the poor child''s life be loveless? |
3254 | Why should the wretched girl who has n''t got that be turned down? |
3254 | Why should they all be so comfortable and cosy while this perpetual fire was burning in himself? |
3254 | Why should they be humble? |
3254 | Why should they both want to hurt him so? |
3254 | Why should they have chanced here, to drive away first love-- to show him that he was going to be no better than a common seducer? |
3254 | Why should they rise?" |
3254 | Why should they, any more-- what was the use? |
3254 | Why should you expect her to act as you would act yourselves?" |
3254 | Why should you think the worst of me? |
3254 | Why should you want them to marry, if he''s tired of her? |
3254 | Why should you? |
3254 | Why spare this girl? |
3254 | Why take her home in this state, why not save the jolting, and let her recover properly? |
3254 | Why tell him what she was doing, in company of one whom he could not bear to think of? |
3254 | Why the deuce could n''t his nephew have stayed out in South Africa? |
3254 | Why the deuce did n''t you let me try cruelty? |
3254 | Why the deuce does n''t she come? |
3254 | Why the devil did n''t they come and tell him something, anything-- rather than this silence, this deadly solitude and waiting? |
3254 | Why then return? |
3254 | Why these passionate obsessions that could not decently be satisfied? |
3254 | Why this shadow over everything? |
3254 | Why trouble? |
3254 | Why try to alter the make and shape of Nature with our petty chisels? |
3254 | Why want to know anything of that''small''mystery-- Je m''en fiche, as Profond says?" |
3254 | Why was he not among these passers- by? |
3254 | Why was he not just an ordinary animal of a man that could enjoy what the gods had sent? |
3254 | Why was he so long? |
3254 | Why was he such a brute-- not to be thinking of her day and night? |
3254 | Why was he walking through a damp wood at this hour of the morning? |
3254 | Why was it? |
3254 | Why was it? |
3254 | Why was n''t I told? |
3254 | Why was not the world composed of the immaculate alone? |
3254 | Why was one restless, wanting things that did not come-- wanting to feel and know, wanting to love, and be loved? |
3254 | Why was she for ever mocking herself, himself, and every other thing? |
3254 | Why was she here? |
3254 | Why was she made like this? |
3254 | Why was she not shocked, smitten to the ground with grief and shame and rage? |
3254 | Why was she playing him this trick? |
3254 | Why was she sitting there? |
3254 | Why was she so hard to her own life, so bitter a foe to her own happiness? |
3254 | Why was the china of her cup flawed so that no one could drink from it? |
3254 | Why was there all the tyranny that made Derek and Sheila so wild? |
3254 | Why were they allowed to hang about; why did n''t the bobby move them on? |
3254 | Why worry her? |
3254 | Why''Good- bye''and not''Good- night''? |
3254 | Why''Good- bye''and not''Good- night''? |
3254 | Why, a poor man who behaved as you''ve done--d''you think he''d have any mercy shown him? |
3254 | Why, because of his love, must he bury the will and force of a man? |
3254 | Why, for instance, her heart ached so some days and felt light and eager other days? |
3254 | Why, for instance, the spring flowers in that woman''s basket had been born; why that high white cloud floated over; why and what was Nedda Freeland? |
3254 | Why, in all these years, had she never got to know his secrets, so that she might fight against what threatened her? |
3254 | Why, in fact, do you favour one case more than the other?" |
3254 | Why, in his fear of putting things to the test, had he let this month go by? |
3254 | Why, then, despise the skittle- alley, the gramophone, those expressions of the spirit of my friend in the billy- cock hat? |
3254 | Why, then, fear death, which is but night? |
3254 | Why, then, have we no Censorship to protect us from the possibility of encountering works that bring blushes to the cheek of the young person? |
3254 | Why, then, this icy clutching at his heart? |
3254 | Why, when people wrote and talked of God, they seemed to know what He was, and she never did? |
3254 | Why, why must people suffer so? |
3254 | Why, you have n''t even got coals? |
3254 | Why-- a thousand things? |
3254 | Why-- anything? |
3254 | Why-- can''t-- women-- fight? |
3254 | Why-- in heaven''s name? |
3254 | Why-- why had she a heart? |
3254 | Why-- wot else can it be? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why? |
3254 | Why?" |
3254 | Why?" |
3254 | Why?" |
3254 | Why?" |
3254 | Why?" |
3254 | Why?" |
3254 | Why?" |
3254 | Why?" |
3254 | Why?'' |
3254 | Why?'' |
3254 | Wi''''is gouty shoe? |
3254 | Will Monsieur have another glass of brandy before I take it? |
3254 | Will Monsieur not''ave anything to eat? |
3254 | Will he be coming in soon?" |
3254 | Will he come back again? |
3254 | Will he throw up the sponge, or try and stick it out here? |
3254 | Will it be safer if they drink too much? |
3254 | Will it do her any harm? |
3254 | Will it do? |
3254 | Will it make any difference, Guv''nor, if I speaks the truth? |
3254 | Will it stop? |
3254 | Will mother feel my going very much? |
3254 | Will she give you away? |
3254 | Will she like them? |
3254 | Will that do, Mr. Wilder? |
3254 | Will they let you be? |
3254 | Will they make you bankrupt, then? |
3254 | Will ye support us in double pay overtime Saturdays? |
3254 | Will yer reely? |
3254 | Will you all go quietly? |
3254 | Will you appoint somewhere else? |
3254 | Will you ask him?" |
3254 | Will you be fit to travel, though?" |
3254 | Will you be in the study just before eleven o''clock, with this gentleman?] |
3254 | Will you be quiet? |
3254 | Will you be quiet? |
3254 | Will you come and have breakfast with us to- day, Herr Harz? |
3254 | Will you come in while I see? |
3254 | Will you come in, please? |
3254 | Will you come this way?" |
3254 | Will you come to me? |
3254 | Will you come to my first night? |
3254 | Will you come up and see my pictures?" |
3254 | Will you come up now?" |
3254 | Will you come, and leave that baggage and her cad? |
3254 | Will you come? |
3254 | Will you fight? |
3254 | Will you get me a quite plain parasol?" |
3254 | Will you get some dinner, or go through?" |
3254 | Will you give him some coffee? |
3254 | Will you give me Daisy''s address?" |
3254 | Will you go in there for a minute? |
3254 | Will you go out and do something for me? |
3254 | Will you go over, Felix, and advise that our young friends be more considerate to these poor beggars?" |
3254 | Will you go, then, at once, and leave me to break it to your wife? |
3254 | Will you go-- first or shall-- I? |
3254 | Will you have a cigarette? |
3254 | Will you have a cigarette?" |
3254 | Will you have a drink?" |
3254 | Will you have a little mustard in it?" |
3254 | Will you have him in? |
3254 | Will you have me, brother? |
3254 | Will you have rum in your tea? |
3254 | Will you have some tea?" |
3254 | Will you have some tea?" |
3254 | Will you have some, Margaret? |
3254 | Will you have supper with me here to- morrow night?" |
3254 | Will you have to pay? |
3254 | Will you hold to your word over those cottages? |
3254 | Will you kindly take a look at them, he says? |
3254 | Will you kindly tell me why your sister signs her drawings by the name of my daughter, Athene Builder-- and has a photograph of my wife hanging there? |
3254 | Will you leave a message? |
3254 | Will you leave my mother alone? |
3254 | Will you let Nollie know, please, that we can take her back with us? |
3254 | Will you let us bide a bit out of the rain?" |
3254 | Will you listen to Reginald? |
3254 | Will you not come, then, little soul? |
3254 | Will you not wait a day for father''s foot? |
3254 | Will you pay your men one penny more than they force you to pay them? |
3254 | Will you permit me to beg your daughter to be my wife?" |
3254 | Will you please tell me what I am to do?" |
3254 | Will you please tell me? |
3254 | Will you please thank Mr. Dedmond, and say that I refuse? |
3254 | Will you please to sit down a minute, while I let the Captain know?" |
3254 | Will you remember, nurse? |
3254 | Will you retract? |
3254 | Will you run for it? |
3254 | Will you see Major Colford and Miss Orme? |
3254 | Will you see her? |
3254 | Will you see her?" |
3254 | Will you see him?" |
3254 | Will you see the proof of the press report, or will you leave it to me?" |
3254 | Will you sit down, please? |
3254 | Will you sit down?" |
3254 | Will you sit down?" |
3254 | Will you smoke? |
3254 | Will you speak to Studdenham, Sir William? |
3254 | Will you stay to dinner? |
3254 | Will you swear to that? |
3254 | Will you take anything here, ma''am? |
3254 | Will you take me?" |
3254 | Will you take tea, sir? |
3254 | Will you take the fifteen pound from me? |
3254 | Will you take them in discharge? |
3254 | Will you tell Annie I shall be round to- morrow, to see her?" |
3254 | Will you tell me any one of us is the right man for the job? |
3254 | Will you tell me it''s right, that because of some tragedy like this-- believe me, it is always a tragedy-- we should hunt down a woman? |
3254 | Will you tell us how you came to that conclusion? |
3254 | Will you wait a minute, please? |
3254 | Will you wait in here while I send for the chief warder to take you over?" |
3254 | Will you want him? |
3254 | Will you-- have him in? |
3254 | Will you? |
3254 | Will you?" |
3254 | Wilmet Gaunt? |
3254 | Win at Bridge? |
3254 | Winton drew his breath in sharply:"Who? |
3254 | Winton looked at his watch and asked:"Does the baby ever go out as late as this?" |
3254 | Winton replied:"And suppose he wo n''t?" |
3254 | Winton took her curls in his hand, and, looking into her face, said:"Well, my gipsy- bird, will you give me one of these?" |
3254 | Winton''s voice from the door said:"Well, my pet?" |
3254 | With Oliver alone? |
3254 | With a dirty face? |
3254 | With a glance at Gyp''s vanishing figure, he said curtly to Markey,"Where have you put this gentleman?" |
3254 | With a kind of moral stammer, he was thinking:''Can I-- dare I offer to see them to their tram? |
3254 | With a most unwonted look of anger, he added:"Is it within the scope of your generosity to credit me with the desire to meet your wishes?" |
3254 | With all the world poking their noses in? |
3254 | With desperate vivacity he sustained the five intolerable minutes of inquiry, where had he been, what had he been doing? |
3254 | With feathers? |
3254 | With her eyes on Stephen''s boots she thought:''How shall I prevent what I''ve heard from coming to Bianca''s ears? |
3254 | With him in that state? |
3254 | With his hands, or----? |
3254 | With murder? |
3254 | With or without deliberate intent? |
3254 | With our missionaries and our trading? |
3254 | With such views about marriage, what business had you to go near a man? |
3254 | With that father?" |
3254 | With that immobility of lips, learned by all imprisoned in Society, Lily Malvezin murmured:"Who''s that she''s dancing with? |
3254 | With the blue eyes and red face?" |
3254 | With the fear of being found out? |
3254 | With the outside of the upper part of the arm? |
3254 | With threats that you would tell his wife? |
3254 | With whom would it hang when he was gone? |
3254 | Withdrawing his hand, he said:"Have a cigar?" |
3254 | Without Forsytes, who believe in none of these things, and habitats but turn them all to use, where should we be? |
3254 | Without consulting me? |
3254 | Without him? |
3254 | Without letting you know? |
3254 | Without lifting her eyes she asked:"Does it all come from-- him?" |
3254 | Without moving Daphne Wing answered:"I suppose it''s Mrs. Fiorsen you want to forget, is n''t it?" |
3254 | Without them, how justify this stiffing of the boy''s love? |
3254 | Wo n''t I du? |
3254 | Wo n''t I? |
3254 | Wo n''t I? |
3254 | Wo n''t Mr Builder be pleased? |
3254 | Wo n''t Mr Jacob have a fit? |
3254 | Wo n''t be finished for a day or two? |
3254 | Wo n''t give him away? |
3254 | Wo n''t it be betraying him?" |
3254 | Wo n''t it be difficult?" |
3254 | Wo n''t it do to- morrow, sir? |
3254 | Wo n''t let her-- won''t let her? |
3254 | Wo n''t they have any tea, Frost? |
3254 | Wo n''t to- morrow do for all that sort of thing? |
3254 | Wo n''t you come in here?" |
3254 | Wo n''t you come in, and arrange with her quietly?" |
3254 | Wo n''t you come to the drawing- room; or do you want to see my father?" |
3254 | Wo n''t you feel lost?" |
3254 | Wo n''t you go and have some lunch, Mr. Tench? |
3254 | Wo n''t you have a cigarette?" |
3254 | Wo n''t you have a cup? |
3254 | Wo n''t you have another? |
3254 | Wo n''t you kees me once? |
3254 | Wo n''t you kiss me?" |
3254 | Wo n''t you play too, Bill, and try and stop Ronny, he''s too terrible? |
3254 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
3254 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
3254 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
3254 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
3254 | Wo n''t you sit down?" |
3254 | Wo n''t you stop and eat, David? |
3254 | Wo n''t you take them? |
3254 | Wo n''t you? |
3254 | Wo n''t you? |
3254 | Wo n''t you? |
3254 | Wo n''t you?" |
3254 | Wonder if her husband shoots? |
3254 | Wonder if she minded?'' |
3254 | Wonder if there''s dancin''in''Eaven? |
3254 | Wonder who they are? |
3254 | Wonderful, an''t it? |
3254 | Work all right? |
3254 | Work land wi''unions, same as they''ve got in this''ere factory, wi''their eight hours an''their do this an''don''do that? |
3254 | Workin''hard? |
3254 | Working very hard? |
3254 | Works for you, eh? |
3254 | Wot abaht it? |
3254 | Wot abaht? |
3254 | Wot are you talkin''about, sir?" |
3254 | Wot c''her do wiv yesterdy''s penny? |
3254 | Wot did yet expect? |
3254 | Wot is it? |
3254 | Wot price the uvvers, old lydy? |
3254 | Wot thing? |
3254 | Wot would y''''ave for supper, if yer could choose-- salmon wivaht the tin, an''tipsy cyke? |
3254 | Wot''ave they done that makes''em any better than wot I am? |
3254 | Wot''s it like? |
3254 | Wot''s that? |
3254 | Wot''s the troof compared wiv that? |
3254 | Wot''s''er income? |
3254 | Would Cramier recognize himself in this creature with the horn- like ears, and great bossed forehead? |
3254 | Would Miss Gyp please to go down when she was ready? |
3254 | Would Monsieur have tea with her? |
3254 | Would Soames be at his Club or at Park Lane? |
3254 | Would he ask where the baby was? |
3254 | Would he be recognisable? |
3254 | Would he be recognisable?" |
3254 | Would he be true to her? |
3254 | Would he be upsetting himself over every woman in like case? |
3254 | Would he come early to- morrow? |
3254 | Would he come to- morrow to see her milking? |
3254 | Would he drive his fist into her face that she managed to keep still smiling? |
3254 | Would he ever be able to live down here, not seeing her? |
3254 | Would he forgive her if she did not tell it? |
3254 | Would he forgive? |
3254 | Would he get through without spilling it all down his front, or choking? |
3254 | Would he get up and strangle her? |
3254 | Would he give up his shooting? |
3254 | Would he give up his town house and collecting whatever it is he collects? |
3254 | Would he give up his work for that-- that chance to break the spell? |
3254 | Would he go back upon it? |
3254 | Would he have forgotten that young girl, or had he nursed and nourished his wicked fancy in the house of grief and silence? |
3254 | Would he have hesitated then? |
3254 | Would he know her if he saw her? |
3254 | Would he last out? |
3254 | Would he like her dress? |
3254 | Would he not come and sit with them a little-- they were going presently to see how Olive was? |
3254 | Would he not just love her as long as he liked? |
3254 | Would he please to go down into the garden? |
3254 | Would he speak a kind word to her? |
3254 | Would he stand under it, or would the whole thing come crashing to the ground? |
3254 | Would he strangle her? |
3254 | Would he sullenly resign his seat, and wait till he could find Audrey Noel again? |
3254 | Would he talk wild, or would he talk sensible? |
3254 | Would he then, as Granny had urged him, put on his armour, and go down into the fight? |
3254 | Would he understand their troubles or wants? |
3254 | Would he-- even now?'' |
3254 | Would he? |
3254 | Would it be better to rewrite the whole thing, and just say you hated Soames?" |
3254 | Would it be happiness at all? |
3254 | Would it be his duty, if she did? |
3254 | Would it be like that up in their bedrooms, or would it only be on her( Nedda''s) own lips that this little smile would come? |
3254 | Would it be relief to pour her soul out? |
3254 | Would it harm him?" |
3254 | Would it have been better if they had been married? |
3254 | Would it have come so confidingly to anyone but her? |
3254 | Would it have mattered the least bit? |
3254 | Would it hurt his feelings? |
3254 | Would it indeed be possible to get his guardian to ask them down to Hayle? |
3254 | Would it not be almost a duty to preserve this house-- like Carlyle''s-- and put up a tablet, and show it? |
3254 | Would it not be almost a relief if she did not come? |
3254 | Would it not be common chivalry to make her independent, able to change her affections if she wished, unhampered by monetary troubles? |
3254 | Would it not then be better, and less savoury of humbug if we said the same to her whose cat- soul has chanced into this human shape? |
3254 | Would it steal on and touch her, or would the sun pass down behind the mountains, and it fade away? |
3254 | Would it? |
3254 | Would n''t I expect what I would do meself? |
3254 | Would n''t I starve an''rot rather than give in? |
3254 | Would n''t it be jollier drivin''? |
3254 | Would n''t seem natural to''ave a dinner, would it, Mrs. Bulgin? |
3254 | Would n''t you have wanted a shot at the brute? |
3254 | Would n''t you like to put him in the stable here? |
3254 | Would n''t you like to see Phyllis? |
3254 | Would n''t you?" |
3254 | Would not a liaison be better than that-- a liaison, and a son he could adopt? |
3254 | Would not the very thought of the girl be abhorrent to him? |
3254 | Would she be able to manage Jon? |
3254 | Would she believe he had done his best? |
3254 | Would she believe? |
3254 | Would she come out a swan? |
3254 | Would she come up to them? |
3254 | Would she come-- would she? |
3254 | Would she ever be capable of riding out with the little company of big hearts, naked of advantage? |
3254 | Would she ever come to feel happy when he was just doing what he thought was right? |
3254 | Would she ever have lived through the night? |
3254 | Would she ever live so long? |
3254 | Would she forgive? |
3254 | Would she help them? |
3254 | Would she never get that affected roll out of her r''s? |
3254 | Would she never make a friendship or take an interest in something that would be of real benefit to her? |
3254 | Would she not always now be suspecting him when he was away from her, whatever he did? |
3254 | Would she not call after him? |
3254 | Would she not rush to him now-- go when and where he liked? |
3254 | Would she not say a word to him before he got out of the room, would she not try and keep him? |
3254 | Would she see that he did not break that promise? |
3254 | Would she want him to marry her? |
3254 | Would she-- could she mean to come away with him that very night? |
3254 | Would that be honest? |
3254 | Would that be the truth?" |
3254 | Would that help? |
3254 | Would that kiss have been given if Fate had been auspicious? |
3254 | Would the horse, Timson? |
3254 | Would the wires hold? |
3254 | Would the woman never show her hand? |
3254 | Would the young fellow put it back? |
3254 | Would they come on here at once? |
3254 | Would they have changed? |
3254 | Would they no longer have the straight look she so loved? |
3254 | Would they refuse to bury that unhappy one in a churchyard? |
3254 | Would three bottles of Perrier Jouet do the trick, or must he add one of the old Madeira? |
3254 | Would victory wing back into night or on into day? |
3254 | Would we come up? |
3254 | Would ye''ave it the old Rector then? |
3254 | Would yer like a sip aht o''my mug? |
3254 | Would yer like me to see to''is gas? |
3254 | Would yer like me to stay and wash it for yer again? |
3254 | Would you allow me to say a word, Mr Mayor? |
3254 | Would you back that opinion, sir? |
3254 | Would you be going to marry him if you were not? |
3254 | Would you be the same now if it were to come again?" |
3254 | Would you believe it, he gives me no pleasure? |
3254 | Would you care to come some day and look over my hospital? |
3254 | Would you give him these cards?" |
3254 | Would you go to bed?" |
3254 | Would you have a lanthorn to beat footpads? |
3254 | Would you have asked me-- then, Kit? |
3254 | Would you have been firm with her? |
3254 | Would you have married him if you had n''t been? |
3254 | Would you have married him if you had n''t? |
3254 | Would you leave me? |
3254 | Would you like a hot bath and a cup of hot tea at once?" |
3254 | Would you like a hot bath, and your dinner in bed?" |
3254 | Would you like him stopped?" |
3254 | Would you like it back, dear?" |
3254 | Would you like me to begin?" |
3254 | Would you like me to come down to the Court to- morrow, Soames?" |
3254 | Would you like one? |
3254 | Would you like some soup? |
3254 | Would you like to be treated as your mother treated Chloe? |
3254 | Would you like to come and see the sort of thing?" |
3254 | Would you like to come? |
3254 | Would you like to hear the speeches? |
3254 | Would you like to put yourself in my position? |
3254 | Would you like to see a proof? |
3254 | Would you like to see a proof? |
3254 | Would you like to see my bedroom? |
3254 | Would you like to see the other ward, or shall I show you our kitchen?" |
3254 | Would you like?" |
3254 | Would you mind if I could make a sort of home at Mildenham where poor children could come to stay and get good air and food? |
3254 | Would you mind? |
3254 | Would you mind?" |
3254 | Would you rather be alive or dead? |
3254 | Would you say as angry as he-- er-- is now? |
3254 | Would you say that a strong press movement would help to quiet the country? |
3254 | Would you say that that denoted insanity? |
3254 | Would you say, for example, that an unhappy marriage is a more Christian thing than a happy one, where there is no suffering, but only love?" |
3254 | Would you sign these for me, please sir? |
3254 | Would you very kindly hang my, hat up on the-- er-- weeping willow tree?" |
3254 | Would you? |
3254 | Would you? |
3254 | Would you? |
3254 | Would you?" |
3254 | Would''The Girl on the Magpie Horse''be all he would see of her to- day-- that unsatisfying work, so cold, and devoid of witchery? |
3254 | Write books? |
3254 | Write? |
3254 | Wrong? |
3254 | Wrote stories did she? |
3254 | XIV But now that she was within reach, he wavered; he had given his word-- was he going to break it? |
3254 | XVII Mr. Treffry said with a sort of laugh:"Near go, eh? |
3254 | Y''nt yer finished wiv to- dy''s? |
3254 | YOUNG M. Proof? |
3254 | YOUNG M. What have you got to do with her? |
3254 | YOUNG M. What''s the matter with whistling? |
3254 | Ye hate it? |
3254 | Ye have gone back on me? |
3254 | Ye have got it on its knees; are ye to give up at the last minute to save your miserable bodies pain? |
3254 | Ye wonder why I tell ye that? |
3254 | Ye''re sure? |
3254 | Ye''ve no wife? |
3254 | Ye- es? |
3254 | Yer can always myke somefin''out o''nufun''? |
3254 | Yer leave it at tryin'', daon''t yer? |
3254 | Yer want it, daon''t yer, wiv a fyce like that? |
3254 | Yer''ll keep that, wo n''t yet? |
3254 | Yes or no? |
3254 | Yes, Anna? |
3254 | Yes, General? |
3254 | Yes, M''m? |
3254 | Yes, M''m? |
3254 | Yes, M''m? |
3254 | Yes, Mr Vane? |
3254 | Yes, Mr. Haywood? |
3254 | Yes, Mr. Steel? |
3254 | Yes, Sir? |
3254 | Yes, and what then? |
3254 | Yes, but did you know that it was taken? |
3254 | Yes, but what do you want him for? |
3254 | Yes, it came to every one-- at some time or other; and what was it, that death they talked of? |
3254 | Yes, madam, what? |
3254 | Yes, my lord? |
3254 | Yes, or no? |
3254 | Yes, sir; but-- may I say something? |
3254 | Yes, terrible, is n''t it?" |
3254 | Yes, what does your father say? |
3254 | Yes-- yes-- and at what time shall I come? |
3254 | Yes-- yes-- but what did he say to you? |
3254 | Yes.--No.--What''s the good? |
3254 | Yes; but he looked-- couldn''t you see he looked--? |
3254 | Yes; but why do we keep contracts when we can break them with advantage and impunity? |
3254 | Yes; have you ever read him? |
3254 | Yes; how do you manage him? |
3254 | Yes; you have not seen it, I suppose? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes? |
3254 | Yes?--Connie? |
3254 | Yesterday afternoon at the Club, did you say? |
3254 | Yet from a Party point of view what could be more justifiable? |
3254 | Yet how could they openly deal with anxieties which had arisen solely from what they had chanced secretly to see? |
3254 | Yet she had sung beautifully; and what more wonderful song in the world? |
3254 | Yet something in his eye seemed to be saying:"Must you really have these fires, master?" |
3254 | Yet, if he did n''t she might take a sudden dislike to him, and where would he be then? |
3254 | Yet, if not, why had she not told him? |
3254 | Yet, if they find warmth therein, who would grudge them those years that they have so guarded? |
3254 | Yet, was there such a thing as chance? |
3254 | Yet-- what had it really been, but the uncontrolled impulse of an emotional child longing to express feelings kindled by the excitement of that opera? |
3254 | You abandon us for Art? |
3254 | You accuse me of injustice-- of what amounts to inhumanity-- of cruelty? |
3254 | You admit the show- up? |
3254 | You agree, hein? |
3254 | You ai n''t very busy, are you? |
3254 | You always begin to act before you stop thinking, do n''t you?" |
3254 | You and Daddy never go to church, do you?" |
3254 | You and Mr. Dawker? |
3254 | You are English, Sir?" |
3254 | You are Tyrolese? |
3254 | You are a Princess in disguise? |
3254 | You are a babee-- a good babee are n''t you? |
3254 | You are a married woman, living with your husband? |
3254 | You are a subject painter, too, I think? |
3254 | You are good to her?" |
3254 | You are leaving? |
3254 | You are n''t going to-- to-- hurt me, are you?'' |
3254 | You are n''t good, are you? |
3254 | You are not English? |
3254 | You are not married? |
3254 | You are really his brother? |
3254 | You are the charwoman employed at the house? |
3254 | You are the son of the owner? |
3254 | You are-- aren''t you?" |
3254 | You ask me to help you live in sin? |
3254 | You became devotedly attached to her, however? |
3254 | You been away? |
3254 | You ca n''t be-- you aren''t- happy, here? |
3254 | You ca n''t desert your post-- and let these villagers do what they like with us? |
3254 | You ca n''t have come back just to leave me again? |
3254 | You ca n''t help us, then? |
3254 | You ca n''t imagine I should ever be like that, Athene? |
3254 | You ca n''t tell me her address, I suppose? |
3254 | You call that ordinary? |
3254 | You can always tell me what I ought to ha''done, ca n''t yer? |
3254 | You can joke about it now?" |
3254 | You care----? |
3254 | You chaps that live over the hill, an''go home dead beat in the dark on a snowy night-- don''t ye fight your way every inch of it? |
3254 | You could n''t make an exception? |
3254 | You could read them first, you know? |
3254 | You desired, too, no doubt, to complete your design of taking this woman away? |
3254 | You did n''t expect me, did you? |
3254 | You did n''t feel the coat yourself? |
3254 | You did n''t have them on you at dinner? |
3254 | You did n''t want to come, did you? |
3254 | You did not know about that, Chris?" |
3254 | You do n''t believe I can earn as much as I want-- more than you have-- any time? |
3254 | You do n''t collect anything? |
3254 | You do n''t deny that the''ty''and the nought were so like the rest of the handwriting as to thoroughly deceive the cashier? |
3254 | You do n''t fish, I think?" |
3254 | You do n''t know? |
3254 | You do n''t let your women folk do just as they like? |
3254 | You do n''t mind my being beastly frank, do you? |
3254 | You do n''t mind that, I suppose? |
3254 | You do n''t mind, Daddy?" |
3254 | You do n''t really need to build just there, do you? |
3254 | You do n''t really think Ronald Dancy--? |
3254 | You do n''t recognise me now?" |
3254 | You do n''t say anything, Sir William? |
3254 | You do n''t seriously imagine that she would wish you to throw away your life for her? |
3254 | You do n''t stop her? |
3254 | You do n''t suggest that we could have helped the poor thing? |
3254 | You do n''t suggest that you were suffering under great excitement when you did that? |
3254 | You do n''t suppose I confine myself to the home paddocks, do you? |
3254 | You do n''t think he''ll attack of me with definition at this time in the mornin''?" |
3254 | You do n''t think the Rector-- you do n''t think your father would speak to Clare? |
3254 | You do n''t think we shall have it before to- night, do you? |
3254 | You do n''t trust me? |
3254 | You do n''t want me to die, Larry, do you? |
3254 | You do n''t want to hear me, then? |
3254 | You do n''t want to upset the young man in there, do you? |
3254 | You do not remember me? |
3254 | You do? |
3254 | You drive? |
3254 | You find that? |
3254 | You followed us?" |
3254 | You gave him three- quarters of a tumbler of rum-- how much honey?" |
3254 | You go to the opera much?" |
3254 | You goin''to ask''em to-- to-- anything? |
3254 | You goin''up to town? |
3254 | You going to take Irene? |
3254 | You going? |
3254 | You got anyone in the Army, miss?" |
3254 | You got that Friday''s laundry job? |
3254 | You had recovered sufficiently to go back to your work that afternoon? |
3254 | You haf been wounded? |
3254 | You have given him up? |
3254 | You have money, then?" |
3254 | You have n''t come to a decision, Mr. Wanklin? |
3254 | You have n''t finished dinner, have you? |
3254 | You have n''t got an uncle, have you? |
3254 | You have n''t seen it? |
3254 | You have n''t such a thing as a bulldog pup you could spare me, I suppose? |
3254 | You have not been to bed, I think? |
3254 | You have not tired of me, that am never the same? |
3254 | You haven''t-- so far? |
3254 | You hear the consequences of your victory, Chairman? |
3254 | You heard of our event at the Rectory? |
3254 | You heard what he said about Goole? |
3254 | You heard what your aunt said? |
3254 | You her brother?" |
3254 | You hope he caught it? |
3254 | You insist? |
3254 | You knew her husband? |
3254 | You knew that the clerk Davis was about to leave England--didn''t it occur to you when you altered this cheque that suspicion would fall on him? |
3254 | You knew that?" |
3254 | You knew, then, that he had been arrested? |
3254 | You know Barter?" |
3254 | You know Canon Bentley, I think? |
3254 | You know Mrs. Lees Noel, do n''t you? |
3254 | You know Vigil? |
3254 | You know about it?" |
3254 | You know all about Derek and Nedda, I suppose?" |
3254 | You know father as well as anyone, Topping; what do you think he''ll do now? |
3254 | You know he''s takin''this[ She makes a little motion towards her mouth] to make''i m sleep? |
3254 | You know her story, Cook? |
3254 | You know nothing of me-- do you?" |
3254 | You know of my attachment, I believe?" |
3254 | You know such a lot o''people, do n''t you? |
3254 | You know that Mr. Walter drew that cheque for nine pounds? |
3254 | You know that Stephen and I had a talk yesterday, I suppose?" |
3254 | You know the man I mean?" |
3254 | You know the old Bluebottles? |
3254 | You know the prisoner? |
3254 | You know there''s a claim for damages? |
3254 | You know there''s going to be another event at the Rectory?" |
3254 | You know what I mean? |
3254 | You know what a nice boy is, do n''t you? |
3254 | You know what it is like to wait? |
3254 | You know what they said of him out there?" |
3254 | You know what''s being said, of course? |
3254 | You know what''s in his mind? |
3254 | You know where Larry lives? |
3254 | You know, perhaps, that Miss Devorell has no money till I die?" |
3254 | You left your latch- key in the door? |
3254 | You listened to him, and what had he to say? |
3254 | You live in Town? |
3254 | You look all-- Wo n''t you eat your peach? |
3254 | You look dreadfully hot; have you been running? |
3254 | You look pale; are you not well? |
3254 | You love me? |
3254 | You love their feet on your necks, do n''t you? |
3254 | You may force a body; how can you force a soul? |
3254 | You may say that was vanity, but in a young girl-- and which of us is not vain, eh? |
3254 | You mean it? |
3254 | You mean she does n''t know?" |
3254 | You mean that he might have been, as one might say, beside himself? |
3254 | You mean that? |
3254 | You mean to-- to-- er-- to pawn them? |
3254 | You mean you''d have to recommend others? |
3254 | You mean your name, do n''t you? |
3254 | You might as well ask-- do I believe that I''m alive?" |
3254 | You mind your own business, will you?" |
3254 | You never believed they were going to hang you, did you? |
3254 | You never go to meet trouble, do you?" |
3254 | You ought n''t to get so excited, Tom; is your head bad, old man? |
3254 | You owe me three hundred pounds, you''ve owed it me for years, and you have the impudence to take this attitude with me, have you? |
3254 | You play Bridge, sir? |
3254 | You prefer that to an hotel? |
3254 | You quite understand, do n''t you? |
3254 | You received it from--? |
3254 | You refused to obey him? |
3254 | You remember Falder? |
3254 | You remember Irene? |
3254 | You remember my maid Annie, who married Roberts? |
3254 | You remember the country when it was very different to what it is now?" |
3254 | You remember, that old actor who gave you a Jeremiad? |
3254 | You said your brother was there; what''s his regiment? |
3254 | You saw a gent with me yesterday? |
3254 | You saw her just now? |
3254 | You saw nothing? |
3254 | You saw that case, I suppose, this morning, of the woman dying of starvation in Bethnal Green? |
3254 | You say all the cigarettes were scattered on the bed? |
3254 | You say he''s to consult''Dennis? |
3254 | You say now you never could do that, how was it, then, you came?" |
3254 | You say that you-- are engaged? |
3254 | You say that? |
3254 | You say the furnace men''s paid enough? |
3254 | You say the mother is on the streets; what evidence have you of that? |
3254 | You say you did n''t take it? |
3254 | You say you took this box? |
3254 | You say your married life is an unhappy one? |
3254 | You second that? |
3254 | You see the good in people, do n''t you? |
3254 | You see what I mean? |
3254 | You see, De Levis? |
3254 | You see, about men: Ought one to marry, or ought one to take a lover? |
3254 | You see, it''s not as if he were a stranger, is it?" |
3254 | You seen them lately?" |
3254 | You should come with us, eh? |
3254 | You tell me that my niece? |
3254 | You think a good deal of Uncle Eustace, do n''t you, Ann?" |
3254 | You think so-- you think so? |
3254 | You think so? |
3254 | You think so? |
3254 | You think so? |
3254 | You think the war is fought for the future; you are giving your lives for a better world, are n''t you? |
3254 | You think you can ride roughshod over everything? |
3254 | You took it out of spite? |
3254 | You took it to him, he says, three days ago; that is, on Monday, and received cash for it? |
3254 | You try me pretty high, do n''t you, forcing me to come here, and speak before this fellow? |
3254 | You understand-- the risk''s great?" |
3254 | You valet Mr-- Mr De Levis, I think? |
3254 | You want me to go to your brother, and quote Bums? |
3254 | You want me to trust you; why do n''t you trust me, Father? |
3254 | You want me to----? |
3254 | You want reason Mr. Harness? |
3254 | You wanted me? |
3254 | You wanted to see me? |
3254 | You went back there? |
3254 | You went to see them, did n''t you?" |
3254 | You were about to say something, I believe? |
3254 | You were at Eton and Oxford? |
3254 | You were going home anyway, were n''t you?" |
3254 | You were n''t quite were you? |
3254 | You were n''t really fond of him? |
3254 | You were n''t seen, you say? |
3254 | You were n''t up for anything in between? |
3254 | You were not aware that it was stolen? |
3254 | You what? |
3254 | You will breakfast? |
3254 | You will of course say:''If she did n''t really love him how could she ever have married him?'' |
3254 | You will stay and have some lunch? |
3254 | You will, wo n''t you?" |
3254 | You willin''to stand? |
3254 | You wo n''t come to my club? |
3254 | You wo n''t let them, will you?" |
3254 | You wo n''t swear to it? |
3254 | You wo n''t want this, will you? |
3254 | You wo n''t? |
3254 | You would have your sittings in the afternoons, perhaps? |
3254 | You would n''t advance me a hundred on my new story? |
3254 | You would n''t do me one of Nell on horseback?" |
3254 | You would n''t give me your opinion of her playing, I suppose?" |
3254 | You would n''t give me your opinion of her playing, I suppose?" |
3254 | You would n''t have noticed it, would you?" |
3254 | You would n''t let me come to you for a bit, till I could find my feet? |
3254 | You would n''t put your name to it? |
3254 | You would take your ant''s reason as the final test, would n''t you? |
3254 | You young man[ He speaks to ROLF] do you support your father''s trick this afternoon? |
3254 | You''d come back to me sooner than ruin him? |
3254 | You''ll be down soon?" |
3254 | You''ll be from college, perhaps?" |
3254 | You''ll be glad to have her back, wo n''t you? |
3254 | You''ll be goin''out?" |
3254 | You''ll come over to Newmarket with us on Wednesday? |
3254 | You''ll go riding, wo n''t you? |
3254 | You''ll listen to Sim Harness of the Union that''s treated you so fair; maybe you''ll listen to those men from London? |
3254 | You''ll say the same to me, wo n''t you? |
3254 | You''ll take it up from the other end, then, Inspector? |
3254 | You''re a Catholic, are n''t you? |
3254 | You''re a brave girl now? |
3254 | You''re aware, sir, of what the doctor said, sir? |
3254 | You''re back, then? |
3254 | You''re busy, of course? |
3254 | You''re going straight back to"The Watchfire"? |
3254 | You''re ill? |
3254 | You''re in the other camp?" |
3254 | You''re insured, I hope?'' |
3254 | You''re not a fisherman, I think? |
3254 | You''re not afraid of going, are you? |
3254 | You''re not feverish? |
3254 | You''re not going to give me up-- after all this? |
3254 | You''re not going, too, Miss Maud? |
3254 | You''re not in bed?" |
3254 | You''re not keeping anything from me, are you? |
3254 | You''re not off already?" |
3254 | You''re not well; need you go to the meeting at all? |
3254 | You''re not worrying for me? |
3254 | You''re quite sure you''re all right? |
3254 | You''re the owner here, I think? |
3254 | You''ve chosen my wife, then? |
3254 | You''ve found that out? |
3254 | You''ve got Irish blood in you-- um? |
3254 | You''ve got her address, have n''t you? |
3254 | You''ve got something to say about the youngsters, have n''t you?" |
3254 | You''ve never been here? |
3254 | You''ve no money, I suppose? |
3254 | You''ve not heard from the young man, I suppose, since he came out? |
3254 | You''ve searched thoroughly? |
3254 | You''ve seen it, I suppose?" |
3254 | You''ve seen the morning''s telegrams? |
3254 | You''ve shot no pheasants yet, Studdenham? |
3254 | You''ve what? |
3254 | You''ve-- WHAT? |
3254 | You, Dad? |
3254 | You- you wo n''t be seeing him again?" |
3254 | You-- don''t-- believe-- in-- barriers-- between the classes? |
3254 | You-- er-- I really do n''t know, I-- hadn''t contemplated-- You think you could manage if I-- if I went to bed? |
3254 | You-- what? |
3254 | You-- you are sure of that? |
3254 | You-- you have a grief, have you not?" |
3254 | You-- you''re sure you''ve everything you want? |
3254 | You-- you''ve had a man in your room?" |
3254 | You? |
3254 | You? |
3254 | You[ very nervously] see a good deal of her? |
3254 | Young Pillin told me--""Young Pillin? |
3254 | Your Society up a tree?" |
3254 | Your engagement with Dunning''s broken off, is n''t it? |
3254 | Your family is not an old one?" |
3254 | Your father in?" |
3254 | Your husband was not under the influence of liquor then? |
3254 | Your mistress said nothing? |
3254 | Your mother''ll give you...."But Emily broke in quietly:"Have you brought Irene?" |
3254 | Your mother''s not ill, is she?" |
3254 | Your mother-- she nice and well?" |
3254 | Your name is Robert Allow? |
3254 | Your name is Thomas Marlow? |
3254 | Your prescription in this case has not been too successful, has it?" |
3254 | Your reti----? |
3254 | Your room? |
3254 | Your sister at home?" |
3254 | Your son, if you have one, may be a pure altruist; who knows?" |
3254 | Your son, sir? |
3254 | Your what? |
3254 | Your wits were sufficiently keen for you to remember that? |
3254 | Yours is Larne, is n''t it? |
3254 | Yourself? |
3254 | [ A knock] Yes? |
3254 | [ A little distant]''Oo blacked the copper''s eye? |
3254 | [ A little impatiently] Did Falder come in while she was there? |
3254 | [ A little touched] Did you? |
3254 | [ A pause] And is Charles''s an improper name too? |
3254 | [ A pause] Is there any need for me to say more? |
3254 | [ A taciturn, alien, yellowish man, in a worn soft hat] What''s wise, Godleigh? |
3254 | [ A tall, fair soldier, of thirty] How d''you do? |
3254 | [ Abruptly] About being lonely? |
3254 | [ Abruptly] Do n''t you ever go racing, then? |
3254 | [ Absorbed in EDWARD] Why? |
3254 | [ Addressing MRS BUILDER] Need we go into this in your presence, ma''am? |
3254 | [ Advancing] Now, mother MRS. H. Well? |
3254 | [ Again giving him that look] Must I order? |
3254 | [ Again raising his hand] Always in the same rooms? |
3254 | [ Again slightly outraged by such precautions in his house] And you found it locked-- and took them from there to put under your pillow? |
3254 | [ Again] Mrs. Hillcrist---- MRS. H. Well? |
3254 | [ Aghast] But how can we? |
3254 | [ Aghast] Put no obstacle? |
3254 | [ Aghast] You''re not making terms? |
3254 | [ All ears and twinkle] Aw, what is it then? |
3254 | [ Almost choking, but mastering himself] Do you mean to say you''ve gone as far as that? |
3254 | [ Almost whispering] Where''s Freda? |
3254 | [ And as she shrinks still further back] what''s the matter? |
3254 | [ Angry, bewildered- in a low voice] What in God''s name is this nonsense? |
3254 | [ Answering this first assertion of rights with a sudden steeliness] Does he love you now? |
3254 | [ Appearing through curtain, Right] Sir? |
3254 | [ Approaching a table whereat sit an English traveller and his wife] Two coffee? |
3254 | [ Approaching her] Come, now; is n''t there anything you feel you''d like to say-- that might help to put matters straight? |
3254 | [ Arranging the flowers] Are n''t you going to the office this morning? |
3254 | [ As KEITH nods] What point? |
3254 | [ As he passes JARLAND]''Ow''s to base, old man? |
3254 | [ As if flicked on a raw spot] In my race, do you mean? |
3254 | [ As if he has not heard] Ruth? |
3254 | [ As if to herself] Is the Spring sentiment? |
3254 | [ As to himself] What am I to do? |
3254 | [ Aside to CANYNGE] Is it fair to Dancy not to let him know? |
3254 | [ Astonished] What for-- ma''am? |
3254 | [ At the sound of some one having entered the outer office] Who''s there? |
3254 | [ Attentively] About Chloe? |
3254 | [ Aware that he has confirmed some thought in her that he had no intention of confirming] What''s that? |
3254 | [ Awkward and expectant] Can I do anything for you? |
3254 | [ BEATRICE bends her head] Never loved me? |
3254 | [ Backing] Did I make use of the word, m''m? |
3254 | [ Baffled, but unconvinced] Do you mean that your love for her has been just what it might have been for a lady? |
3254 | [ Beckoning him out] Now tell me: ca n''t you settle down, Falder? |
3254 | [ Becoming conscious of the depths of feeling before him] I-- er-- are you attached to my son? |
3254 | [ Bewildered] Mei''Bubi-- Typhus-- aber Typhus? |
3254 | [ Bitterly] Was that all? |
3254 | [ Bitterly] What have I to do with this quarrel? |
3254 | [ Bitterly] Why not? |
3254 | [ Blank] Spun? |
3254 | [ Blankly] Rooshian? |
3254 | [ Blankly] Why not? |
3254 | [ Brightening] Have you? |
3254 | [ Brutally] Can a woman like that love? |
3254 | [ Brutally] How drunk were you? |
3254 | [ Bursting into voice] Do you keep dogs? |
3254 | [ Burying his face in the carnations] I say-- these are jolly, are n''t they? |
3254 | [ But SEELCHEN shakes her head] What then do you want? |
3254 | [ CLARE just moves her shoulders] Have you done what I suggested? |
3254 | [ CLARE looks at him] Will you answer a straight question? |
3254 | [ CLARE nods] Something rather awful must have happened? |
3254 | [ COKESON nods] And she saw him, and went away? |
3254 | [ Catching sight of him- softly] Is Uncle Hubert going to the front to- day? |
3254 | [ Catching sight of the WAITER appearing in the doorway] Waiter; where to h- ll is that glass of beer? |
3254 | [ Cheerfully] Miss Stokes, would you kindly tell Lord William I''m here from the Press, and would like to speak to him? |
3254 | [ Cheerfully] Queer sort of accident, was n''t it? |
3254 | [ Clasping her hands on her breast; under her breath] Me? |
3254 | [ Clearing his throat] I understand, then, that you do not wish to offer any explanation? |
3254 | [ Clears his throat] I''ve often wanted to ask: What do they pay you-- if it''s not indelicate? |
3254 | [ Closing the door] What is it? |
3254 | [ Closing the door] What is it? |
3254 | [ Coldly] What has happened, exactly? |
3254 | [ Concerned] You''ve not got heart disease? |
3254 | [ Confidentially] Bit dyngerous,''yn''t it? |
3254 | [ Contemplating him] The incident''s closed; no ill- feeling, I hope? |
3254 | [ Controlling himself with an effort] Now, Athene, what''s this? |
3254 | [ Crossing to his wife] What have they been saying? |
3254 | [ Crossing to the bell] Shall I tell you my definition of a gentleman? |
3254 | [ DANCY shakes his head] Why not? |
3254 | [ DE LEVIS nods] Any noise- anything outside- anything suspicious anywhere? |
3254 | [ Deliciously limp] Had I better put in the duty to your neighbour if there is n''t a victory soon? |
3254 | [ Depositing bundle outside, and heaving BABY] May I? |
3254 | [ Descending and beckoning to the POLICEMAN]''Sie wollen den Herrn accusiren''? |
3254 | [ Desolately] Well? |
3254 | [ Despairingly] What is it to you? |
3254 | [ Dipping a biscuit in the tea] Now, then? |
3254 | [ Disappointed] I see-- not draw attention to your property in the present excited state of public feeling? |
3254 | [ Discreetly] would you care to see the bomb, my lady? |
3254 | [ Doubtfully] Mr Jacob Twisden? |
3254 | [ Drawing a little closer] Three weeks? |
3254 | [ Drawing her hair away] Well? |
3254 | [ Drawing himself up] Sir? |
3254 | [ Drawing up a chair and sitting] This, man, your-- your husband, before he came here the night before last-- how long since you saw him? |
3254 | [ Drily] Let me see, which of us will have to put up with her shortcomings-- Johnny or I? |
3254 | [ Dropping her hands] If I ca n''t believe in you, who can? |
3254 | [ Dropping his hand] Ca n''t you make it up? |
3254 | [ Dubious] Wot abaht''em? |
3254 | [ Dubiously] Is it? |
3254 | [ Eagerly, from his perch] What was that? |
3254 | [ Eagerly] Yes? |
3254 | [ Embarrassed] Well, Builder? |
3254 | [ Entering from the house] Mrs. Burlacombe, I ca n''t think where I''ve put my book on St. Francis-- the large, squarish pale- blue one? |
3254 | [ Entering] Yes, sir? |
3254 | [ Extending a penny] What''s that you''re sayin''? |
3254 | [ Eyeing him] Is it likely? |
3254 | [ Eyeing them] D''you want-- Mrs Challenger? |
3254 | [ FAITH looks up at him, hypnotized by his determination] Now, mother, I''ve come down at your request to discuss this; are you ready to keep her? |
3254 | [ FREDA moves a few steps towards her father] When did you start this? |
3254 | [ Facing MRS. HILLCRIST] That''s a charitable thing to say, is n''t it? |
3254 | [ Faintly] Behind? |
3254 | [ Faintly] How d''you do? |
3254 | [ Fastening the roses] And how are you, Freda? |
3254 | [ Fiercely] Are you paid to smile at me? |
3254 | [ Fiercely] But what''s the good-- when there''s nothing before you?--Do I look ill? |
3254 | [ Filling his sponge] Question is: How far are you to give rein to your disposition? |
3254 | [ Fixing her as though he suspected her of banter] Will she be back soon? |
3254 | [ Fixing him] Have you seen her, Johnny? |
3254 | [ Floundering in these waters deeper than he had bargained for] I say-- about things having beginnings-- did you mean anything? |
3254 | [ Fluttering, but restraining herself lest he should see] But, Bill, why must you spend more than your allowance? |
3254 | [ Forcing his voice] Did you get a run, Ronny? |
3254 | [ Frigidly] Is this the natural place for me to find my son''s wife? |
3254 | [ Frigidly] Why not? |
3254 | [ From the crowd] What''s''is nyme? |
3254 | [ From under the table] Poulder, are you virtuous? |
3254 | [ Gazing at her] Have you had any hand in this? |
3254 | [ Genially] Can you give me another five minutes, Bill? |
3254 | [ Gentle and embarrassed] Run? |
3254 | [ Gently] Well, Jim? |
3254 | [ Giving him a match] D''you mind writing in here this morning, Dad? |
3254 | [ Giving his hand to MALISE] How are you? |
3254 | [ Glancing at the door] Fun you call it? |
3254 | [ Gloomily] What about the other eleven? |
3254 | [ Going over and standing behind her son''s chair] Anything wrong, darling? |
3254 | [ Going to the window] What are you doing here? |
3254 | [ Going up to CLARE, who has recovered all her self- control] Will you come outside and speak to me? |
3254 | [ Going up to her] Pleased with yourself to- night? |
3254 | [ Grimly] Humour? |
3254 | [ HORNBLOWER] Eight thousand did you say, sir? |
3254 | [ HORNBLOWER] Three thousand five hundred? |
3254 | [ Half conscious of being led on] Are you from Paris? |
3254 | [ Half conscious of him] What? |
3254 | [ Half to himself] After your life, who can believe---? |
3254 | [ Half to the STRANGER and half to DAWKER] Do you realise that an imputation of that kind may be ground for a criminal libel action? |
3254 | [ Handling coffee- pot, to his wife] More? |
3254 | [ Hastily] Yes, quite-- and what prevented you? |
3254 | [ Hastily] You smoke, Mr. MALISE? |
3254 | [ He applies the spy- glasses] And then? |
3254 | [ He checks himself] Have men been brutes? |
3254 | [ He comes forward to the table] Shall I tell you why I favour the gov''nor? |
3254 | [ He examines the drawing] Mrs Herringhame, you said? |
3254 | [ He gets up] What is it that gets loose when you begin a fight, and makes you what you think you''re not? |
3254 | [ He gives and she accepts a kiss] Better? |
3254 | [ He goes up to FREDA holding out his gloved right hand] Button that for me, Freda, would you? |
3254 | [ He grins] They''ll make you wonderfully comfortable, wo n''t you, major domo? |
3254 | [ He has a pipe in his hand and wears a Norfolk jacket] Fond of flowers? |
3254 | [ He laughs] How did you stand them? |
3254 | [ He looks at her, as if calculating] What do you say to looking up Athene? |
3254 | [ He looks round from face to face] Am I to take it that there is a doubt in your minds, gentlemen? |
3254 | [ He looks up] What''s the matter now? |
3254 | [ He nods] Ca n''t we have more than three days at the sea? |
3254 | [ He nods] Where? |
3254 | [ He opens a tool- bag] Wot dyer think I''ve got yer? |
3254 | [ He puts his flute down on a chair against the far wall] Where are the others? |
3254 | [ He scans her with increased curiosity] You wish something, Madame? |
3254 | [ He screws himself round so as to command both HILLCRIST and HORNBLOWER] May I have yours, sir? |
3254 | [ He shakes his head] Is that all they make here with their sadness? |
3254 | [ He starts at RUTH, who is standing absolutely still; his face and hands twitch and quiver as the truth dawns on him] What is it? |
3254 | [ He takes a short turn up the room] What''s to be done about Athene? |
3254 | [ He takes the check- book and cons the counterfoils] What''s this ninety? |
3254 | [ He touches the other chair] May I? |
3254 | [ He turns to the red- cheeked YOUTH] What do you opine, sir? |
3254 | [ He utters a throaty laugh]''Ave yer got that? |
3254 | [ Her eyes fixed on TWISDEN] Yes? |
3254 | [ Hesitating] Is it bad enough for me to go? |
3254 | [ Hesitating] Tell me, did you love the prisoner very much? |
3254 | [ His eye grows bald] Who plays the goat? |
3254 | [ His eye wanders] Where''s Mr Flatway? |
3254 | [ His eyes roll philosophically] Did you ever read''Aigel? |
3254 | [ His face, above her head, is contorted for a moment, then hardens into a mask] Well, what shall we do? |
3254 | [ Holding it out to him] Take it, and drop me out-- won''t you? |
3254 | [ Holding up his hand for silence] Were you out of the room again after you went in? |
3254 | [ Holding up his hand] My partner means, did you press him for this settlement? |
3254 | [ Holding up the keys] Larry would n''t have given me these, would he, if he had n''t trusted me? |
3254 | [ Holding up the saw] Seen this, Miller? |
3254 | [ Hurrying forward] What is it? |
3254 | [ Icily] Well? |
3254 | [ Ignoring it] I thought you said you did n''t keep your word when it suited you to break it? |
3254 | [ Immovable] No, ma''am, Would you like some eau de Cologne on your forehead? |
3254 | [ Impassively] Yes, sir? |
3254 | [ Impatiently] Well, what''s the good of it? |
3254 | [ In a considerate voice] When you left him on the morning of Friday the 7th you would not say that he was out of his mind, I suppose? |
3254 | [ In a deep voice] The gentleman wishes me? |
3254 | [ In a hard, dry voice] What did you do then? |
3254 | [ In a loud whisper] Shall I lend him my toffee? |
3254 | [ In a low voice to FAITH] Will you give me your word to stay here, if I make them keep you? |
3254 | [ In a low voice] Are you going to leave him up there with the girl and that inflammatory literature, all night? |
3254 | [ In a low voice] Have n''t you any self- respect? |
3254 | [ In a low voice] Well? |
3254 | [ In a lull] How did it eventuate? |
3254 | [ In a tiny voice] Would you? |
3254 | [ In a twice sharpened by pain] Why, in the name of mercy, come here to tell me that? |
3254 | [ In a voice changed by sudden apprehension] What do you mean by coming here in this state? |
3254 | [ In a whisper] What is it? |
3254 | [ In a whisper] Who are you, please? |
3254 | [ In terror] Who''s that? |
3254 | [ Ineffably] What''s that you give me? |
3254 | [ Intently] D''you realise that I''ve supported you in luxury and comfort? |
3254 | [ Interrogatively] A penny, is it? |
3254 | [ JAMES deigns no reply] What shall we do? |
3254 | [ JOHNNY shakes his head] Mary? |
3254 | [ Jumping up] How d''you mean? |
3254 | [ Just as he is vanishing-- softly] Enemy? |
3254 | [ KATHERINE nods] But not grandfather? |
3254 | [ KATHERINE shakes her head] Not? |
3254 | [ KATHERINE shudders] Will they hurt him for not taking our side? |
3254 | [ LADY CHESHIRE bows her head] Well, then? |
3254 | [ Leaning against him] You would n''t easily believe things against me, would you? |
3254 | [ Leaning against the window- sill, looking at her attentively] I say, what nationality are you? |
3254 | [ Leaning out] I sy-- you''yn''t tykin''the body, are yer? |
3254 | [ Leaning through window] Hello, Tam--''ow''s t''base, old man? |
3254 | [ Leaning towards him] Well now-- see, ni- ice boy-- you haf never been in a hole, haf you? |
3254 | [ Leaping over the stile]''Oo are you, Pompey? |
3254 | [ Lifting his eyebrows] Mr De Levis presses the matter? |
3254 | [ Lifting the bundle]''Dies ist nicht Ihr Gepack''--pag? |
3254 | [ Limping to the window-- doubtfully] I say, how did you how did you get into this? |
3254 | [ Listens] New constable? |
3254 | [ Looking at HILLCRIST] For nine thousand five hundred? |
3254 | [ Looking at her, unsmiling] So you want to be my mistress, do you? |
3254 | [ Looking at her] Do n''t you feel well? |
3254 | [ Looking at him over his spectacles] How''s your health? |
3254 | [ Looking at him sharply] Is your wife back? |
3254 | [ Looking at him] Do you know that I have to repeat everything to you nowadays? |
3254 | [ Looking at the door in doubt] By the wayhe''d no means of tracing you? |
3254 | [ Looking back along the tow- path] What''ll he be like, I wonder? |
3254 | [ Looking back at his cell] How can I help it, sir? |
3254 | [ Looking from face to face with a dubious and rather quizzical expression] Who? |
3254 | [ Looking round] Vill nobody dake ze Bub''? |
3254 | [ Looking suddenly at him] It is true that he does n''t? |
3254 | [ Looking up into his face] But you will be kind? |
3254 | [ Looking] What''s it for? |
3254 | [ Looks at HARRIS] Am I the right man? |
3254 | [ MALISE laughs] What is your income, Kenneth? |
3254 | [ MALISE nods] But that does n''t mean that you wo n''t have your income, does it? |
3254 | [ MALISE stares at her] Am I anything to you but just prettiness? |
3254 | [ MARY nods] Geof? |
3254 | [ MORE nods] May I stay a little, too? |
3254 | [ MORE shakes his head] Why? |
3254 | [ Making a volte face towards the table] Miss? |
3254 | [ Making time] Mummy, when is Uncle Hubert coming back? |
3254 | [ Mocking] With what wilt thou keep me? |
3254 | [ Mockingly] And do n''t you want one of the spaniel pups? |
3254 | [ More resolutely] Do you expect me to sanction such a mad idea as a marriage? |
3254 | [ Moving his hand to put down old emotion] What else have you that connects you with her? |
3254 | [ Moving towards the door, Left; to the CONSTABLE] Who''s that out there? |
3254 | [ Mrs. H. If you had a son tricked into marrying such a woman, would you wish to remain ignorant of it?] |
3254 | [ Musing] It''s a funny world,''yn''t it? |
3254 | [ Nervously] What have you been doing with yourself? |
3254 | [ Nodding towards the billiard- room] Are those fellows still in there, Colford? |
3254 | [ Nodding; then looking at him with admiration] Are you that Herr Lamond who has climbed all our little mountains this year? |
3254 | [ Nodding] Are you glad? |
3254 | [ Not lowering the paper] Well? |
3254 | [ Not noticing] Who''s that next him, looking up here? |
3254 | [ Not sitting] Have ye got gout? |
3254 | [ On his guard again] Did n''t they find him a place when his time was up? |
3254 | [ Opening the door an inch] Yes? |
3254 | [ Opening the door] No? |
3254 | [ Outside] Who''s that? |
3254 | [ Palpably astonished] Athene? |
3254 | [ Passing his hand over his hair in travesty]"Is it a dream? |
3254 | [ Passing on towards the drawing- room] Your father coming up to- night? |
3254 | [ Passionately] And what about me? |
3254 | [ Patting her arm] My dear, you do n''t understand young fellows, how should you? |
3254 | [ Patting her shoulder] How old are you? |
3254 | [ Patting his wife''s arm] Hardly the point, is it? |
3254 | [ Pause] That you, Mr Editor? |
3254 | [ Pause] The"Comet"? |
3254 | [ Pinning the roses] D''you know if Mr. Bill''s come? |
3254 | [ Placing his plaid and rucksack on the window bench] Can I sleep here? |
3254 | [ Plaintively] Are you really going? |
3254 | [ Pocketing his pen] Coming with me to the British Museum? |
3254 | [ Pointing into the cell] Not enough to do, eh? |
3254 | [ Pointing to ANNE, and addressing JAMES] Wot is this one, anywy? |
3254 | [ Pointing to HERRINGHAME] Is this the young man? |
3254 | [ Pointing to the bomb] Do you really think there''s something in this? |
3254 | [ Pointing to the litter of papers] Why do n''t we live, instead of writing of it? |
3254 | [ Pointing to the typewriter] D''you want this''ere, too? |
3254 | [ Pouring out the coffee] Ca n''t you suggest any way of making Athene see reason? |
3254 | [ Pressing his hand to her breast and looking into his face] Do you know what Margaret called you? |
3254 | [ Pricking his ears] What? |
3254 | [ Producing a paper from his pocket]''Ave one o''my gum drops? |
3254 | [ Pushing her back from him, whether at the sound of the door or of a still small voice] What am I doing? |
3254 | [ Putting down fiddle] Voos? |
3254 | [ Putting down his cider- mug empty] Yure tongue du watter, do n''t it, Mr. Godleigh? |
3254 | [ Putting her hands on LARRY''s breast] What does it mean? |
3254 | [ Putting his arms round WANDA, who is standing motionless with her eyes fixed on him] Together, Keith? |
3254 | [ Puzzled] How do you mean? |
3254 | [ Puzzled] In-- That? |
3254 | [ Puzzled] You accuse Davis, then? |
3254 | [ Quickly] And are you still in love with her? |
3254 | [ Quietly] Are you married to her? |
3254 | [ Quietly] Kenneth, do you care for me? |
3254 | [ Quietly] Where are you going, Falder? |
3254 | [ Quietly] You ask me to help you live in secret with another man? |
3254 | [ Quizzical] Not go up? |
3254 | [ RUTH nods] What was his manner then? |
3254 | [ Raising his clenched fist] What in God''s name is he about? |
3254 | [ Raising his hands]''Was zu thun''? |
3254 | [ Rapping his desk] Does"funny"mean mad? |
3254 | [ Rather dangerously] Where, please? |
3254 | [ Re- appearing] Sir? |
3254 | [ Re- appearing] Sir? |
3254 | [ Re- appearing] Sir? |
3254 | [ Re- appearing] Sir? |
3254 | [ Re- appearing] Sir? |
3254 | [ Re- entering] Where''s Mrs. Dedmond? |
3254 | [ Reading the label] Where was it? |
3254 | [ Receiving the card- with a faint smile] What do you want to see me about, sir? |
3254 | [ Reciting with unction]"Little lamb who myde thee? |
3254 | [ Recoiling] But, Dot, what are we really going to have for the baby? |
3254 | [ Recovering her pride] What are you going to do, then? |
3254 | [ Regarding her with reluctant admiration] Why, what''s the matter with you? |
3254 | [ Relighting his pipe and preparing his materials] What do you think of things, Mr Bly? |
3254 | [ Remonstrant] If she had n''t had it how could she have smothered it? |
3254 | [ Reopening the door] Will you come in, please? |
3254 | [ Repeating her] 83 Mullingar Street? |
3254 | [ Resting] My daughter givin''satisfaction, I hope? |
3254 | [ Returning to her mocking] Quite got over it? |
3254 | [ Returning] Madame feels the''eat? |
3254 | [ Returning] Well? |
3254 | [ Rises] Now what''s behind this, Maud? |
3254 | [ Rising hastily] Have you ever caught him in that dishevelled state before? |
3254 | [ Rising, with his back to the fire, and staring at his brother] What is it, man? |
3254 | [ Rising; with eyes turning here and there] Must I? |
3254 | [ Rising] Did you have your lunch before going back? |
3254 | [ Roused from his abstraction] Eh? |
3254 | [ STEEL hands them over] Now, that ends it, d''you see? |
3254 | [ Savagely] What makes you bait me this morning of all mornings? |
3254 | [ Scarcely moving his lips] M''lady? |
3254 | [ Scared] What do you want with me? |
3254 | [ Scribbling and muttering]"The idea, of brotherhood--"D''you mind my saying that? |
3254 | [ Scrutinizing the widely-- grinning THOM] Where? |
3254 | [ Seeing that he has not taken in her words] Mr. Strangway-- yu''m feelin''giddy? |
3254 | [ Seizing her arm] D''you imagine they''ll let you off, out there-- you with your face? |
3254 | [ Seriously] May I say that you designed the dinner to soften the tension, at this crisis? |
3254 | [ Shakes her head at him-- then to GEORGE] Will you go, please? |
3254 | [ Shaking hands] How d''you do, sir? |
3254 | [ Shaking his arm free-- to the crowd] Well, what do you want? |
3254 | [ Shaking his head] Are you ready to go away at any time? |
3254 | [ Sharply] Are you suggesting that he was insane? |
3254 | [ Sharply] Are you sure there was nobody in the room already? |
3254 | [ Sharply] Do you mean that? |
3254 | [ Sharply] How long have they been here, Jarvis? |
3254 | [ Sharply] In what sense do you use that word? |
3254 | [ Sharply] Is there another door to that room? |
3254 | [ She buries her chin in her hands, wide her elbows on her knees] And she said in a sort of fierce way:"What do you want?" |
3254 | [ She gets under the table] Do I show? |
3254 | [ She gives a little snarl] Do you know what I was thinking when you came up to me? |
3254 | [ She has put her nose into some roses in a bowl on a big stand close to the window] Do n''t they smell lovely? |
3254 | [ She has taken a little plain cigarette case from her dress] Would you mind if I smoked? |
3254 | [ She points out unto the moonlight] What do we get out of life? |
3254 | [ She shakes her head] What have I got to make terms with? |
3254 | [ She takes it from him] Sure yu''m not feelin''yer''ead? |
3254 | [ She waits] Yes? |
3254 | [ Shortly] You think so? |
3254 | [ Shrinking] I trust the Rector''s not suffering so much this morning? |
3254 | [ Shuddering] Shall I one day dance like that? |
3254 | [ Shutting OLIVE''s door, and going up to her] What is it, Nurse? |
3254 | [ Signing towards the window] Shall I leave the sunset, sir? |
3254 | [ Sitting on the arm of the sofa and caressing her] Feel better, dear? |
3254 | [ Sizing up his social standing] Mr Gilman? |
3254 | [ Skidding a little, and regarding the four immovables once more] I never see such pytient men? |
3254 | [ Smiling] That''s not your fault, is it? |
3254 | [ Snatching it and reading]"Patrick Walenn"--Was that his name? |
3254 | [ Softly] How have you been? |
3254 | [ Softly] How were you wounded, ni- ice boy? |
3254 | [ Softly] Jim, you wo n''t go fightin''in the sun, with the birds all callin''? |
3254 | [ Softly] Wo n''t you tell me? |
3254 | [ Sotto voce] Any wine? |
3254 | [ Stammering] I? |
3254 | [ Stammering] You-- you been down there to- day? |
3254 | [ Standing up] Did you open the window, sir, or was it open when you first came in? |
3254 | [ Standing up] Now, look here, Chloe, what''s behind this? |
3254 | [ Staring at her, rather angrily] Is it a whistling matter? |
3254 | [ Staring at her, then dropping his glance] Camille? |
3254 | [ Staring at her] News-- what? |
3254 | [ Staring at her] What''s come to you? |
3254 | [ Staring at her] You wo n''t go to her? |
3254 | [ Staring at her] You would-- against my wishes? |
3254 | [ Staring at him] How can you do it? |
3254 | [ Staring at him] Why? |
3254 | [ Staring at him] You laughed? |
3254 | [ Staring at his face] Who? |
3254 | [ Staring down at her] What do you mean-- Court? |
3254 | [ Staring hard into her face that is quivering and smiling] You mean it? |
3254 | [ Staring in front of her] Is it very awful in that world, Dodo? |
3254 | [ Staring] Are you ill? |
3254 | [ Starting] What did you say? |
3254 | [ Startled] Yes? |
3254 | [ Stealing another look] Have you any typewriting I could do? |
3254 | [ Still mocking] Then what hast thou here that shall keep me? |
3254 | [ Still on the fender] What do you say, Dad? |
3254 | [ Stopping before JAMES] You''yn''t one, I suppose? |
3254 | [ Stopping] Mr. Wooder? |
3254 | [ Straightening herself] What sort of a run, Ronny? |
3254 | [ Straying round her mother] Has n''t Daddy come? |
3254 | [ Straying to the window] Mrs. Lemmy, what''s the moon? |
3254 | [ Struck] In Hyde Park? |
3254 | [ Struggling between resentment and sympathy] Why do you come to me? |
3254 | [ Stunned] Is that true? |
3254 | [ Suddenly looking at him] You do n''t want this quarrel with the Hillcrists to go on, do you, Rolf? |
3254 | [ Suddenly looking up] Mr Ricardos, was it Captain Dancy? |
3254 | [ Suddenly serious] I say, Nell, how am I to tell what this fellow felt when he left that bomb here? |
3254 | [ Suddenly, to the YOUNG MAN] Who are you? |
3254 | [ Suddenly] But, I say, what would any of us have done if we''d been in his shoes? |
3254 | [ Suddenly] D''you think I''m pretty? |
3254 | [ Suddenly] Do you think we make show enough, sir? |
3254 | [ Suddenly] Eh? |
3254 | [ Suddenly] How can I, Keith? |
3254 | [ Suddenly] If you love him, what will it be like for you, knowing you''ve ruined him? |
3254 | [ Suddenly] It must be dull for poor Freda working in there with all this fun going on? |
3254 | [ Suddenly] My name''s Anne; what''s yours? |
3254 | [ Suddenly] Why do you go on about me so? |
3254 | [ Suddenly] Wot is''er voo of life? |
3254 | [ Suddenly] You have n''t been doing that, father? |
3254 | [ Surprised] Ca n''t I what? |
3254 | [ Surprised] How''s that? |
3254 | [ Surprised] What? |
3254 | [ Sweetening her eyes] A cutlet soubise? |
3254 | [ Switching of on a different line of thought] Are you very busy this morning? |
3254 | [ Switching off] James, do you think there''s going to be a bloody revolution? |
3254 | [ TO LORD WILLIAM, With his eyes still held On LADY WILLIAM-- mysteriously] Wiv lydies present? |
3254 | [ TO MORE] And you mean to charge the windmill? |
3254 | [ TO SIR WILLIAM] YOU tell me that my daughter''s in the position of that girl owing to your son? |
3254 | [ Taken aback] Like Lord William? |
3254 | [ Taken aback] Where have they gone? |
3254 | [ Taking out her cigarette case] I suppose I must n''t smoke, Mr Graviter? |
3254 | [ Taking out his note- book] Could I have a word with you on the crisis, before dinner, Lord William? |
3254 | [ Taking the cheque- book] July 7th? |
3254 | [ Taking the client''s chair, to the left of the table] Mr Twisden, I believe? |
3254 | [ Taking up his hat] Can I trust you? |
3254 | [ Taking up his note- book, and becoming, again his professional self] Yes, Mrs. Lemmy? |
3254 | [ Taking up the decanter] Have some? |
3254 | [ Taking up the flower which is lying on the table] May I have this flower? |
3254 | [ Telephoning, and getting a reply, looks round at TWISDEN] Yes? |
3254 | [ Telephoning] Can Sir Frederic spare Mr Twisden a few minutes now if he comes round? |
3254 | [ Telephoning] What''s his address? |
3254 | [ Terribly moved] Do you understand what this means? |
3254 | [ The GIRL gives him another quick look] I say, is it as bad as they make out? |
3254 | [ The big man''s figure appears out of the shadow of the barn] That yu, zurr? |
3254 | [ The sound of cannoning billiard balls is heard] Who''s that knocking the balls about? |
3254 | [ The strop held out] Are you married to this-- this--? |
3254 | [ Then at some sound he looks round uneasily and draws away from her] Are n''t you glad to see me? |
3254 | [ Then seeing FREDA standing so uncertainly by the stairs] Do you want me, Freda? |
3254 | [ Then suddenly] From the big world you will remember? |
3254 | [ Then with a brutality born of nerves suddenly ruffled] Have you committed a murder that you stand there like a fish? |
3254 | [ Then with a sudden change to a sort of sierra gravity] Can you? |
3254 | [ Then, after a little pause] Ai n''t he to be put a stop to? |
3254 | [ Then, after a silence] Where''s the girl? |
3254 | [ There is something of outrage in his tone and glance, as who should say:"In my house?"] |
3254 | [ Timidly] Could n''t you stop this quarrel; father? |
3254 | [ To BARNABAs] Have you actual proof? |
3254 | [ To BURLACOMBE] You''ve seen him, then? |
3254 | [ To CLARE] Do you wish me to go? |
3254 | [ To CLYST, who has taken out his paper again] Where''d yu get thiccy paper? |
3254 | [ To FAITH] Are you ready? |
3254 | [ To FAITH] Have you thought of anything to do, if you leave here? |
3254 | [ To FALDER sharply] Did you know that Mr. Walter How had the cheque- book till after Davis had sailed? |
3254 | [ To FALDER] You admit altering this cheque? |
3254 | [ To FELLOWS at the door] Are the Jackmans still in the house? |
3254 | [ To FREDA] Is that true? |
3254 | [ To FREDA] You hear the handsome offer that''s been made you? |
3254 | [ To FRUST who as coming down] Well, sir? |
3254 | [ To GRAVITER] Well? |
3254 | [ To Guy] When do you expect my daughter in? |
3254 | [ To HARRIS] Now then, what is it? |
3254 | [ To HORNBLOWER] Would you like to glance at this book, sir? |
3254 | [ To JOAN who has opened the door] Looking for John? |
3254 | [ To KEITH] Where did you leave the old man? |
3254 | [ To LITTLE AIDA] Do you like me? |
3254 | [ To LITTLE AIDA] Have you ever seen a bomb? |
3254 | [ To MARY] Where''s your mother? |
3254 | [ To MAUD] How de do? |
3254 | [ To MRS. HILLCRIST] How can you be so vile? |
3254 | [ To OLIVE] What shall I bring you back, chick? |
3254 | [ To ROLF] Come to see us turned out? |
3254 | [ To ROLF] Well? |
3254 | [ To RUTH, who is staring in the direction in which FALDER has disappeared] Do you understand, your name will not be mentioned? |
3254 | [ To RUTH] You see the thing plainly, do n''t you? |
3254 | [ To SECOND STRANGE] You knew her personally? |
3254 | [ To THE PRESS] You defy me? |
3254 | [ To THE PRESS]''Yn''t that true, speakin''as a man? |
3254 | [ To WINSOR] I understand there''s a lady in the room on this side[ pointing Left] and a gentleman on this[ pointing Right] Were they in their rooms? |
3254 | [ To WINSOR] Yes, sir? |
3254 | [ To her husband in a low voice] Is it right to force them? |
3254 | [ To his daughters, genially] Rehearsin''? |
3254 | [ To his disappearing form] Do you think you ought, John? |
3254 | [ To his friend MR. SPICER] A thumpin''price? |
3254 | [ To his wife, in an Oxford voice] Sugar? |
3254 | [ To the LITTLE MAN] I judge you go in for brotherhood? |
3254 | [ To the LITTLE MAN] What is your nationality, sir? |
3254 | [ To the YOUNG MAN standing there aghast] What''s this? |
3254 | [ To the YOUNG MAN] It''s a lie, is n''t it? |
3254 | [ To the frightened WOMAN]''Warum haben Sie einen Buben mit Typhus mit ausgebracht''? |
3254 | [ Touching his hat] Seein''you''ve missed your train, m''m, shall I wait, and take you''ome again? |
3254 | [ Touching one of the orchis] What''s the name of this one? |
3254 | [ Triumphantly] Ye hear that? |
3254 | [ Tuning his fiddle] Wot''ll yer''ave, little Aida? |
3254 | [ Turning back to them] Why do you tell me that lie? |
3254 | [ Turning his face towards the window] What''s that? |
3254 | [ Turning his head a little] Well, Larry, what is it? |
3254 | [ Turning sharply] Hate? |
3254 | [ Turning to him suddenly with the cheque held out] You know this cheque, Falder? |
3254 | [ Turning to him suddenly] Ronny-- you-- didn''t? |
3254 | [ Turning to the window] Did you see the sunset? |
3254 | [ Turning-- excited] Wot''d I tell yer, old lydy? |
3254 | [ Turning-- startled] Who''s that? |
3254 | [ Unconscious] Will you take a letter for me? |
3254 | [ Uneasy] Are you related to the party? |
3254 | [ Uneasy] Mrs. Dedmond I must apologize, but you-- you hardly gave us an alternative, did you? |
3254 | [ Unmoved] Shall I send young Dunning, Sir William? |
3254 | [ Utterly taken aback] Why come here and tell me this? |
3254 | [ Very blank] Nothing to do with property, I hope? |
3254 | [ Very low] There are other things to be got, are n''t there? |
3254 | [ Very red from repression] These rooms are not yours, are they? |
3254 | [ Very still] But do you think it''s dignified, John? |
3254 | [ WOODER salutes, and goes out] Let''s see, he''s not married? |
3254 | [ Waiting for the door to close] You know how that came on him? |
3254 | [ Waking] Where wouldst thou go? |
3254 | [ Waving the paper] Will y''give me a drink for this, Mr. Godleigh? |
3254 | [ Whispering] What is it? |
3254 | [ Who has risen and is shifting about as though dodging a stream of lava] We must n''t be violent, must we? |
3254 | [ Why could n''t he choose some day when we''d gone? |
3254 | [ Wide another sharp look at him] D''you expect your wife soon? |
3254 | [ Wistfully] Do n''t you believe in human nature? |
3254 | [ With a certain finality] Now, sir, what time did you come up? |
3254 | [ With a faint smile] Not very glorious, is it? |
3254 | [ With a glance at ROSE] Can we have this room for the mouldy rehearsal, Mother? |
3254 | [ With a laugh] You''re a distrustful little soul; are n''t you? |
3254 | [ With a little grunt] You are sure of that? |
3254 | [ With a little smile] Did n''t you like it? |
3254 | [ With a little sound of sympathy] What are you-- thirty- five? |
3254 | [ With a pounce] Did you happen to look under his bed? |
3254 | [ With a queer little smile] Will staying here help them to do that? |
3254 | [ With a shrug] What made you choose that archway? |
3254 | [ With a silencing gesture] At the same, time-- What made you forget yourself? |
3254 | [ With a slight bow] Your husband, Mrs Dancy? |
3254 | [ With a smile] Yes, Mercy; and what is a Christian? |
3254 | [ With a strange smile-- to the girl] Shall we, Wanda? |
3254 | [ With a sudden change of voice] What was the matter with you last night? |
3254 | [ With a sudden warm impulse] What is it, Freda? |
3254 | [ With a supple movement slipping away from him] They? |
3254 | [ With an ironic bow] If your lordship thinks I could have brought out the full facts in any other way? |
3254 | [ With an irritated smile] Will you tell the jury what it was? |
3254 | [ With corrective severity] But did''e''it''i m with the stick? |
3254 | [ With curiosity] Had he any set plan? |
3254 | [ With faint amusement] Ring the bell- would you, Miller? |
3254 | [ With fearful curiosity] Why, what happened then? |
3254 | [ With fierce longing] Am I then no one? |
3254 | [ With fury] D''you mean to stay in this pigsty with that rhapsodical swine? |
3254 | [ With hesitation] You-- you do n''t think he-- puts-- er-- ideas into her head? |
3254 | [ With intense interest] Is it really a bomb? |
3254 | [ With one of her quick looks] That was Mr. Malise, then? |
3254 | [ With presence of mind] Lady William? |
3254 | [ With professional composure] Marteil''s Three Star, zurr, or''Ennessy''s? |
3254 | [ With suppressed passion] Dodo, may I spit in his eye or something? |
3254 | [ With venom] What did ye call it-- a skin game? |
3254 | [ Without looking at BILL]''Tis said there''s been an offer of marriage? |
3254 | [ Without looking at CLARE] Well, if we''re going to play, Charles? |
3254 | [ Without moving] If we could sleep a little-- wouldn''t it be nice? |
3254 | [ Writing] Ye- es? |
3254 | [ Yawning heavily] My dear, if you''re not going to sing again, d''you mind sitting down? |
3254 | [ gloomily] Do you know your part? |
3254 | [ in a low voice] Mother, is it true about young Dunning and Rose Taylor? |
3254 | [ staring at her] I know that-- now, I mean? |
3254 | after midnight on Easter Monday, and partaken of whisky, and that under the influence of the whisky he had taken the box? |
3254 | and Aunt Juley''s:"He must have his feet in mustard and hot water to- night, Hester; will you tell Jane? |
3254 | and Jimmy Portugal sniggering, June grew crimson, and suddenly rapped out:"Then why did you ever come? |
3254 | and Mr. Timothy? |
3254 | and Uncle Tod? |
3254 | and about the Darties-- had Soames heard that dear Winifred was having a most distressing time with Montague? |
3254 | and are the lights not wonderful?" |
3254 | and deliberately fixing his gaze on her, he asked:"Why do n''t you get Irene?" |
3254 | and do you know this? |
3254 | and however did you get it in? |
3254 | and she is pretty?" |
3254 | and slide slowly down the banisters, head foremost? |
3254 | and what did I say that was so very dreadful? |
3254 | and what do you think she answered? |
3254 | and what more do three- quarters of the women who are married get from the men who marry them?" |
3254 | and who had spoiled her? |
3254 | and whom do you think I passed to- day in Richmond Park? |
3254 | and why did n''t she come? |
3254 | and wo n''t you have a cigarette?" |
3254 | and you?" |
3254 | answered Joe;"where are your eyes? |
3254 | are n''t you afraid?" |
3254 | are n''t you well, sir?" |
3254 | are you Mr. Treffry? |
3254 | asked Mrs. Decie;"what does he want?" |
3254 | asked Soames:"Would he remember me? |
3254 | asked Swithin;"ca n''t you see I''m very bad?" |
3254 | asked one politely;"an''which may her be?" |
3254 | better? |
3254 | bien-- what are we now? |
3254 | but do n''t you see? |
3254 | but her husband? |
3254 | but her husband? |
3254 | but how can he, if he loves her so? |
3254 | but how to accept his return? |
3254 | but to the key of:"Will it pay?" |
3254 | but why?" |
3254 | but''oo can see what our natures are? |
3254 | but''oo''s to learn''er? |
3254 | but-- I see, you mean you''re in the same line of business? |
3254 | cried the woman tearfully;"I''ve got to get my living, have n''t I, the same as you?" |
3254 | death-- unholy, violent death-- in a storm of sand? |
3254 | did n''t you? |
3254 | do I waste my time?" |
3254 | do you know their Christian names? |
3254 | do you? |
3254 | does he? |
3254 | friend Lennan-- looking deeply into the past from the less romantic present? |
3254 | gnadiges Fraulein, will you no breakfast have?" |
3254 | had a good race?" |
3254 | had ever entered; the proud head, which no such fear as"How am I carrying it off?" |
3254 | he answered,"it''s true; did n''t you hear her?" |
3254 | he answered;"how should I know?" |
3254 | he began,"you support her in this execrable matter? |
3254 | he brooded;''why wo n''t they let me alone?'' |
3254 | he ended with a stammer:"Perhaps you will kindly furnish us with the authorisation you spoke of?" |
3254 | he exclaimed;"what''s that you said?" |
3254 | he had actually left L15,000 to"whomever do you think, my dear? |
3254 | he muttered,"you little Cockney; what do you know about a horse?" |
3254 | he peered about him,"into places that smell of paint, into the milieu of''the people,''into the society of Bohemians-- who knows? |
3254 | he repeated,"what is perfection? |
3254 | he said again,"as bad as that? |
3254 | he said between his teeth,"Is it unnatural to want a child from one''s own wife? |
3254 | he said in high- tuned tones, halting his legs in such an easy attitude that it was impossible to interrupt it:"come to take the air?" |
3254 | he said in his dandified way, aspirating the''h''strongly( this difficult letter was almost absolutely safe in his keeping)--"how are you?" |
3254 | he said sharply,"who''s there?" |
3254 | he said sharply,"who''s there?" |
3254 | he said to Harz:"how goes the picture?" |
3254 | he said, contemplating her in the glass;"what''s wrong?" |
3254 | he said, looking round him with his chin a little in the air,"am I intruding, Turl?" |
3254 | he said, sniffing,"smells of the earth, nicht wahr, Herr Artist? |
3254 | he said, uttering the unlikely name with resolution, for, after all, she was his sister- in- law:"Did this fellow set fire to Malloring''s ricks?" |
3254 | he said, with some appearance of innocence;"what for? |
3254 | he said,"I was asleep? |
3254 | he said,"is that you? |
3254 | he said,"search if you must, but where will you find bottom? |
3254 | he said,"she has seen it? |
3254 | he said,"that is what you do?" |
3254 | he said,"what''s the meaning of it? |
3254 | he said,''reasons that will prevent our fighting him, I suppose? |
3254 | he said,''you''ll have to give evidence; your name and address please?'' |
3254 | he said:"Is this not a calamity for you, monsieur le cure?" |
3254 | he said:"tell me all about your time in Ireland?" |
3254 | he said;"almost a vice, is n''t it? |
3254 | he said;"and what on earth would you do with yourself if I did? |
3254 | he said;"can you stand a bit of a jerk? |
3254 | he said;"do you know her address?" |
3254 | he said;"what''s up?" |
3254 | he said;"why did you do that?" |
3254 | he stammered:"Back?" |
3254 | he thought, appalled;"is it possible that I have not got to the bottom of this question?" |
3254 | he thought,"what shall I do now?" |
3254 | he thought,''or ask her to come down here? |
3254 | he thought;''what have I lost?'' |
3254 | he would have replied:"In love? |
3254 | he''s----What''s that in the road? |
3254 | how can she help her legs being short?'' |
3254 | how do you do? |
3254 | how should I know? |
3254 | if you do n''t mind the mess I''m making;"and, with a little squeeze of the tips of his fingers, added:"Would it bore you to see my photographs?" |
3254 | is it beginning already? |
3254 | is it not good- life?" |
3254 | is it----? |
3254 | is it? |
3254 | is it? |
3254 | is n''t it stupid, the war? |
3254 | it is too late),''the Public''is inconceivable-- in fact that for him there is no such thing? |
3254 | knowing his heart was with this girl? |
3254 | might I have my note- book? |
3254 | murmured Winifred, concerned,"you''re not taking this to heart? |
3254 | muttered James;"why did n''t you come before? |
3254 | muttered Sarelli;"Harz means''tar,''hein? |
3254 | muttered Soames,"that''s all, is it?" |
3254 | muttered Swithin;"what''s that to you?" |
3254 | muttered old Pearse,''Rick Voisey''s daughter?'' |
3254 | my dear, you are asking me a riddle? |
3254 | my friend,"the smoker said,"you walk early; are you going my way?" |
3254 | no; but,"she said eagerly,"he give me the note-- I would not have taken it if I''ad not thought it good, would I? |
3254 | nurse her well...? |
3254 | of anarchists, perhaps?" |
3254 | on her linen? |
3254 | one day he said to me,''That is your sister, Mademoiselle, that young lady in the white dress? |
3254 | one doesn''t--""Why not?" |
3254 | only as far as London?" |
3254 | only simple liberty not to be treated as though they had no minds or souls of their own-- weren''t the public to know that? |
3254 | or do I only want her because she is so pretty, and loves me? |
3254 | or even:"Phyllis-- do you-- won''t you-- mayn''t I?" |
3254 | or would she take to its fatted luxury as a duck to water? |
3254 | or, Not guilty?" |
3254 | perhaps you do like him? |
3254 | queried Mrs. Dennant from behind the urn--"Tom Crocker? |
3254 | repeated Aunt Juley;"Soho?" |
3254 | repeated Greta;"what is it to be brave? |
3254 | repeated Joe;"what Germans? |
3254 | repeated Shelton;"do you call that a great quality?" |
3254 | repeated Shelton;"what sort of a young man?" |
3254 | replied Soames:"Is he ill?" |
3254 | replied Soames:"the Inspector? |
3254 | returned Swithin;"now how should I know?" |
3254 | said Cecilia,"what is it?" |
3254 | said Cecilia;"where?" |
3254 | said Dartie,"did you see the beast''s face? |
3254 | said George;"what are you training for? |
3254 | said Herr Paul raising his brows till his glasses fell from his nose:"And what says Gretchen? |
3254 | said Hilary;"that''s all the trouble?" |
3254 | said James bewildered,"who should there be more? |
3254 | said James, and the word came from deep down;"but there''s all my money, and there''s his-- who''s it to go to? |
3254 | said Miltoun:"You mean, I suppose, that''public life''is the breath of my nostrils, and I must die, because I give it up?" |
3254 | said Mr. Treffry;"how should I know? |
3254 | said Nedda eagerly,"is n''t it wonderful how things grow?" |
3254 | said Sarelli suavely;"what do you think of this?" |
3254 | said Soames, with a sort of menace;"what d''you mean?" |
3254 | said Swithin suddenly;"which is my way to the Goldene Alp?" |
3254 | said Swithin,"six languages?" |
3254 | said Swithin;"and you gave it to a beggar?" |
3254 | said Swithin;"you''ve been spying, then?" |
3254 | said Val fervently;"who''s going to stop it? |
3254 | said the Connoisseur,"but d''you suppose that makes much difference? |
3254 | said the lady, nearly rising,"when that country is Germany?" |
3254 | said the policeman,''what was he like?'' |
3254 | said the stained- glass man, brushing back his hair( he was walking with no hat);"why, what the deuce d''you do?" |
3254 | said the traveller:"You, whose voice is so clear, is this all you get to eat?" |
3254 | self- seeking? |
3254 | she answered,"Oh, do you like it?" |
3254 | she said softly; and, taking''Passion and Paregoric''from the table, added:"And so you''ll lend me this, dear Auntie? |
3254 | she said,"before men? |
3254 | she said,"but what have you come about, please? |
3254 | she said,"do you mean, that you--?" |
3254 | she said,"is n''t it a darling?" |
3254 | she thought,''if he asked me? |
3254 | she thought:"What did I do?" |
3254 | she thought:''Oh, why does n''t he go?'' |
3254 | she thought;''I should have remembered that-- Poultry?'' |
3254 | she thought;''how could I have been so blind?'' |
3254 | sir, but what news of your daughter?'' |
3254 | sneered Swithin;"d''you mean to tell me you were n''t in the street just now?" |
3254 | so you think she''s lucky, do you? |
3254 | that Soames remarked:"What are you, Mr. Mont, if I may ask?" |
3254 | that''s good-- isn''t it?" |
3254 | the burden of his:"It''s NOT-- can''t you see it is n''t?" |
3254 | the poor thing''s heart---- What makes you look at me like that? |
3254 | the signal falls, The din expands, and expectation mute''--"when suddenly Eilie said:''Suppose I were to leave off loving you?'' |
3254 | thought Shelton, in the dreamy way of tired people;"the institutions are all right; it''s the spirit that''s all--""Wrong?" |
3254 | thought the secretary,''I told the old boy he must tell them more''.... To whom, for instance, had the proposal first been made? |
3254 | trustin''the Press? |
3254 | up to Drayleigh? |
3254 | was in that look, but''Dare I go in?'' |
3254 | was she going to give him trouble-- pain-- give him trouble? |
3254 | we need n''t put the light out, need we? |
3254 | what a comfort-- um? |
3254 | what about your Uncle James?" |
3254 | what are we to do, Stephen? |
3254 | what did I have for lunch?'' |
3254 | what do you know of me?'' |
3254 | what do you want to stay here for? |
3254 | what does it matter? |
3254 | what does it mean? |
3254 | what has happened, sir? |
3254 | what is coming?" |
3254 | what is it?'' |
3254 | what shall I do? |
3254 | what shall we do now? |
3254 | what was it? |
3254 | what was she? |
3254 | what will father be like now? |
3254 | what''s she been duin''then? |
3254 | what''s this? |
3254 | what?" |
3254 | whatever made you do it, Jem? |
3254 | when will it cease, my suffering?'' |
3254 | where''s Fido?'' |
3254 | who are you?" |
3254 | why are you doing this?" |
3254 | why could n''t they go on as if nothing had happened? |
3254 | why did I ask you?" |
3254 | why did he? |
3254 | why did n''t you, Uncle? |
3254 | why did you come out?" |
3254 | why do n''t you back me up? |
3254 | why do they have such families?" |
3254 | why does n''t this wretched war end? |
3254 | why not, then, be flat?" |
3254 | why on earth are we born young? |
3254 | why should I have to expose my misfortune to the public like this? |
3254 | why would n''t she let me help her? |
3254 | why? |
3254 | with that white skin and those dark eyes, and that hair, couleur de-- what was it? |
3254 | wo n''t it ever, ever end?'' |
3254 | would n''t it be fun?" |
3254 | ye... es-- ticket- of- leave? |
3254 | yes, he''s a painter-- isn''t he?" |
3254 | yes; what was that? |
3254 | you are going? |
3254 | you awake?" |
3254 | you do?" |
3254 | you say, why should n''t they, then?" |
3254 | you take that tone,"he said,"do you? |
3254 | you think so?" |
3254 | you''d had too much champagne? |
3254 | you''re still lookin''for''i m?" |
3254 | young lady with dark hair and large expressive eyes? |
3254 | your brother? |